Thailand Trade Gap Widens in December
2026-01-23 03:41
By
Chusnul Chotimah
1 min. read
Thailand’s trade deficit widened to USD 0.35 billion in December 2025 from USD 0.01 billion in the same month a year earlier.
It marked the third consecutive month of a trade gap, as imports rose faster than exports.
Year-on-year, imports surged 18.8%, accelerating from a 17.6% increase in November and marking the fastest pace since August 2022, amid the government’s efforts to boost domestic demand.
Meanwhile, exports grew at a softer pace of 16.8%, though this still represented the strongest growth in three months, driven by industrial products, which jumped 20.3%.
Exports increased to the US (54.3%), Japan (8.6%), China (4.4%), the EU (17.2%), and ASEAN countries (13.1%).
For the full year of 2025, the country recorded a trade deficit of USD 5.31 billion, with exports rising 12.9% to USD 339.64 billion, while imports also grew 12.9% to USD 344.94 billion.
For 2026, exports are forecast to either fall by up to 3.1% or rise by as much as 1.1%.