<p>As the <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/coronavirus-live-news-covid-19-latest-updates.html" target="_blank">coronavirus </a>brought the global economy to its knees, Thai businessman Yod decided to buy himself an $872,000 treat -- a lime-green Lamborghini.</p>.<p>Yod picked up the customised Huracan EVO supercar in Bangkok, a city of billionaires with a luxury economy unbroken by the crisis ripping through Thailand's wider economy.</p>.<p>With tourism and exports in freefall, Thailand's growth could shrivel by as much as 10 percent this year, dumping millions into unemployment.</p>.<p>But in a split-screen economy, there are plenty with immunity to the economic scourge caused by Covid-19.</p>.<p>Thailand is home to the ninth most billionaires anywhere, according to the China-based Hurun Report's Global Rich List 2020.</p>.<p>Among those with deep pockets is Yod -- full name Thanakorn Mahanontharit -- who was undeterred by Thailand's "crazy" supercar import taxes of up to 80 percent when he made his March purchase.</p>.<p>"This car makes me feel like David Beckham," the genial Bangkok-based petro-chemicals businessman told AFP.</p>.<p>"When you open your door everyone looks at you like you're a superstar."</p>.<p>Ferrari, Rolls-Royce and Lamborghini have all launched top-end models in Bangkok over the pandemic period, cars with price tags of between $750,000 and $1.2 million.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/coronavirus-news-live-updates-unlock-30-rules-india-maharashtra-karnataka-delhi-tamil-nadu-mumbai-bengaluru-chennai-ahmedabad-new-delhi-total-cases-deaths-recoveries-today-covid-19-coronavirus-vaccine-covid-vaccine-updates-869265.html" target="_blank">For live updates on the coronavirus outbreak, click here</a></strong></p>.<p>It is a bet on the wealth sloshing around Bangkok.</p>.<p>Millions of dollars of that cash were on proud display in the capital last week as an eye-catching 40-car convoy from the Thailand Lamborghini Club cut through the city's knotted traffic for a day trip to a nearby resort.</p>.<p>Lamborghinis "appeal to a very niche audience of high net-worth individuals", said Matteo Ortenzi, chief executive for Automobili Lamborghini in the Asia-Pacific region.</p>.<p>There has been "continued interest and demand (from Thailand), one of our most important markets in Southeast Asia," he added.</p>.<p>Yod said his supercar purchase was the completion of a lifelong dream.</p>.<p>"It is a reflection of your success, it doesn't mean I am better than you," he told AFP.</p>.<p>"It's just that I work hard and play harder."</p>.<p>But most Thais are in a different game.</p>.<p>The kingdom is one of Asia's least equal countries.</p>.<p>Thailand is headed by a super-rich monarchy and buttressed by a handful of family dynasties with monopolies covering everything from beer and duty-free to convenience stores.</p>.<p>Their fortunes have surged under six years of military-aligned government which has parcelled out major contracts to them, while the wider economy has backslid.</p>.<p>"One percent of the population owns pretty much two-thirds of the country," said Thitinan Pongsudhirak, a political analyst from Bangkok's Chulalongkorn University, warning that inequality is kindling a political crisis.</p>.<p>Meanwhile many more are sinking.</p>.<p>Farmers are reeling as demand struggles to return to pre-virus levels and remittances from migrants to the cities are drying up, while the urban middle class are facing a cash crunch playing out in unpaid loans and school fees.</p>.<p>As a result, household debt is forecast to surge to 88-90 percent of GDP by the end of this year, according to a Kasikornbank research note.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/science-and-environment/coronavirus-vaccine-live-updates-covaxin-clinical-trials-human-trials-coronavirus-vaccine%20tracker-india-russia-us-china-oxford-moderna-bharat-biotech-866148.html" target="_blank">To know the latest developments of the coronavirus vaccine, click here</a></strong></p>.<p>Government figures predict the pandemic could leave 8.4 million jobless, over a quarter of them employed in the cash-cow tourism sector.</p>.<p>That would eviscerate the gains of the last two decades, which saw millions lifted from poverty by Thailand's export, manufacturing and tourism boom.</p>.<p>Even before the pandemic hit, the number of people living in poverty had risen by nearly two million to 6.7 million, according to a March report by the World Bank.</p>.<p>Now, as the pandemic strips back the economy, the middle and working classes "are not well-cushioned," said Pavida Pananond, an academic at the Thammasat Business School.</p>.<p>Yet the rich enjoy a level of "financial immunity" from the crisis.</p>.<p>Signs of the resilience of wealth are dotted across Bangkok.</p>.<p>Houses worth between $1-5 million are selling well, according to real estate agency CBRE Thailand, while condos at the super-plush Mandarin Oriental are being snapped up despite the $14,200-a-square-metre price tag -- pricier than the swankiest west London postcodes.</p>.<p>A trawl through the Instagram accounts of Thailand's 'Hi-So' (High Society) set also reveals a glamour scene unruffled by the new normal -- yoga sessions on pristine beaches, yacht parties and champagne receptions.</p>.<p>"They've got the money and they can spend it any time," says Naphalai Areesorn, editor-in-chief of fashion and society magazine Tatler Thailand.</p>.<p>The allure of being "Hi-So" runs through Thai society, she said, explaining that money -- especially the show of having it -- is a shortcut into Thailand's elite, which was once defined by having the right "breeding" and education.</p>.<p>"There's still very much a class system here... maybe it comes from a feudalistic history," she said.</p>.<p>Entering High Society -- and staying there --- is very much "an aspiration" for many in Bangkok "whether you can afford it or not".</p>
<p>As the <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/coronavirus-live-news-covid-19-latest-updates.html" target="_blank">coronavirus </a>brought the global economy to its knees, Thai businessman Yod decided to buy himself an $872,000 treat -- a lime-green Lamborghini.</p>.<p>Yod picked up the customised Huracan EVO supercar in Bangkok, a city of billionaires with a luxury economy unbroken by the crisis ripping through Thailand's wider economy.</p>.<p>With tourism and exports in freefall, Thailand's growth could shrivel by as much as 10 percent this year, dumping millions into unemployment.</p>.<p>But in a split-screen economy, there are plenty with immunity to the economic scourge caused by Covid-19.</p>.<p>Thailand is home to the ninth most billionaires anywhere, according to the China-based Hurun Report's Global Rich List 2020.</p>.<p>Among those with deep pockets is Yod -- full name Thanakorn Mahanontharit -- who was undeterred by Thailand's "crazy" supercar import taxes of up to 80 percent when he made his March purchase.</p>.<p>"This car makes me feel like David Beckham," the genial Bangkok-based petro-chemicals businessman told AFP.</p>.<p>"When you open your door everyone looks at you like you're a superstar."</p>.<p>Ferrari, Rolls-Royce and Lamborghini have all launched top-end models in Bangkok over the pandemic period, cars with price tags of between $750,000 and $1.2 million.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/coronavirus-news-live-updates-unlock-30-rules-india-maharashtra-karnataka-delhi-tamil-nadu-mumbai-bengaluru-chennai-ahmedabad-new-delhi-total-cases-deaths-recoveries-today-covid-19-coronavirus-vaccine-covid-vaccine-updates-869265.html" target="_blank">For live updates on the coronavirus outbreak, click here</a></strong></p>.<p>It is a bet on the wealth sloshing around Bangkok.</p>.<p>Millions of dollars of that cash were on proud display in the capital last week as an eye-catching 40-car convoy from the Thailand Lamborghini Club cut through the city's knotted traffic for a day trip to a nearby resort.</p>.<p>Lamborghinis "appeal to a very niche audience of high net-worth individuals", said Matteo Ortenzi, chief executive for Automobili Lamborghini in the Asia-Pacific region.</p>.<p>There has been "continued interest and demand (from Thailand), one of our most important markets in Southeast Asia," he added.</p>.<p>Yod said his supercar purchase was the completion of a lifelong dream.</p>.<p>"It is a reflection of your success, it doesn't mean I am better than you," he told AFP.</p>.<p>"It's just that I work hard and play harder."</p>.<p>But most Thais are in a different game.</p>.<p>The kingdom is one of Asia's least equal countries.</p>.<p>Thailand is headed by a super-rich monarchy and buttressed by a handful of family dynasties with monopolies covering everything from beer and duty-free to convenience stores.</p>.<p>Their fortunes have surged under six years of military-aligned government which has parcelled out major contracts to them, while the wider economy has backslid.</p>.<p>"One percent of the population owns pretty much two-thirds of the country," said Thitinan Pongsudhirak, a political analyst from Bangkok's Chulalongkorn University, warning that inequality is kindling a political crisis.</p>.<p>Meanwhile many more are sinking.</p>.<p>Farmers are reeling as demand struggles to return to pre-virus levels and remittances from migrants to the cities are drying up, while the urban middle class are facing a cash crunch playing out in unpaid loans and school fees.</p>.<p>As a result, household debt is forecast to surge to 88-90 percent of GDP by the end of this year, according to a Kasikornbank research note.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/science-and-environment/coronavirus-vaccine-live-updates-covaxin-clinical-trials-human-trials-coronavirus-vaccine%20tracker-india-russia-us-china-oxford-moderna-bharat-biotech-866148.html" target="_blank">To know the latest developments of the coronavirus vaccine, click here</a></strong></p>.<p>Government figures predict the pandemic could leave 8.4 million jobless, over a quarter of them employed in the cash-cow tourism sector.</p>.<p>That would eviscerate the gains of the last two decades, which saw millions lifted from poverty by Thailand's export, manufacturing and tourism boom.</p>.<p>Even before the pandemic hit, the number of people living in poverty had risen by nearly two million to 6.7 million, according to a March report by the World Bank.</p>.<p>Now, as the pandemic strips back the economy, the middle and working classes "are not well-cushioned," said Pavida Pananond, an academic at the Thammasat Business School.</p>.<p>Yet the rich enjoy a level of "financial immunity" from the crisis.</p>.<p>Signs of the resilience of wealth are dotted across Bangkok.</p>.<p>Houses worth between $1-5 million are selling well, according to real estate agency CBRE Thailand, while condos at the super-plush Mandarin Oriental are being snapped up despite the $14,200-a-square-metre price tag -- pricier than the swankiest west London postcodes.</p>.<p>A trawl through the Instagram accounts of Thailand's 'Hi-So' (High Society) set also reveals a glamour scene unruffled by the new normal -- yoga sessions on pristine beaches, yacht parties and champagne receptions.</p>.<p>"They've got the money and they can spend it any time," says Naphalai Areesorn, editor-in-chief of fashion and society magazine Tatler Thailand.</p>.<p>The allure of being "Hi-So" runs through Thai society, she said, explaining that money -- especially the show of having it -- is a shortcut into Thailand's elite, which was once defined by having the right "breeding" and education.</p>.<p>"There's still very much a class system here... maybe it comes from a feudalistic history," she said.</p>.<p>Entering High Society -- and staying there --- is very much "an aspiration" for many in Bangkok "whether you can afford it or not".</p>