Thailand's most severe outbreak so far started in April and has
badly hit domestic spending and travel in the absence of foreign
visitors.
The outbreak has shut 36% of tourism businesses temporarily and
4% permanently, the Tourism Council of Thailand said in a
statement, citing a survey that also showed tourism confidence
hit a record low in the current quarter.
Hotel occupancy rates dropped to 10% in the second quarter from
20% in the first quarter, the survey showed.
Since the pandemic, more than 2 million tourism workers lost
their jobs, including 400,000 in the first quarter of 2021,
council president Chamnan Srisawat told a briefing.
The industry is hoping the opening to vaccinated visitors to the
resort island of Phuket from Thursday, a pilot project, will
bring in some foreign tourists this year.
The arrivals this year are expected to be a fraction of the
nearly 40 million foreign visitors in 2019 before the pandemic,
he said.
"Most tourism operators only have cash flow for up to six
months. If the outbreak can't be controlled and the economy does
not get better by then, more businesses will be closed down,"
Chamnan said.
Separately, the cabinet on Tuesday agreed to delay debt
repayments for state banks' debtors until the end of the year to
help households and smaller businesses affected by the outbreak.
It also approved financial assistance of 7.5 billion baht ($234
million) for employers and workers hit by recent restrictions to
curb the spread.($1 = 32.05 baht)
(Reporting by Satawasin Staporncharnchai; Writing Orathai
Sriring; Editing by Martin Petty)
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