![]() |
Internet Edition. January 8, 2009, Updated: Bangladesh Time 12:00 AM |
| Home | Daily Ittefaq | FORMICON | Tech News | Ebiz | Photos |
![]() |
Airport siege in Thailand costs $8.3b: Central Bank BSS, Bangkok Anti-government protests that shut down Bangkok's airports last year have cost Thailand 290 billion baht (8.3 billion dollars), a central bank study said Wednesday. Demonstrators opposed to the previous government's ties to ousted former premier Thaksin Shinawatra occupied the capital's international and domestic airports for more than a week from late November to early December. The protesters from the royalist People's Alliance for Democracy movement dispersed after a court verdict brought down the government, but a Bank of Thailand study said the economic damage from the siege was huge. "The political unrest has not only affected the tourism industry but also other related industries," said the study, titled "Thailand's Tourism Industry After The Closure Of Airports." "Based on analysis, total losses were 290 billion baht, equivalent to 3.0 of nominal GDP (gross domestic product)," the study added. It said the losses included 120 billion baht in the service industry, 90 billion baht in logistics and 60 billion baht in industry. The shutdown of Suvarnabhumi and Don Mueang airports between November 25 and December 4 prevented 3.4 million tourists from visiting Thailand. "The losses are more serious than SARS and the tsunami because those two were short-term," the study said, referring to the global Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome outbreak in 2003 and the deadly 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami. The study predicted that tourist arrivals in Thailand this year would fall 8.8 per cent year on year to 12.8 million. Thailand's tourism industry accounts for five per cent of GDP and employs some two million people or up to seven percent of the country's total workforce. The losses from the airport blockade have added to the economic challenges that Thailand faces as a result of the global financial crisis, with the export-dependent kingdom's trading partners struggling.
Do you like the new site? Do you have any improvement suggestion? Please drop us a line. |
|
| Privacy Policy | Feedback | Contact Us |