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Thailand to distribute first US$4.2b of handout scheme starting this month

Tan KW
Publish date: Mon, 09 Sep 2024, 05:21 PM
Tan KW
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BANGKOK Thailand will distribute 145 billion baht (US$4.2 billion or RM18.63 billion) of its "digital wallet" handout programme earlier than scheduled to support vulnerable groups, a deputy finance minister said on Monday, stressing the need for short-term economic stimulus.

In remarks during a budget debate in the Senate, Julapun Amornvivat said the government has prepared 450 billion baht (US$13.29 billion) in total for its signature handout programme, which seeks to stimulate economic activity by transferring 10,000 baht to 50 million Thais to spend in their localities.

The measure, which was scheduled for rollout in the last quarter of this year, is the cornerstone of Thailand's plans to jumpstart Southeast Asia's second-largest economy, which grew 2.3% in the second quarter.

A change in government last month, caused by a court's shock removal of Srettha Thavisin as premier, has left uncertainty about when promised stimulus measures would commence.

Part of the handout will now be in cash, Srettha's ally and successor, Paetongtarn Shinawatra said last week.

Finance official Julapun said 32 million people had registered so far for the programme including vulnerable groups, but not those without smartphones, through which funds were due to be received via an application.

It was not immediately clear the first tranche of payments, which Julapun said would be made later in September and would be from the 2024 budget and other sources, would be in cash.

His remarks come after Paetongtarn, the daughter of politically influential billionaire Thaksin Shinawatra, at the weekend promised to stimulate the economy right away and follow through on Srettha's policy agenda.

Her new government published a policy statement on Sunday that Paetongtarn will deliver to parliament later this week.

The handout scheme has been criticised by economists including two former central bank governors as fiscally irresponsible. The government rejects that, but has struggled to find sources of funding.

It insists the policy is necessary to energise the economy, which the central bank expects to grow just 2.6% this year, up from 1.9% in 2023 and far adrift of most regional peers.

 


  - Reuters

 

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