Thailand Country Facts - Tips
Thailand Country Facts
Bureau of East Asian and Pacific
Affairs
October
2007
Background Note: Thailand Country
Facts
Flag of Thailand is five horizontal bands of red (top), white, blue
(double
width), white, and
red.
PROFILE
OFFICIAL
NAME:
Kingdom of
Thailand
Geography
Area: 513,115 sq. km. (198,114 sq. mi.); equivalent to the size of
France, or
slightly smaller than
Texas.
Cities: Capital--Bangkok (population 9,668,854); Nakhon Ratchasima
(pop.
437,386 for Muang district and
2,565,685 for the whole province), Chiang Mai
(pop. 247,672 for Muang
district and 1,595,855 for the whole province).
Terrain: Densely populated central plain; northeastern plateau;
mountain
range in the west; southern isthmus
joins the land mass with Malaysia.
Climate: Tropical
monsoon.
People
Nationality: Noun and
adjective--Thai.
Population (2006): 65.28 million. (Data based on Bank of
Thailand.)
Labor force (2006): 36.43
million.
Annual population growth rate (2006 est.):
0.3%.
Ethnic groups: Thai 89%, other
11%.
Religions: Buddhist 94-95%, Muslim 4-5%, Christian, Hindu, Brahmin,
other.
Languages: Thai (official language); English is
the second language of the
elite; regional
dialects.
Education: Years compulsory--12. Literacy--94.9% male, 90.5%
female.
Health (2006
est.): Infant mortality rate--19.5/1,000. Life expectancy--68
years male, 75 years
female.
Government
Type: Thailand remains a constitutional monarchy. Prime Minister,
Cabinet,
and National Legislative Assembly were appointed
by the leaders of a
September 19, 2006 coup d'etat. Military leaders constitute a Council
for
National Security. The current structure will
remain in place until a
democratically elected government takes
office.
Constitution: Thailand adopted its current constitution following an
August
19, 2007
referendum.
Independence: Never colonized; traditional founding date
1238.
Branches: Executive--King (chief of state), Prime Minister (head
of
government).
Legislative--National Assembly (unicameral, appointed by the
military leadership). Judicial--composed of the Constitutional
Tribunal, the
Courts of Justice, and the Administrative
Courts.
Administrative subdivisions: 76 provinces, including Bangkok
municipality,
subdivided into 796 districts, 81
subdistricts, 7,255 tambon administration,
and 74,435
villages.
Political parties: Multi-party system; Communist Party is
prohibited.
Suffrage:
Universal and compulsory at 18 years of
age.
Economy
GDP (2006): $206
billion.
Annual GDP growth rate (2006):
5.0%.
Per capita income (2006):
$3,155.
Unemployment rate (2006): 1.5% of total labor
force.
Natural resources: Tin, rubber, natural gas, tungsten, tantalum,
timber,
lead, fish, gypsum, lignite,
fluorite.
Agriculture (8.9% of GDP): Products--rice, tapioca, rubber, corn,
sugarcane,
coconuts,
soybeans.
Industry: Types--tourism, textiles, garments, agricultural
processing,
cement, integrated
circuits, jewelry, electronics, and auto
assembly.
Trade (2006):
Merchandise exports--$128.2 billion: textiles and footwear,
fishery products, computers and parts, electronics, electrical
appliances,
jewelry, rice, tapioca products, integrated
circuits, rubber, automobiles.
Major markets--ASEAN,
U.S., EU, Japan, China, and Singapore. Merchandise
imports--$125.9 billion: machinery and parts, petroleum, iron and
steel,
chemicals, vehicles and parts,
jewelry, fish preparations, electrical
appliances, fertilizers and pesticides. Major suppliers--Japan,
ASEAN, Middle
East, China, EU, and
U.S.
PEOPLE
Thailand's population is relatively homogeneous. More than 85% speak
a
dialect of Thai and share a
common culture. This core population includes the
central Thai (33.7%
of the population, including Bangkok), Northeastern Thai
(34.2%),
northern Thai (18.8%), and southern Thai
(13.3%).
The language of the central Thai population is the language taught in
schools
and used in government. Several other small Thai-speaking
groups include the
Shan, Lue, and
Phutai.
Up to 12% of Thai are of significant Chinese heritage, but the
Sino-Thai
community is the best integrated in
Southeast Asia. Malay-speaking Muslims of
the south comprise another
significant minority group (2.3%). Other groups
include
the Khmer; the Mon, who are substantially assimilated with the Thai;
and the Vietnamese. Smaller mountain-dwelling tribes, such as the Hmong
and
Mein, as well as the Karen, number about
788,024.
The population is mostly rural, concentrated in the rice-growing
areas of the
central, northeastern, and northern regions. However, as
Thailand continues
to industrialize, its urban
population--31.6% of total
population,
principally in the Bangkok area--is
growing.
Thailand's highly successful government-sponsored family planning
program has
resulted in a dramatic decline in population growth from
3.1% in 1960 to less
than 1% today. Life expectancy also has risen, a
positive reflection of
Thailand's
efforts at public health education. However, the AIDS epidemic has
had
a major impact on the Thai population. Today, over 500,000 Thais
live
with HIV or AIDS--approximately 1.4% of the
adult population. Each year,
25-30,000 Thais
die from AIDS-related causes. Ninety percent of them are aged
20-49,
the most productive sector of the workforce. The situation could have
been worse; an aggressive public education campaign in the early
1990s
reduced the number of new
HIV infections from over 100,000 annually to around
15,000 annually
now.
The constitution mandates 12 years of free education, however, this
is not
provided universally. Education accounts for 18.0%
of total government
expenditures.
Theravada Buddhism is the major religion of Thailand and is the
religion of
about 95% of its people. The government permits
religious diversity, and
other major
religions are represented. Spirit worship and animism are widely
practiced.
HISTORY
Southeast Asia has been inhabited for more than half a million
years.
Archaeological
studies suggest that by 4000 BC, communities in what is now
Thailand had emerged as centers of early bronze metallurgy. This
development,
along with the cultivation of wet rice, provided the
impetus for social and
political organization. Research
suggests that these innovations may actually
have been transmitted
from there to the rest of Asia, including to China.
The Thai are related linguistically to Tai groups originating in
southern
China. Migrations from southern China to
Southeast Asia may have occurred in
the 6th and 7th centuries. Malay,
Mon, and Khmer civilizations flourished in
the region prior to the
arrival of the ethnic
Tai.
Thais date the founding of their nation to the 13th century.
According to
tradition, in 1238, Thai chieftains
overthrew their Khmer overlords at
Sukhothai and established a Thai kingdom. After its decline, a new
Thai
kingdom emerged in 1350 on the
Chao Praya River. At the same time, there was
an equally important
Tai kingdom of Lanna, centered in Chiang Mai, which
rivaled Sukhothai and Ayutthaya for centuries, and which defines
northern
Thai identity to this
day.
The first ruler of the Kingdom of Ayutthaya, King Rama Thibodi, made
two
important contributions to Thai history:
the establishment and promotion of
Theravada Buddhism as the
official religion--to differentiate his kingdom
from the neighboring Hindu kingdom of Angkor--and the compilation of
the
Dharmashastra, a legal code based on
Hindu sources and traditional Thai
custom. The Dharmashastra remained a tool of Thai law until late in the 19th
century. Beginning with the Portuguese in the 16th century, Ayutthaya
had
some contact with the West, but until the
1800s, its relations with
neighboring kingdoms and principalities, as well as with China, were
of
primary
importance.
After more than 400 years of power, in 1767, the Kingdom of Ayutthaya
was
brought down by invading Burmese armies and its
capital burned. After a
single-reign
capital established at Thonburi by Taksin, a new capital city
was founded in 1782, across the Chao Phraya at the site of
present-day
Bangkok, by the
founder of the Chakri dynasty. The first Chakri king was
crowned Rama I. Rama I's heirs became increasingly concerned with the
threat
of European colonialism after British victories in neighboring
Burma in
1826.
The first Thai recognition of Western power in the region was the
Treaty of
Amity and Commerce with the United Kingdom in 1826.
In 1833, the United
States began
diplomatic exchanges with Siam, as Thailand was called until
1938. However, it was during the later reigns of Rama IV (or King
Mongkut,
1851-68), and his son Rama V (King Chulalongkorn
(1868-1910), that Thailand
established firm rapprochement with
Western powers. The Thais believe that
the diplomatic
skills of these monarchs, combined with the
modernizing
reforms of the Thai
Government, made Siam the only country in South
and
Southeast Asia to avoid European
colonization.
In 1932, a bloodless coup transformed the Government of Thailand from
an
absolute to a constitutional monarchy.
King Prajadhipok (Rama VII) initially
accepted this change but later
surrendered the kingship to his 10-year-old
nephew. Upon
his abdication, King Prajadhipok said that the obligation of a
ruler was to reign for the good of the whole people, not for a select
few.
Although nominally a constitutional monarchy after 1932, Thailand was
ruled
by a series of military governments interspersed with
brief periods of
democracy.
Following the 1932 revolution that imposed constitutional limits
on the monarchy, Thai politics was dominated for a half-century by a
military
and bureaucratic elite. Changes of government were effected
primarily by
means of a long series of mostly
bloodless coups. Thailand was occupied by
the Japanese
during the Second World War until Japan's defeat in
1945.
Beginning with a brief experiment in democracy during the mid-1970s,
civilian
democratic political institutions slowly gained greater
authority,
culminating in 1988 when Chatichai Choonavan--leader of the Thai
Nation
Party--assumed office as the
country's first democratically elected Prime
Minister in more than a decade. Three years later, yet another bloodless
coup
ended his
term.
Shortly afterward, the military appointed Anand Panyarachun, a
businessman
and former diplomat, to head a largely
civilian interim government and
promised to hold elections in the near future. However,
following
inconclusive elections, former army commander Suchinda Kraprayoon
was
appointed Prime
Minister. Thais reacted to the appointment by demanding an
end to military influence in government. Demonstrations were
violently
suppressed by the
military; in May 1992, soldiers killed at least
50
protesters.
Domestic and international reaction to the violence forced Suchinda
to
resign, and the nation once
again turned to Anand Panyarachun, who was named
interim Prime
Minister until new elections in September 1992. In
those
elections, the political
parties that had opposed the military in May 1992
won by
a narrow majority, and Chuan Leekpai, a leader of the
Democratic
Party, became Prime
Minister. Chuan dissolved Parliament in May 1995, and the
Thai Nation
Party won the largest number of parliamentary seats in subsequent
elections. Party leader Banharn Silpa-Archa became Prime Minister but
held
the office only little more than a year. Following
elections held in November
1996, Chavalit Youngchaiyudh formed a
coalition government and became Prime
Minister. The onset of
the Asian financial crisis caused a loss of confidence
in the Chavalit
government and forced him to hand over power to Chuan Leekpai
in
November 1997. Chuan formed a coalition government based on the themes of
prudent economic management and institution of political reforms
mandated by
Thailand's 1997
constitution.
In January 2001, telecommunications multimillionaire Thaksin
Shinawatra and
his Thai Rak Thai (TRT) party won a decisive
victory on a populist platform
of economic growth and
development. In the February 2005 elections, Thaksin
was
re-elected by an even greater majority, sweeping 377 out of
500
parliamentary seats. Soon after Prime Minister Thaksin's second term
began,
allegations of corruption emerged against his
government. Peaceful
anti-government mass demonstrations grew, and thousands marched in
the
streets to demand Thaksin's
resignation. Prime Minister Thaksin dissolved the
Parliament in
February 2006 and declared snap elections in April. The main
opposition parties boycotted the polls, and the judiciary
subsequently
annulled the
elections. A new round of elections was anticipated in November
2006.
On September 19, 2006, a group of top military officers overthrew
the
caretaker
administration of Thaksin Shinawatra in a non-violent coup d'etat.
Soon thereafter, the coup leaders issued an interim constitution
and
appointed Surayud
Chulanont as interim Prime Minister for the approximately
one-year period until a new constitution could be written and ratified
and
new democratic elections held. On August 19, 2007,
Thai voters approved a new
constitution in a national referendum. The
government subsequently announced
that general elections would take
place December 23,
2007.
Since the end of the Second World War in 1945, Thailand has had very
close
relations with the United States. Threatened by
communist revolutions in
neighboring
countries such as Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos, Thailand actively
sought U.S. assistance to contain communist expansion in the region.
Thailand
also has been an active member in multilateral organizations
like the
Association of
Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and the Asia-Pacific Economic
Cooperation (APEC)
forum.
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL
CONDITIONS
Thailand is a constitutional monarchy. From 1992 until the 2006 coup,
the
country was a functioning democracy with
constitutional changes
of
government. Elections for a democratically elected government are expected
in
December 2007. The King has been given little direct power under
Thailand's
constitutions but is a symbol of national identity
and unity. King Bhumibol
(Rama IX)--who has been on the throne
since 1946--commands enormous popular
respect and moral
authority, which he has used on occasion to
resolve
political crises
that have threatened national
stability.
Under the interim constitution in force between the 2006 coup and
the
enactment of the 2007
constitution, a unicameral National
Legislative
Assembly was
appointed by the military leadership. Under the
1997
constitution, the National Assembly consisted of two chambers--the
Senate and
the House of Representatives. The Senate was a non-partisan
body with limited
legislative powers, composed of 200 directly elected
members from constituent
districts, with every province having at
least one Senator. The House of
Representatives had 500 members, 400 of whom were directly elected
from
constituent districts, and the
remainder drawn proportionally from party
lists. Under the 2007 constitution, the Senate will have 150 members, 76
of
whom will be directly elected (one per district). The
remaining 74 will be
appointed by a panel comprised of
judges and senior independent officials
from a list
of candidates compiled by the Election Commission. The House will
have
480 members, 400 of whom will be directly elected from
constituent
districts and the remainder
drawn proportionally from party
lists.
Thailand's legal system blends principles of traditional Thai and
Western
laws. Under the 1997 constitution, the
Constitutional Court was the highest
court of appeals, though
its jurisdiction was limited to clearly defined
constitutional issues. Its members were nominated by the Senate and
appointed
by the King. The Courts of Justice have jurisdiction over
criminal and civil
cases and are organized in three tiers: Courts of
First Instance, the Court
of Appeals, and the Supreme Court of
Justice. Administrative courts have
jurisdiction over suits between private parties and the government, and
cases
in which one government entity is suing another. In the current
environment,
the court system is largely the same, with the exception
that the
Constitutional Court has been replaced by a Constitutional Tribunal
composed
of judges from the other high courts. In Thailand's southern
border
provinces, where Muslims constitute the majority of the
population,
Provincial Islamic Committees have limited jurisdiction over probate,
family,
marriage, and divorce
cases.
Thailand's 76 provinces include the metropolis of greater Bangkok.
Bangkok's
governor is popularly elected, but those of the remaining
provinces are
career civil servants
appointed by the Ministry of
Interior.
Principal Government
Officials
Chief of State--King Bhumibol
Adulyadej
Interim Prime Minister--Surayud
Chulanont
Interim Minister of Foreign Affairs--Nitya
Pibulsongram
Ambassador to the U.S.--Krit
Garnjana-Goonchorn
Ambassador to the UN--Laxanachantorn
Laohaphan
Thailand maintains an embassy in the United States at 1024 Wisconsin
Ave. NW,
Washington DC 20007 (tel. 202-944-3600). Consulates are
located in New York
City, Chicago, and Los
Angeles.
ECONOMY
The Thai economy is export-dependent, with exports of goods and
services
accounting for 68.6% of GDP in 2006.
Thailand's recovery from the 1997-98
Asian
financial crisis relied largely on external demand from the
United
States and other foreign markets. The
Thaksin government took office in
February 2001 with the intention of stimulating domestic demand and reducing
Thailand's reliance on foreign trade and investment. From 2001-2006,
the
Thaksin administration embraced a "dual
track" economic policy that combined
domestic stimulus with
Thailand's traditional promotion of open markets and
foreign
investment. Weak export demand held 2001 GDP growth to
2.2%.
Beginning in
2002, however, domestic stimulus and export revival fueled a
better performance, with real GDP growth at 7.1% in 2003 and 6.3% in
2004. In
2005, the economy decelerated to a 4.5% annual GDP growth
rate due to the
tsunami catastrophe, drought, and
violence in the three
southernmost
provinces. For 2006, the rebound of production in agriculture
and
manufacturing coupled with soaring numbers of tourists increased GDP by 5.0%
(year-on-year).
Before the financial crisis, the Thai economy had years of
manufacturing-led
economic growth--averaging 9.4% for the decade up
to 1996. Relatively
abundant and inexpensive labor and natural resources, fiscal
conservatism,
open foreign investment policies, and
encouragement of the private sector
underlay the
economic success in the years up to 1997. The economy
is
essentially a
free-enterprise system. Certain services--such as
power
generation,
transportation, and communications--are state-owned and operated,
but
the government is considering privatizing them in the wake of
the
financial crisis. The
timetable for privatization of some
state-owned
enterprises,
however, has slipped due to resistance from labor unions and
parts of civil society. Despite the resistance, some firms were
successfully
privatized, such as Airports of Thailand (renamed from
Airport Authority of
Thailand), PTT Public Company Limited
(renamed from the Petroleum Authority
of Thailand), and MCOT
(renamed from Mass Communication Authority
of
Thailand).
The Royal Thai Government welcomes foreign investment, and investors
who are
willing to meet certain requirements can apply for special
investment
privileges
through the Board of Investment. To attract additional foreign
investment, the government has modified its investment regulations.
In a
reaction to former Prime Minister
Thaksin's sale of his telecommunications
company to
foreign investors, the interim Thai government
introduced
amendments
to its Foreign Business Act during 2007 which would apply greater
restrictions on the ability of non-Thais to own or control
businesses
operating in the
Thai services
sector.
The organized labor movement remains weak and divided in Thailand;
less than
2% of the work force is unionized. In 2000, the State
Enterprise Labor
Relations Act
(SELRA) was passed, giving public sector employees
similar
rights to those of private sector
workers, including the right to unionize.
Roughly 40% of Thailand's labor force is employed in agriculture
(data based
on Bank of Thailand.) Rice is the country's most
important crop; Thailand is
the largest exporter in the world rice
market. Other agricultural commodities
produced in significant amounts
include fish and fishery products, tapioca,
rubber, corn, and
sugar. Exports of processed foods such as canned tuna,
canned pineapples, and frozen shrimp are on the
rise.
Thailand's increasingly diversified manufacturing sector is the
largest
contributor to growth.
Industries registering rapid increases in production
included
computers and electronics, furniture, wood products, canned food,
toys, plastic products, gems, and jewelry. High-technology products
such as
integrated circuits and parts, hard disc drives,
electrical appliances,
vehicles, and
vehicle parts are now leading Thailand's strong growth
in
exports. The appreciation of the
Thai baht to the U.S. dollar relative to
other
regional currencies during the 2006-2007 period has dampened some of
Thailand's exports, and export sector margins have been affected. To
help
arrest baht appreciation, the Bank of Thailand
applied controls on the import
of capital into the country in December
2006. Nevertheless, the baht
continued to
appreciate.
The United States is Thailand's largest export market and
third-largest
supplier after Japan and
China. While Thailand's traditional major markets
have
been North America, Japan, and Europe, economic recovery
among
Thailand's regional trading partners has helped Thai export growth (21.6% in
2004, 15.0% in 2005, and 17.4% in 2006, and 16.6% in the first half
of 2007).
Due to domestic political uncertainty and concern about
government's economic
policies, Thai domestic demand and private
investment were flat from early
2006 and remained flat at
mid-2007.
Machinery and parts, vehicles, electronic integrated circuits,
chemicals,
crude oil and fuels, and iron and steel
are among Thailand's principal
imports. The moderation in import levels (7.0% increase in 2006 versus 26.0%
in 2005) reflects the low confidence of both consumers and
investors.
Thailand is a member of the World Trade Organization (WTO) and the
Cairns
Group of agricultural exporters. Tourism
contributes significantly to the
Thai economy
(about 6%). Tourist arrivals, which declined in 2005 due to the
tsunami catastrophe, recovered strongly in
2006.
Bangkok and its environs are the most prosperous part of Thailand,
and the
barren northeast is the poorest. An overriding
concern of successive Thai
Governments, and a
particularly strong focus of the Thaksin government, has
been
to reduce these regional income differentials, which have
been
exacerbated by rapid economic growth in and around Bangkok and the financial
crisis. The government has tried to stimulate provincial economic
growth with
programs such as the Eastern Seaboard project and the
development of an
alternate deep-sea
port on Thailand's southern peninsula. It also
is
conducting
discussions with Malaysia to focus on economic development along
the Thai-Malaysian
border.
Although the economy has demonstrated moderate positive growth since
1999,
future performance depends on continued reform of
the financial sector,
corporate debt
restructuring, attracting foreign investment, and increasing
exports. Telecommunications, transportation networks, and
electricity
generation
showed increasing strain during the period of sustained economic
growth and may pose a future challenge. Thailand's growing shortage
of
engineers and skilled
technical personnel may limit its future technological
creativity and
productivity.
FOREIGN
RELATIONS
Thailand's foreign policy includes support for ASEAN in the interest
of
regional stability and emphasis on a
close and longstanding security
relationship with the United
States.
Thailand participates fully in international and regional
organizations. It
has developed increasingly close ties with
other ASEAN members--Indonesia,
Malaysia, the
Philippines, Singapore, Brunei, Laos, Cambodia, Burma,
and
Vietnam--whose foreign and economic
ministers hold annual meetings. Regional
cooperation is progressing
in economic, trade, banking, political, and
cultural
matters.
Thailand continues to take an active role on the international stage.
When
East Timor gained independence from Indonesia,
Thailand, for the first time
in its history, contributed troops
to the international peacekeeping effort.
As part of its effort to
increase international ties, Thailand has reached
out to
such regional organizations as the Organization of American
States
(OAS) and the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe (OSCE).
Thailand has
contributed troops to reconstruction efforts in Afghanistan and
Iraq.
U.S.-THAI
RELATIONS
Since World War II, the United States and Thailand have developed
close
relations, as reflected in
several bilateral treaties and by both countries'
participation in UN
multilateral activities and agreements. The principal
bilateral arrangement is the 1966 Treaty of Amity and Economic
Relations,
which facilitates U.S. and Thai
companies' economic access to one another's
markets. Other
important agreements address civil uses of atomic
energy,
sales of agricultural commodities,
investment guarantees, and military and
economic
assistance. In June 2004 the United States and Thailand initiated
negotiations on a free trade agreement which, when concluded, will
reduce and
eliminate barriers to trade and investment between the two
countries. These
negotiations were placed on hold following the
dissolution of the Thai
Parliament in February 2006 and the subsequent coup in
September.
The United States and Thailand are among the signatories of the 1954
Manila
pact of the former Southeast Asia Treaty Organization
(SEATO). Article IV(1)
of this treaty provides that, in the event of
armed attack in the treaty area
(which includes Thailand), each member
would "act to meet the common danger
in accordance with its
constitutional processes." Despite the dissolution of
the SEATO in
1977, the Manila pact remains in force and, together with the
Thanat-Rusk communiqué of 1962, constitutes the basis of U.S.
security
commitments to Thailand.
Thailand continues to be a key security ally in
Asia, along with Australia, Japan, the Philippines, and South Korea.
In
December 2003, Thailand was
designated a Major Non-NATO
Ally.
Thailand's stability and independence are important to the
maintenance of
peace in the region. Economic
assistance has been extended in various fields,
including rural
development, health, family planning, education, and science
and
technology. The formal U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID)
program ended in 1995. However, there are a number of targeted
assistance
programs which continue in areas of
mutually defined importance, including:
health and HIV/AIDS
programming; refugee assistance; and trafficking
in
persons. The U.S. Peace Corps in
Thailand has approximately 100 volunteers,
focused on primary
education, with an integrated program involving teacher
training, health education, and environmental
education.
Thailand has received U.S. military equipment, essential supplies,
training,
and assistance in the construction and improvement of
facilities and
installations for much of the period since 1950. Over recent decades,
U.S.
security assistance included military training
programs carried out in the
United States and elsewhere.
A small U.S. military advisory group in Thailand
oversaw the delivery
of equipment to the Thai Armed Forces and the training
of Thai
military personnel in its use and maintenance. Funding for
the
International Military
Education and Training and the Foreign
Military
Financing programs,
along with selected other programs totaling $29 million,
was
suspended following the September 19, 2006 coup d'etat in Thailand.
As
part of their mutual defense cooperation over the last
decade, Thailand and
the United States have developed a
vigorous joint military exercise program,
which engages all the
services of each nation and averages 40 joint exercises
per
year.
Thailand remains a trafficking route for narcotics from the
Golden
Triangle--the intersection of Burma, Laos, and Thailand--to both the
domestic
Thai and international markets. The large-scale production
and shipment of
opium and heroin shipments from Burma of
previous years have largely been
replaced by
widespread smuggling of methamphetamine tablets, although heroin
seizures along the border continue to take place with some frequency.
The
United States and Thailand work closely
together and with the United Nations
on a broad range of programs to
halt illicit drug trafficking and use and
other
criminal activity. The U.S. supports the International Law Enforcement
Academy (ILEA) in Bangkok, which provides counter-narcotics and
anti-crime
capacity-building programs to law enforcement
and judicial officials from a
number of regional
countries.
Trade and
Investment
The United States is Thailand's second largest trading partner after
Japan;
in 2006 merchandise imports from Thailand totaled $22.5
billion, and
merchandise exports totaled $8.2 billion. The U.S., Japan, Taiwan,
Singapore,
and the European Union are among Thailand's largest foreign
investors.
American investment,
concentrated in the petroleum and chemicals, finance,
consumer products, and automobile production sectors, is estimated at
$21
billion.
Principal U.S. Embassy
Officials
Ambassador--Ralph L.
Boyce
Deputy Chief of Mission--James F.
Entwistle
Management Counselor--Rosemary
Hansen
Political Affairs Counselor--Susan
Sutton
Economic Affairs Counselor--Robert
Griffiths
Public Affairs Counselor--Anne
Casper
Consul General--William
Bartlett
The U.S. Embassy in Thailand is located at 120/22 Wireless Road,
Bangkok
(tel. 66-2-205-4000). There is a
Consulate General in Chiang Mai, 387
Wichayanond Road (tel.
66-53-252-629).
TRAVEL AND BUSINESS
INFORMATION
The U.S. Department of State's Consular Information Program advises
Americans
traveling and residing abroad through Consular Information
Sheets, Public
Announcements, and Travel Warnings.
Consular Information Sheets exist for all
countries and include
information on entry and exit requirements, currency
regulations, health conditions, safety and security, crime,
political
disturbances, and
the addresses of the U.S. embassies and consulates abroad.
Public
Announcements are issued to disseminate information quickly
about
terrorist threats and other relatively
short-term conditions overseas that
pose significant
risks to the security of American travelers. Travel Warnings
are
issued when the State Department recommends that Americans avoid travel
to a certain country because the situation is dangerous or
unstable.
For the latest security information, Americans living and traveling
abroad
should regularly monitor the Department's Bureau
of Consular Affairs Internet
web site at
http://www.travel.state.gov, where the
current Worldwide Caution,
Public Announcements, and Travel Warnings
can be found. Consular Affairs
Publications,
which contain information on obtaining passports and planning a
safe
trip abroad, are also available at
http://www.travel.state.gov.
For
additional information on international
travel, see
http://www.usa.gov/
Citizen/Topics/Travel/International.shtml.
The Department of State encourages all U.S citizenstraveling or
residing
abroad to register via the State
Department's travel registration website or
at the nearest U.S.
embassy or consulate abroad. Registration will make your
presence and
whereabouts known in case it is necessary to contact you in an
emergency and will enable you to receive up-to-date information on
security
conditions.
Emergency information concerning Americans traveling abroad may be
obtained
by calling 1-888-407-4747 toll free in the U.S. and
Canada or the regular
toll line 1-202-501-4444 for
callers outside the U.S. and
Canada.
The National Passport Information Center (NPIC) is the U.S.
Department of
State's single, centralized public
contact center for U.S.
passport
information. Telephone: 1-877-4USA-PPT (1-877-487-2778). Customer
service
representatives and operators for TDD/TTY
are available Monday-Friday, 7:00
a.m. to 12:00 midnight,
Eastern Time, excluding federal
holidays.
Travelers can check the latest health information with the U.S.
Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, Georgia.
A hotline at 877-FYI-TRIP
(877-394-8747) and a web site at
http://www.cdc.gov/travel/index.htm
give the
most recent health advisories, immunization recommendations
or requirements,
and advice on food and drinking water safety for
regions and countries. A
booklet entitled "Health
Information for International Travel"
(HHS
publication number CDC-95-8280) is available from the U.S.
Government
Printing Office,
Washington, DC 20402, tel. (202)
512-1800.
Further Electronic
Information
Department of State Web Site. Available on the Internet at
http://
www.state.gov, the Department of State web
site provides timely, global
access to
official U.S. foreign policy information, including
Background
Notes and daily press briefings
along with the directory of key officers of
Foreign Service
posts and more. The Overseas Security Advisory Council (OSAC)
provides
security information and regional news that impact U.S. companies
working abroad through its website
http://www.osac.gov
Export.gov provides a portal to all export-related assistance and
market
information offered by the federal
government and provides trade leads, free
export counseling, help
with the export process, and
more.
STAT-USA/Internet, a service of the U.S. Department of Commerce,
provides
authoritative economic, business, and
international trade information from
the Federal
government. The site includes current and
historical
trade-related releases, international market research, trade
opportunities,
and country analysis and provides access to the
National Trade Data Bank.
***********************************************************
See http://www.state.gov/r/pa/bgn/ for all
Background
notes
************************************************************
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change your subscription, go to
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Thailand Country Facts
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