PM to tackle household debt

Thailand’s Prime Minister Prayut Chan-ocha has assigned Deputy Prime Minister MR Pridiyathorn Devakula to supervise agencies tasked with solving debt problems of low-income earners and farmers in the wake of an alarming surge in household debts.

According to the PM Office Deputy Spokesperson, Col. Sansern Kaewkamnerd, agencies in charge of solving the problem, such as Ministries of Justice, Finance and Agriculture and Cooperatives, have been told to focus their efforts on heavily-indebted farmers who are being sued by their creditors and risk losing their property as a result of the legal proceedings.

The Prime Minister (pictured) has voiced his concern for this group of debtors, and one of his suggestions is to conduct a feasibility study on a possible bailout for farmers.

A survey by the Ministry of Interior has found that 140,000 farmers owed state financial institutions to the tune of THB 3.6 billion, while another 149,000 incurred THB 2.1 billion of debt with non-formal lenders.

A recent report from the Bank of Thailand (BOT) indicated that household debts in the fourth quarter of the year 2014 represented 85.9 percent of the gross domestic products, a sharp rise from 54.6 percent in 2007.

Most of the problems, according to a statement from Thailand’s Public Relations Department, can be attributed to the previous government’s economy boost plans, including its first house and first car projects, and the special loans for the 2012 flood victims.

 

This story was written by Andrew Batt, Group Editor of Dot Property Group. Send your news, views, press releases and comments to him at [email protected].

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