Thailand, branded the ‘sick man of Asia’: how much hope can a new government deliver?

The country is grappling with low economic growth and an economic structure that is no longer apace with today’s development needs. The Ministry of Finance has forecast a GDP growth of just 2.2% in 2025 and 2.0% in 2026.

The Nation

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Thai Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul (C) gestures as he arrives at the Government House in Bangkok on February 9, 2026. PHOTO: AFP

February 10, 2026

BANGKOK – Thailand is increasingly being described as the “sick man of Asia”, driven by a sharp slowdown in consumption, manufacturing and tourism—trends that are hitting household livelihoods and raising concerns about the country’s stability.

Thailand is grappling with low economic growth and an economic structure that is no longer keeping pace with today’s development needs. The Ministry of Finance has forecast GDP growth of just 2.2% in 2025 and 2.0% in 2026.

Over the past five years after the Covid-19 crisis, Thailand’s economy has expanded by no more than 2.6%, recorded in 2022. This has left the country lagging behind many regional peers in its post-pandemic recovery. Longstanding structural constraints remain unresolved: the population has fallen for a fourth consecutive year, the 2025 birth rate is at its lowest level in 75 years, household debt is close to 90% of GDP—one of the highest levels in Asia—and competitiveness has weakened.

In the past, Thailand successfully shifted from an agriculture-based economy towards industry, raising the industrial share of GDP and fuelling expectations that the country could become a newly industrialised economy. After the 1997 Asian financial crisis, Thailand recovered on the back of exports, and in 2011 the World Bank classified Thailand as an upper-middle-income country. But that image is fading as long-term problems remain unaddressed.

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