Business
SCB EIC Monthly Report: Economic Outlook & Q4 2025 Forecast
Thailand’s 2026 economy will grow just 1.5%, pressured by global slowdown, trade wars, and domestic weaknesses. Urgent structural reforms, cautious investment, and government support are vital for recovery amid political, financial, and competitive challenges.
Thailand’s Economic Outlook for 2026
Thailand’s economy is projected to grow just 1.5% in 2026, the slowest pace in over three decades excluding crisis years, down from 2% in 2025. External pressures like a global slowdown, escalating trade wars, and stiff foreign competition weigh heavily. Domestically, fragile households and businesses, limited purchasing power, fiscal constraints, and political uncertainty challenge growth. Urgent structural reforms are crucial to boost resilience, raise economic potential, and create new growth engines.
Key Challenges and Reforms Needed
Trade tensions and tariff impacts may cause Thai exports to shrink by 1.5%, while tourism growth remains moderate amid regional competition and border issues. Private consumption will be weak due to slow wage growth and high household debt, with private investment growing modestly, mainly driven by foreign inflows in high-tech sectors. Financial conditions remain tight despite expected policy rate cuts. Continued political uncertainty pressures fiscal policy, necessitating reforms to reduce budget deficits and sustain credit ratings.
Business Adaptation and Global Growth Outlook
Thai businesses face global supply chain volatility, subdued domestic demand, policy uncertainty, and intense competition. Sectors embracing innovation, sustainability trends, and new markets can find opportunities. Globally, economic growth is expected to slow to 2.5% in 2026, pressured by U.S. tariffs and trade conflicts, though AI-related investments will provide some momentum. Monetary policies remain accommodative but constrained, with key risks including trade uncertainties, geopolitical tensions, and climate impacts.
