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OPINION

Urgent push for fair climate finance

Oped, Sarinee Achavanuntakul, Published on 01/04/2026

» Ever more visible, the various impacts from climate change are eroding both Thailand's economic competitiveness and the livelihoods of its people: season by season, in heat waves that flatten productivity, floods that swallow farmland, and coastal erosion that is slowly reclaiming communities.

OPINION

Deliberation and bureaucracy can live together

Oped, Joe Mathews, Published on 23/02/2026

» Deliberative democracy is now officially entangled in state bureaucracy. And that's good news for citizens around the world.

OPINION

Fix Thailand's data confusion

Oped, Jompon Pitaksantayothin, Published on 20/02/2026

» Thailand has made significant strides in building a data governance framework, most notably through the Personal Data Protection Act (PDPA) 2019. Data now underpins how citizens exercise their rights, how governments deliver services, how businesses innovate, and ultimately, how democracy is sustained.

OPINION

The politics of taste in our election season

Oped, Kong Rithdee, Published on 26/12/2025

» Hell is other people's tastes. Hell is when we passionately hate what people unconditionally love. Hell is when we can't fathom how anyone on the face of the earth can like someone or something we find revolting -- a food, a film, a style, an opening ceremony, a politician, a president.

OPINION

G20 must commit to debt relief

Oped, Olusegun Obasanjo, Published on 04/12/2025

» As G20 leaders met in Johannesburg last month, they faced a grim reality: many developing-country governments are spending more than they can afford on debt service. To keep funds flowing to foreign creditors, policymakers have been forced to cut spending on education, health care, and infrastructure. These countries have so far avoided default, but at the expense of their own development.

OPINION

Parroting lies

Oped, Postbag, Published on 28/11/2025

» Re: "Rising heat needs urgent response", (Opinion, Nov 24). After repeating the obligatory but egregiously false lie that this year was the hottest on record, the UN climate alarmists claim, "By 2060, under a high-emissions scenario, the Islamic Republic of Iran, Mongolia, Myanmar, Turkey and Uzbekistan could lose more than 70% of their glacier mass. These phenomena also add to sea-level rise, raising existential risks for some countries in the Pacific."

OPINION

Can ethical supply chains survive tariffs?

Oped, Joleen Ong, Published on 10/10/2025

» Recent geopolitical developments have underscored the fragility of global supply chains, reminding businesses in constantly evolving sectors like consumer goods and fashion that the strength of supplier relationships is one of the few persistent sources of resilience. Maintaining such relationships through responsible purchasing is not only ethical but strategically necessary.

OPINION

Renminbi debt in a dollar-denominated world

Oped, Paola Subacchi, Published on 25/09/2025

» When governments borrow on international markets, they do so overwhelmingly in US dollars. Roughly two-thirds of international debt issuance is denominated in foreign currencies, of which nearly half is in dollars and about 40% is in euros. The rest is spread across other currencies, including the Chinese renminbi.

OPINION

Stressed bonds call for market reform

Oped, Pasinee Rerkpiboon and Phumjit Sri-Udomkajorn, Published on 18/06/2025

» Not too long ago, Thai Airways was all but written off. After a staggering loss of more than 141 billion baht and a default on over 71 billion baht in bonds from mismanagement and the pandemic in 2020, the once-proud national airline seemed doomed.

OPINION

Why US Treasury yields are rising

Oped, Dambisa Moyo, Published on 16/06/2025

» Sovereign bond yields have been rising sharply around the world, driven by growing concerns over US President Donald Trump's economic policies and an increasingly uncertain global outlook. In less than a month, the yield on 10-year Treasuries jumped by 50 basis points to 4.6%. And in May alone, the 30-year Treasury rate rose by 30 basis points, briefly topping 5%.