The Southeast Asian country last year suffered its worstfull-year performance since the Asian financial crisis in 1997 with a 6.1percent economic contraction.
The Office of the National Economic and SocialDevelopment Council (NESDC) had initially given a forecast for recovery duringthe first quarter, estimating growth of 1.5 percent to 2.5 percent for 2021.
But NESDC Secretary-General Danucha Pichayanan announcedit had to revise that figure down to between 0.7-1.2 percent.
This crisis caused by the pandemic is unlike thefinancial crises in 1997 and 2009, he said during a press conference, addingthat the estimation is based on domestic causes.
He further said that the new forecast was dependent onthe hope that the pandemic’s curve will flatten after the third quarter, thusenabling a relaxation of restrictions by October.
But if the pandemic continues and relaxation cannot startin the fourth quarter, the growth could be lower than 0.7 percent, Danucha said.
Thailand’s GDP for the second quarter was up 7.5 percent from the same period last year, the first sign of recovery since the pandemic broke out. Thegrowth was most visible in agricultural, industrial and exports sectors, whiletourism — once Thailand’s cash cow — remained sluggish.
Since the start of the pandemic Thailand has recorded928,314 cases with 7,733 deaths, the bulk of them detected since April.
The country has seen more than 20,000 new cases reporteddaily for nearly a week, crowding its already-hampered healthcare system andfilling up its state-run quarantine facilities.
In another move, Fitch Solutions has also lowered Malaysia’s GDP growthforecast to 0 percent from 4.9 percent this year due to surging COVID-19 cases.