Kavita Wongyakasem runs a small business in Bangkok, owns a two-storey house in Nonthaburi, drives a pickup truck, and sends her two daughters to good schools.
But every day is a desperate struggle to find the money to keep her household afloat, said the 48-year-old, whose business provides services for a big energy company.
“I think about it every minute,” said Ms Kavita, breaking into tears as she spoke.
The sole breadwinner of a family of five is about 8 million baht in debt and has no cash savings.
“Some days I just can’t face the morning. I don’t want to wake up to the reality that we don’t have any money.”
Thailand has among the highest household debt to gross domestic product (GDP) ratios in Asia — behind only South Korea and Hong Kong, according to a Bank for International Settlements ranking — and millions of people, one in every three Thais, are trapped in debt.
The problem has become a key issue in a May 14 general election and all major parties have promised wage increases or debt moratoriums, along with guarantee-free loans and handouts.
A number of populist policies in the past led to rising household debt as the government used them as easy solution to stimulate the economy. The Yingluck Shinawatra government, for one, offered a steep tax rebate in 2011 to 2012 to first-time car buyers to boost demand after the country’s biggest floods in decades.
Household debt jumped to 71.8% of GDP by the end of 2012 from 60.3% at the start of 2011. The government also lost an estimated 91 billion baht from that programme.
Pita Limjaroenrat, the prime ministerial candidate of the Move Forward Party, which has proposed annual minimum wage revisions, said he would look to fix the long-standing inequality problem.
“If you do the maths, it’s about 1% at the top and the 99% at the bottom,” said Mr Pita, who has seen a late surge in popularity.
“Once you’re in debt, it’s very hard for you to move up the ladder.”
The Bank of Thailand bank is worried. In February, it said that household debt levels should be brought down from 86.9% of GDP at the end of 2022 to below 80% to help reduce financial risks.
Political parties’ extravagant election promises could increase the macro-economic risks posed by debt, analysts say.
Excluding overlapping policies, poll promises by nine major parties analysed in February could amount to 3.14 trillion baht, only slightly less than the annual budget of 3.18 trillion baht, the Thailand Development Research Institute (TDRI) estimated.
Whoever forms the government after Sunday’s election will have to contend with the gnawing debt problem.
“High household debt rate means that it won’t be easy to lay out future policies to stimulate consumption because people are busy paying debts and asking the bank for loans,” said Thanavath Phonvichai, president of University of the Thai Chamber of Commerce (UTCC).
‘No warning’
The debt burden starts early for many people in the country and can last a lifetime.
Some 58% of people aged 25 to 29 are in debt, and a quarter of people over age 60 have outstanding loans, averaging more than 400,000 baht, central bank data shows.
In all, about 30% of those with credit cards or personal loans have a combined debt of 10-25 times their income, double that of international standards, according to the bank.
Although a sticky issue for years, the problem has become worse since the Covid-19 pandemic that nearly doubled the number of bad debt accounts to 10 million, according to the central bank.
The pandemic didn’t ravage the population people as much as it did those in some other countries but it hammered the heavily tourism-dependent economy and hit incomes.
“There was no warning,” said Achin Chunglog, president of a nationwide group of volunteers that helps people struggling with debt.
“It’s like we were walking and then suddenly a wind came in and swept us off a cliff.”
An April survey of 1,300 respondents with a monthly salary of up to 15,000 baht by the UTCC found that their debt levels were the highest since 2010.
In the rural hinterland, 90% of farm households have outstanding loans, according to a March study that described a “vicious cycle of debt”.
Ms Kavita said her income dropped during the pandemic but expenses rose as she scrambled to keep her staff of about 20 safe from the virus.
To pay salaries and keep her home running, she said she was forced to borrow from outside the banking system.
One recent evening, watching politicians on a televised debate, Ms Kavita said the handouts offered by political parties sounded good but would do little to help those heavily in debt.
“I can’t die,” she said, referring to a law that the assets of a deceased person go to creditors to pay off debts.
“It’s an endless struggle.”