New Thai PM Paetongtarn to Prioritize Tackling $474 Billion Household Debt

(Bloomberg) -- Thailand’s new government plans to expedite a sweeping debt restructuring to tackle an estimated $474 billion of household liability, offer financial assistance to small businesses and accelerate fiscal stimulus to lift growth.

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The debt revamp will cover the entire system, and will be especially targeted at providing relief to borrowers of car and home loans, according to a draft policy statement seen by Bloomberg News. Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra is due to announce the plans in parliament on Sept. 12.

The initiative will also cover the informal sector, and will be implemented through state-owned financial institutions, commercial banks and asset management companies.

The government is concerned about household debt that’s at more than 16 trillion baht ($474 billion) — equivalent to over 90% of gross domestic product — and rising non-performing loans, Paetongtarn is set to say. The indebtedness is driving inequality between the rich and poor, with development concentrated mainly in Bangkok and major cities, the prime minister will say.

The policy statement will list out priorities of Paetongtarn’s coalition government that’s led by her Pheu Thai Party and backed by a clutch of pro-establishment and royalist groups. The youngest daughter of influential former leader Thaksin Shinawatra was elected by parliament last month after her predecessor Srettha Thavisin was dismissed by a court over an ethical violation.

Paetongtarn, the third member of the influential Shinawatra clan to lead the country, faces the challenge of boosting a $500 billion economy that’s lagged its neighbors with an average 1.9% growth rate during nearly a decade of military-backed rule.

Thailand’s youngest premier will also need to reassure foreign investors that she can provide a stable administration, eschew any clashes with the central bank, and drive policies to reverse a slump in manufacturing and sustain tourism recovery.

“If there are no financial and fiscal measures that support economic expansion, the country’s economic growth rate is expected to be no more than 3% per year,” which will push public debt close to the legal ceiling of 70% of GDP in 2027, Paetongtarn will say. “Therefore, it is a great challenge that the government must urgently restore the country’s economy to grow strongly again soon.”