Thailand economy slows on Omicron outbreak

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BANGKOK- Thailand’s economic activity slowed in January due to a new coronavirus outbreak fuelled by the Omicron variant, cutting short a recovery in the final quarter of 2021, the central bank said on Monday.

Southeast Asia’s second-largest economy in the fourth quarter was helped by robust exports and an easing of COVID-19 curbs.

But the abrupt suspension of a quarantine waiver program for international arrivals in December has impacted tourism, however. The waiver will resume on Tuesday.

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“We started to see the spread of the Omicron late in December. That has somewhat slowed economic activity in January. But part of that is a seasonal adjustment,” Chayawadee Chai-Anant, senior director at the Bank of Thailand, told a news conference.

In December, the economy improved from November with exports increasing and tourism improving following a broad re-opening to foreign visitors in November, after 20 months of mandatory quarantine that saw annual arrivals plunge to less than 1 percent of pre-pandemic numbers.

Private consumption and investment also increased, the BOT said in a statement.

Exports, a key driver of growth, jumped 23 percent in December from a year earlier, with imports up 28.2 percent year-on-year and a trade surplus of $2.8 billion, the BOT said.

The country recorded a current account deficit of $1.4 billion in December after November’s surplus of $0.3 billion.

The economy in the final quarter of 2021 likely performed better than the previous quarter and better than expected, Chayawadee said, without giving specific forecasts.

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