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Thailand
AsiaSoutheast Asia

Still reeling from Chinese visitor losses, Thai tourism suffers an earthquake

Post-quake jitters and existing safety concerns expected to cut tourist arrivals by 10-15 per cent in the next two weeks

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Tourists visit the Wat Pho temple in Bangkok on March 19. Photo: EPA-EFE
Bloomberg
The deadly Myanmar earthquake is set to hurt foreign tourist arrivals to Thailand in the coming weeks, the latest blow to an industry already reeling from dwindling Chinese visitors worried about travel safety.

International tourist arrivals are expected to drop by 10 per cent to 15 per cent or even more in the next two weeks as Friday’s 7.7 earthquake shook buildings in Bangkok and other Thai tourist hotspots, spooking prospective travellers, the Thai Hotels Association said.

About 10 per cent of foreign tourists checked out early after the quake, said Thienprasit Chaiyapatranun, president of the association, citing an initial survey among the group’s members. Some tourists, however, later returned to their hotels as they had no other options, he said.

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“A short-term impact is expected for the tourism industry because of safety concerns,” Thienprasit said by phone on Saturday.

Even a short-lived effect on tourist arrivals will hurt an economy where the industry employs one in five of the country’s workforce and accounts for about 13 per cent of gross domestic product.

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Thai authorities are betting on an improved tourism performance to propel growth to 3 per cent this year as merchandise exports, another key driver of growth, faces headwinds from the Trump administration’s trade tariffs.

03:56

Earthquake death toll tops 1,000 as new images emerge from Myanmar, Thailand and China

Earthquake death toll tops 1,000 as new images emerge from Myanmar, Thailand and China
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