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Water festival meets wallet squeeze: Thailand’s Songkran spending set to dip
Revellers gear up for a quieter Songkran in Thailand, as rising costs see fewer water guns, scaled-back travel plans and lower festive spending in 2026. — AFP file pic

BANGKOK, April 10 — From fewer water guns to cancelled travel ‌plans, rising prices brought by the ​Iran war have driven down expectations for spending next week during Thailand’s traditional new year, or Songkran, sometimes called the ‌world’s biggest water festival.

The boisterous event, officially set to run ​for three days from Monday, is a major draw for tourists, as revellers in colourful clothes spray water on each other in an ancient ritual that symbolises ​cleansing, reverence and good fortune.

But spending this year is expected to fall for the first time since the Covid-19 pandemic, said Thanavath Phonvichai, president of the University of the Thai Chamber of Commerce.

Usually one of Thailand’s biggest spending periods

Expenditure during ‌the festival, usually one of Thailand’s biggest spending periods, is forecast ⁠to fall 3.7 per cent to about ⁠130 billion baht (US$3.5 billion; RM13.94 billion), a university survey showed, ⁠with 36% of respondents planning to ⁠spend less.

Songkran usually ⁠sees many Bangkok residents travel back to their hometowns from the Thai capital, helping drive spending nationwide, but some are staying put ⁠this year as higher transport and living costs crimp household budgets.

“Transport costs are too high and travelling was not possible,” said Yuparat Kheowsakhu, “I live around Sukhumvit, so I’ll just celebrate Songkran there.”

Plans to skip festive activities

A separate poll by Suan Dusit Poll found that ⁠51.42 per cent of 1,272 respondents surveyed between March 31 and April 3 planned to skip festive activities to save money.

Sales have halved this ⁠year, said Saran Keavvichai, a vendor of water guns at the sprawling ⁠wholesale Sampeng ⁠market in Bangkok’s Chinatown.

“Our sales are down a lot, so we are ​ordering less and profits are lower,” Saran ​said. “Last year was much better. We are ‌stocking less, and other merchants are not ​coming to buy for resale. ​They are afraid to invest.” — Reuters

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