cover image: Who Pays the Bill? Distributional and Fiscal Consequences of Elevated Inflation in Thailand

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Who Pays the Bill? Distributional and Fiscal Consequences of Elevated Inflation in Thailand

2 Feb 2024

This paper analyzes the distributional impacts of inflation in Thailand. For that aim, the paper uses rich micro-survey data on 46,000 Thai households to study the effect of the recent elevated inflation on poverty, its distributional effects on different income levels, and the fiscal cost to compensate households from real income losses. To study the multidimensional impact of inflation, the paper also studies how inflation differentially affects households through the consumption, income, and wealth channel. The analysis shows that under a baseline scenario, poverty in Thailand could increase by 1.3 percentage points—about 900,000 people—in the absence of government intervention. Targeted fiscal support to only compensate households that are below the national poverty line from rising inflation amount to 0.05 percent of GDP. However, fiscal support to compensate relatively rich households, defined as those above the median of the income distribution, amount to 1.4 percent of GDP. Moreover, due to high levels of debt, richer households benefit from inflation relative to poorer households. Finally, the paper also delves into policy responses undertaken by the Thai government and Asian and emerging economies to mitigate elevated inflation.

Authors

Piyaporn Chote, Corinne C Delechat, Thanaphol Kongphalee, Vatsal Nahata, Mouhamadou Sy, Pym Manopimoke, Tamon Yungvichit

Format
Paper
Frequency
regular
ISBN
9798400266485
ISSN
1018-5941
Pages
31
Published in
United States of America
Series
Working Paper No. 2024/022
StockNumber
WPIEA2024022