BANGKOK- Thailand’s lower house on Friday passed a delayed 3.48 trillion baht ($95.6 billion) budget bill for the 2024 fiscal year, aimed at reviving Southeast Asia’s second-largest economy, currently the region’s laggard.
The 2024 budget for the fiscal year ending September aims for a 9.3 percent rise in spending and a drop of 0.3 percent in the budget deficit to 693 billion baht from the previous year.
The bill, which needs senate and royal approval before taking effect, is crucial to Prime Minister’s SretthaThavisin’s government as it tries to boost the economy, which he says is trailing peers due to high household debt and interest rates.
The government has said the budget should be ready for use by early next month, delayed from the original start date of Oct. 1, 2023 due to prolonged political gridlock following a May election. The current government was formed in August.
The delay has slowed government spending, weighing on an economy Srettha describes as at a “critical” stage and in need of urgent stimulus measures and cuts in interest rates from a decade high of 2.5 percent , a stance the central bank has disagreed with.