Thailand announced a relocation package on Friday to attract foreign companies looking to moved production due to intensifying Sino-US trade tensions, seeking to compete with Vietnam to lure manufacturers hit by tariffs. The Thai government seeks to boost Southeast Asia's second-largest economy which grew at its weakest annual pace in nearly five years in the second quarter as exports tumbled.
The package, approved by the economic cabinet, includes tax incentives, special investment zones and changes in laws that would facilitate foreign investment, particularly from China, Japan, Taiwan and South Korea, the Board of Investment (BOI) said in a statement. "We are confident that these incentives will definitely make us more competitive than Vietnam," Kobsak Pootrakool, secretary of the economic cabinet, told reporters.
"Our tax incentives are not less than theirs, but we need to work on free trade agreements," he said. The new package will offer a 50% corporate income tax reduction for another five years for firms with real investment of at least 1 billion baht ($32.61 million) who apply for the incentive by 2020. It will also offer a higher tax deduction on advanced technology training and for investment in automation.
Thailand already offers firms in the Eastern Economic Corridor (EEC) a corporate income tax (CIT) exemption of up to 13 years and a 50% tax reduction of up to five years. The current CIT is 20%. Vietnam's standard corporate tax is 20%, but targeted firms will be offered a 10% tax for 15 years, a tax exemption for four years and a 50% tax reduction for nine years. Some are offered more generous perks.
Charnon Boonnuch, economist of Nomura in Singapore, said the package is missing a "concrete implementation plan" and a tax incentive alone may not be able to promote an investment if the implementation of the EEC projects remains sluggish. Thailand is already attracting some foreign firms looking to relocate production from China to escape US tariffs on Chinese goods.