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INDUSTRY
The boom in building
Busrin Treerapongpichit
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| Demand continues to grow in spite of a slowdown in the property
sector. |
ALTHOUGH THE property sector lost some growth momentum in the
first quarter of 2004 due to the expiry of tax incentives for homebuyers
and tighter reins on housing loans, the building and furnishing
materials industry is expected to maintain growth of 10% until
next year.
The local property sector has been a leader in the recovery from
the 1997-98 crisis and has rebounded especially strongly in the
past three years. The tax breaks for homebuyers were among the
few economic measures for which the Minister Thaksin Shinawatra
government cannot claim credit _ they were initiated by the former
Democrat administration of Chuan Leekpai.
To breathe new life into the sluggish industry, the 3.3% specific
business tax, an indirect tax levied on certain businesses that
are exempt from paying value-added tax, was slashed to 0.11%, while
the 2% real estate transaction fee was cut to 0.01%.
Naturally, the building and construction materials sector has
been a major beneficiary of the rebound. The Thaksin government
decided to extend the tax incentives in 2002 to keep the growth
momentum but decided to end the tax breaks at the end of 2003.
In the first half of this year, demand for building and furnishing
materials grew by 15% despite the slowdown in the property sector.
Demand for major materials such as roof tiles grew by 30% while
that of ceramic wall and floor tiles increased by 14%.
This is because a large portion of the demand did not come from
new houses and buildings but rather from the need for decoration
of the large number of houses that had been sold over the past
two years, according to Kajohndet Sangsuban, president of Cementhai
Building Products Co, a unit of the Siam Cement Group industrial
conglomerate.
Siam Cement Industry, the group's cement flagship, made waves
in June when it announced plans to lift capacity by 50% _ the first
expansion by a cement producer since before 1997.
Mr Kajohndet said demand from property projects in the medium-
to long terms remained strong although it would likely shift from
high-end to medium-end housing projects. This demand is projected
to keep the 10% annual growth of the building materials industry
on track until next year.
He said the strong growth in the industry over the past three
years had been driven largely by the government's low-cost Ua-arthorn
housing projects and the tax breaks. In addition, low interest
rates for mortgage loans further boosted demand in the sector.
Mr Kajohndet said sales of most building material products would
rise as long as the real estate sector continued to do well. However,
some negative factors have emerged that have threatened to derail
that growth. For example, China's efforts to put brakes on its
economy could lead to a drop in demand for steel.
The price of billet, a raw material used in construction steel
products, has fallen to US$300 a tonne from an average of $400
in the first quarter, partly due to China's new policy that includes
limits on new construction projects and loan curbs.
According to National Finance and Securities, China's economic
slowdown is not expected to have much impact on Thai industries.
China's demand for building materials is not expected to fall so
suddenly or significantly, as the country still needs primary products
to serve its overall development.
Despite the positive outlook, the Thaksin government should take
proper steps to prevent bubbles and to ensure a sustainable recovery
of the industrial sector. Fair income distribution should also
be taken into consideration instead of a single-minded focus on
growth or gross domestic product alone.
Meanwhile, producers of building materials should also be cautious
about capacity expansion to avoid creating an oversupply, which
was among the major problems faced by the industry during the crisis.
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