Senate eyes one-day budget bill wrap-up

The House of Representatives has passed a 3.75 trillion baht budget for the fiscal year starting October. The Upper House looks set to conduct all three readings of the budget bill on Monday. (Photo: Nutthawat Wichieanbut)
A 3.75 trillion ringgit resources for the fiscal year that kicks off in October has been approved by the House of Representatives. On Monday, the Upper House appears to be scheduled to hold all three observations of the funds costs. ( Photo: Nutthawat Wichieanbut )

The three analyses of the 3.75-trillion-baht resources costs for the 2025 fiscal year are scheduled for Monday in the Upper House, according to Deputy Senate Speaker Gen Kriangkrai Srirak on Friday, with approval possibly expected the same day.

He claimed that the Senate’s decision to introduce the bill’s mission is due to the Senate’s prior establishment of a special committee that would start deliberating it while it was being scrutinized in the Lower House this week from Tuesday to Thursday.

Gen Kriangkrai expressed his strong belief that the Senate’s prepared one-day costs deliberation will go smoothly and be finished in time for this horizontal deliberation.

The House of Representatives approved the budget costs late on Thursday, which will allow recently appointed prime minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra to lower state spending and ratchet up a ratcheting up the country’s economy.

309 legislators voted in favor of the budget bill in its third and final studying on Thursday in the 500-member House of Representatives, proposing a 4.2 % increase in federal spending starting with the 2025 fiscal year. A total of 155 legislators voted against the costs at the end of a three-day conversation.

The new budget legislation will become effective after a see has been published in the Royal Gazette if it receives Senate support.

A clause in the budget’s budget includes funding for the coalition government’s questionable cash grant to restart manufacturing and consumption.

Ms. Paetongtarn must overcome the strain of revitalizing Southeast Asia’s second-largest economy, which is currently stifled by a nearly record levels of household debt, slow exports, and a production sector depressed by cheap imports, generally from China.

The new premier has pledged to take action to restore the country’s economy to its” crisis” mode, and she will give a full report to congress on the laws of her government next year.

Her state is also expected to redo the program known as the “digital wallet,” which promised 10,000 baht each to nearly all adult Thais.

The program aims to increase economic growth by more than twice the average sub-2 % rate for nearly a decade under military-backed rule, to 5 %.

Senator Premsak Piayura requested that the Senate hold a meeting on Monday to deliberate all three readings on Friday, in his power as deputy president of the Senate’s special commission vetting the budget costs. He added that the council had already finished its review of the costs and would visit on the Senate to call a meeting on the same day.