Thai pawn shops busy ahead of new school year

Thai pawn shops busy ahead of new school year

A staff member checks a ring before making a decision on whether it could be deposited in exchange for cash at a pawn shop in Muang district in Nakhon Ratchasima province on Friday. (Photo: Prasit Tangprasert)
A slave shop employee checks a band before making a decision on whether to pawn it for money on Friday in Muang area in Nakhon Ratchasima state. ( Photo: Prasit Tangprasert )

Parents are flocked to pawn stores to move their products into money because they are in urgent need of money to pay for their children’s clothing and other requirements for the new school name.

With the start of the new school year just around the corner, pawn shops across the nation reserve more funds to get ready for the fast business they anticipate.

Parents who are short on money you ask where they can go to get money to buy new outfits and other school supplies for their children. Most colleges will opened on May 16 for the new semester.

The Nakhon Ratchasima Municipality Office runs pawn shops with 300 million ringgit of dollars in property in three of its branches, and they are even offering low interest rates as a reward for kids.

The director of the next branch of the municipality-run shops, Siriphan Kuanha, said,” We have enough money to service all users.

Pawn shops run by the government or private sector in other regions have also increased their income stocks. 100 million ringgit is in the comfortable of a Yala City municipality-owned store.

The Yala shop’s assistant director, Charoonrat Lamrassamee, predicted yet more customers the week before the start of the school year, according to the Public Relations Department.

The second branch of the store’s storage room in Nakhon Ratchasima is stuffed with a variety of stolen items, both small and large, from amulets in gold frames to gasoline cylinders, refrigerators, and washing machines.

A 40-inch TV-spying man drove to at least five stores on Saturday in the Nonthaburi city of Pak Kret. According to press shops, nobody would take it because there is no place to store it, among other things.

After the class demanded payment, the person eventually ended up borrowing cash from a loan shark because he immediately needed 1, 000 ringgit to help pay for his five-year-old nephew’s tuition and other expenses.

He advised Thai PBS that “every pawn shop does post a clear communication outside that they do not get TVs.”