Thailand, officially the Kingdom of Thailand (Prathet Thai, or “Land of the Free”), country in Southeast Asia. Thailand is the only Southeast Asian country never to have been occupied by any European or other foreign power, except in war. The country was an absolute monarchy from 1782 until 1932, when rebels seized power in a coup and established a constitutional monarchy. Since then, Thailand has come under the rule of many governments, both civil and military. The country was known as Siam until 1939 (when it was renamed Thailand), and again for a few years in the late 1940s. In 1949 the name Thailand was adopted a second time.
Central Thailand is dominated by a large fertile
plain, formed by the country’s chief river, the Chao Phraya, and its
tributaries. Much of the country’s rice and other crops are grown in this
region. Mountains and plateaus surround the central plain on the west, north,
and east. The western mountain ranges extend south onto the Malay Peninsula
(Malaya). Bangkok, located on the Chao Phraya near the Gulf of Thailand, is
Thailand’s capital and largest city.
Thai people form the large majority of
Thailand’s population, and most of them practice Theravada Buddhism. Other
ethnic groups within the population include Chinese, Malays, and indigenous
hill peoples, such as the Hmong and Karen. Thailand is known for its highly
refined classical music and dance and for a wide range of folk arts.
Traditionally based on agriculture, Thailand’s economy began developing rapidly
in the 1980s.
The Introduction to this article was contributed by
Philip Stott.
II
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LAND AND RESOURCES OF THAILAND
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Thailand is bordered on the west and northwest by
Myanmar (formerly Burma); on the northeast and east by Laos and Cambodia; and on
the south by the Gulf of Thailand (also known as the Gulf of Siam, the
northwestern portion of the South China Sea), peninsular Malaysia, and the
Andaman Sea. With an area of 513,115 sq km (198,115 sq mi), Thailand is similar
in size to France. Its distinctive shape is often compared to an elephant’s
head, with the “trunk” extending south into the slender Malay Peninsula. This
unusual shape means that Thailand is more than twice as long from north to
south (about 1,770 km/1,100 mi) as it is wide from east to west (about 800
km/500 mi). The country as a whole pivots around the Gulf of Thailand.
A
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Natural Regions
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Thailand comprises five major natural regions. The first
is the country’s heartland: a wide alluvial plain whose fertile soils are
replenished by the Chao Phraya and other rivers flowing out of the northern
mountains. This central plain has been described as one of the “rice bowls” of
Asia because of its high agricultural productivity. The plain was originally a
swamp, created by a much older river system that was partially submerged when
the sea level rose at the end of the last Ice Age (about 10,000 years ago). The
plain is still subject to severe flooding during the wet season of the
southwest monsoon (approximately April to September).
Thailand’s second natural region consists of mountain
ranges lying north of the central plain. Oriented on a north-south axis, the
ranges are formed of granite and limestone. Separating them are valleys, where
the first Thai settled between the 9th and the 14th centuries. Thailand’s
highest mountain, Doi Inthanon, rises among the northern mountains southwest of
the city of Chiang Mai to a height of 2,595 m (8,514 ft). The northern ranges
are part of a wider mountain system that was created when sections of the
Indo-Australian plate moved north, pressing against the Eurasian continental
plate and forcing up the Himalayas and the mountains of Indonesia. See also Plate
Tectonics.
Thailand’s third natural region, which lies to the west
along the border with Myanmar, is also marked by north-south trending
mountains. These mountains create a natural frontier that is breached at Three
Pagodas Pass, which has been a strategic crossing point and defense outpost
throughout Thailand’s history.
To the east of the central plain, the
Khorat Plateau, an undulating sandstone area that rarely rises above 200 m (660
ft), forms the fourth natural region. Dry and infertile, the plateau is drained
by tributaries of the Mekong River.
Lastly, a long peninsula—part of the greater Malay
Peninsula—makes up the south of the country, forming the fifth region. Although
dominated by north-south mountains, this region is also noted for its coastal
beaches and its many islands, some formed of limestone.
B
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Rivers
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The central river of Thailand is the Chao
Phraya, also known in Thailand as Menam (“Mother of Waters”) Chao Phraya. Along
with a number of shifting, unstable distributaries, the Chao Phraya drains the
central plain into the Gulf of Thailand. The river forms at Nakhon Sawan, the
head of the central plain, where it receives the waters of four other important
rivers, the Nan, Ping, Wang, and Yom. These rivers flow out from the northern
mountains. Downstream, the Chao Phraya is fed by waters from the Pa Sak River
flowing from the edge of the Khorat Plateau in the east. At its mouth, the Chao
Phraya is tidal and is fringed with nipa palms. The river is subject to both
flooding and drought. In areas subject to such frequent flooding, the
inhabitants adapted by developing the traditional Thai stilt house. Thailand’s
other important rivers are the Chi and the Mun, which drain the Khorat Plateau
eastward into the Mekong River.
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Coastline
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Thailand has a long and intricate coastline
measuring 3,200 km (2,000 mi). It faces the Andaman Sea in the west and the
Gulf of Thailand in the east and south. The coast is characterized both by
rocky shoreline and more gentle shorelines with mangrove swamps, beaches, and
offshore coral reefs. Resorts built on Thailand’s beaches are popular tourist
destinations, and some, such as Pattaya in the southeast and Hua Hin in the
south, have become particularly famous.
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Plant and Animal Life
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Thailand’s natural vegetation includes a wide range of
forest types. In the south, tropical semievergreen rain forests are most
common. In the north, two types of forests grow: monsoon forests, characterized
by dense-growing, broadleaf deciduous trees, and savanna forests, in which
grasses and sedges (grasslike flowering plants with triangular stems) grow
beneath open stands of widely spaced trees. During the dry season, in both the
monsoon and savanna forests, the trees shed their leaves and fires can occur.
The monsoon forests are particularly noted for their useful species of trees
and plants, including teak, which is highly valued for its strength and
durability, and many types of bamboo. The forests abound in orchids, which are
widely collected and grown in gardens.
Many animal species inhabit Thailand’s forests.
Elephants, traditionally used as beasts of burden, are raised in captivity but
also live in the wild. Other large animals native to Thailand include the
rhinoceros, tiger, leopard, gaur (wild ox), water buffalo, and gibbon. Thailand
has more than 50 species of snakes, including several poisonous varieties.
Crocodiles are numerous, as are fish and birds. Other animals, such as the
Schomburgk’s deer of the central plain, have become extinct.
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Natural Resources
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Thailand possesses a range of mineral resources.
Tin is mined in the peninsula. Important gemstones, such as sapphires, are
found in the southeast, and coal reserves, particularly lignite, are in the
north. Fish are abundant in rivers and coastal waters. In addition to being
consumed domestically, fish are also exported.
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Climate
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Thailand experiences a typical monsoon climate. Winds
blow from the northeast during the winter months of October to March or April
(known as the “dry season”), while rain-bearing monsoon winds blow from the
southwest during the summer months of April or May to September (the “wet
season”). This remarkable annual wind reversal is related to changes in air
pressure and temperature taking place above the high Tibetan Plateau. Due to
these shifting winds, Thailand’s climate varies markedly throughout the year.
Conditions depend on the direction of the winds in relation to the north-south
trending mountain systems.
During the wet season each year, average rainfall
is 1,500 mm (60 in), and during the dry season, rainfall averages between 150
and 250 mm (6 and 10 in). The Thai portion of the Malay Peninsula typically
receives a large amount of rainfall, averaging 2,600 mm (100 in) per year,
whereas northeastern Thailand normally experiences much less rainfall (1,300
mm/50 in per year). Temperatures are somewhat higher inland than they are along
the coast, except at points of high elevation. In the south and center of the
country, temperatures vary little from month to month, while in the northern
hills temperatures are cooler during the wet season. In Bangkok, highs average
35°C (95°F) in April (usually the hottest month) but fall to 21°C (70°F) in
December.
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Environmental Issues
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Many environmentalists regard the loss of forest in Thailand
as a serious problem. In 1960 Thailand was more than 50 percent forested. Since
then, however, deforestation has eliminated over half of Thailand’s woodlands.
Forests now cover 28 percent of the country, and deforestation continues at a
rate of 0.6 percent per year. Some environmentalists claim that deforestation
has caused major landslides, lowered the water table, affected local climates,
and reduced animal and plant diversity. More than 30 mammal species, for
example, including the tiger, are threatened with local extinction. The
destruction of coastal mangrove swamps and the resulting movement of sediment
into the sea have damaged both fisheries and coral reefs. In and around
Thailand’s cities, rivers and canals are heavily polluted. Notorious traffic
congestion and air pollution afflict Bangkok.
The Land and Resources section of this article was
contributed by Philip Stott.
III
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PEOPLE AND SOCIETY OF THAILAND
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Thailand (known until 1939 as Siam) has never been
heavily populated. In 1668 an Indian king was reported to have commented
somewhat disparagingly to a Siamese visitor that “the King of Golconda is a
king of men, while your king is only a king of the forests and the mosquitoes!”
By the 1800s Thailand’s population remained low at 2,000,000, and by 1950 it
had risen to only 20,041,628. By 2008 the total population had increased to
65,493,298, giving a population density of 128 persons per sq km (332 per sq
mi), still one of the lowest in Asia.
Residents of cities are 32 percent of Thailand’s
inhabitants. More than 10 percent is concentrated in Bangkok, where serious
problems of overcrowding do exist. Since World War II, a significant number of
rural Thai have moved from the countryside to cities in search of better
economic opportunities. Many Thai people also have migrated abroad either on a
permanent basis, mainly to the United States and Canada, or on a temporary one,
as migrant laborers, to other Southeast Asian countries (such as Singapore) and
to countries of the Middle East.
With an annual rate of population growth of
0.6 percent, Thailand’s population is expected to double in 108 years. However,
family size is falling. The Thai have a long tradition of family planning and
the use of contraception, which partly reflects the fact that women gain status
through their ability to trade rather than through family size. In 2008 the
birthrate was 13.6 births per 1,000 people, and the average number of children
per woman was 1.6. The proportion of the Thai population that is elderly has
grown in recent decades, with 8 percent of the population age 65 or older in
2008. This number is expected to reach 14 percent by 2025.
A
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Principal Cities
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Bangkok, known in Thai as Krung Thep (“City of
Angels”), is Thailand’s capital and largest city, and it dominates the country
politically and economically. A seaport located in the southern part of the
central plain on the estuary of the Chao Phraya, it became the capital of Siam
in 1782, following Thon Buri, which was the capital from 1767 to 1782, and
Ayutthaya (1351-1767). Bangkok is a vibrant city, in which the old blends with
the new. Within the city, traditional, multicolored temples (wat) and
royal palaces are dwarfed by modern skyscrapers. Bangkok suffers from notorious
traffic congestion, annual flooding, and severe air pollution. Migration to
Bangkok from north and northeast Thailand has swelled the city’s population.
Other important Thai cities include Nakhon
Ratchasima, an industrial city in east Thailand; Nonthaburi, a suburb of
Bangkok; Chiang Mai, the largest city in the northern mountains; and Songkhla,
a coastal city in the southern peninsula. Chiang Mai and Songkhla are noted for
their tourist attractions.
B
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Ethnic Groups
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Although the majority of Thailand’s people (about 75
percent) are classified as Thai, the country has a complex ethnic composition.
The Thai themselves vary considerably, with those of the central plain
differing markedly in culture and language from those of the north and
northeast, known as the Lao. Many Thai have some Chinese ancestry, and Chinese
constitute the largest single minority group in the country (about 14 percent
of the total population).
The mountains of northern Thailand are home to a
number of different hill peoples, including the Akha, the Hmong (also known as
the Meo or Miao), the Karen, and the Lua’. Most of these peoples practice
slash-and-burn agriculture. Many produce dry hill (or upland) rice, and some,
such as the Hmong, produce opium. Farther south are populations of Mon people
as well as groups of Khmer (Cambodian) and Vietnamese refugees. The southern
peninsula is home to ethnic Malays.
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Language
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Thailand’s official language is standard Thai, formerly
known as Siamese, which is spoken by about 40 percent of the population. Thai
is the predominant member of the Tai family of languages, which includes about
60 languages spoken throughout Southeast Asia. The Tai languages are difficult
to place linguistically but usually are linked to either the Sino-Tibetan or Austronesian
language families. Standard Thai is written in the Thai alphabet, derived from
the Indian Devanagari script, and is characterized by the use of five tones. A
strong Thai literary tradition goes back to the 13th century.
Another 50 percent of Thailand’s population speak
Tai languages other than Thai, such as Lao, spoken in the northeast. Most
educated Thai speak English, and Chinese is also widely used. English, Chinese,
and Japanese are often the languages of commerce. The Mon-Khmer family of languages
is represented both among the hill peoples of the north and in lowland groups
of Mon and Khmer peoples. Some Malay is spoken in the south.
D
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Religion
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Theravada Buddhism is the prevailing religion in
Thailand, with about 95 percent of the Thai majority being Theravada Buddhist.
Theravada is a school of Buddhist belief that spread to Thailand beginning in
the 13th century, primarily via Sri Lanka. Thailand’s most characteristic
architectural feature is the wat, the Thai Buddhist temple, of which
there are an estimated 18,000. Nearly all Thai men enter a Buddhist monastery
for at least a few days or months.
Despite the predominance of Buddhism, Thai religion is
highly syncretic, meaning that it combines different systems of religious
practice and belief. Many Buddhist ceremonies include elements of animism
(worship of objects and phenomena of nature), Hinduism, and even Christianity.
Small Muslim groups, comprising about 7 percent of the population, are found
throughout the country, especially in the southern peninsula (see Islam).
Some hill peoples, including members of the Karen, are Roman Catholic, while
missionaries from Europe and North America have converted others to
Protestantism. Very few ethnic Thai have converted to Western religions.
E
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Education
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An estimated 96 percent of Thailand’s population is
literate. The country has a comprehensive educational system that extends from
kindergarten to university and adult education. Education is free and
compulsory for 9 years beginning at age 6, and 97 percent of primary-school
aged children are enrolled. About 81 percent of students continue to secondary
education, which normally finishes at age 17. The country has a wide range of
private schools, from international schools to palace and experimental schools.
Thailand has a growing university sector, and 38
percent of Thais of university age are enrolled. Universities include the
prestigious Chulalongkorn University, Mahidol University (a medical school),
Kasetsart University (for agriculture, forestry, and fisheries), Thammasat
University (for the social sciences), Silpakorn University (for fine arts), and
the Asian Institute of Technology, all located in Bangkok, and Chiang Mai
University, in the north. The country also has a number of teacher-training
colleges. Many Thai students choose to study abroad, especially in North
America, Europe, Australia, and Japan.
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Way of Life
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The Thai have always been an agricultural
people of the lowland valleys and intermontane basins, where they cultivated
wet rice with the use of water buffalo and harvested a wide range of fish and
shellfish from the rivers and the sea. These occupations were often
supplemented, especially in the north and northeast, by the collection of
forest products, ranging from timber, such as teak and bamboo, to foods stored
for consumption during the dry season. In the northern mountain valleys, Tai-speaking
peoples developed an intricate system of small-scale irrigation, called muang
fai. The eventual move to the great central plain necessitated the
development of canals for transportation and, from the late-19th century
onwards, of much larger irrigation and flood-control systems. Small nuclear
families occupied villages, comprising a wat and wooden houses on stilts. The
pattern of life was governed above all by the seasonal rhythm of the monsoons
and by a series of important religious festivals. Many of these festivals were
closely associated with fertility and the arrival and ending of the rains.
The Thai are now an increasingly
urbanized people, with a strong interest in shopping and trade. Thai cookery is
considered one of the world’s great cuisines, known for its range of subtle
spices and sauces. Favorite Thai foods include salads of meat, fish, and
vegetables; soups; curries (stews flavored with a blend of ground spices); and
tropical fruits.
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Social Issues
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Thailand faces a number of social problems.
Corruption affects government, business, and even the Buddhist monkhood (known
as the sangha), and the press frequently reports scandals. Drugs and
drug trafficking are ongoing concerns. In rural areas, many tropical diseases,
such as malaria, dengue fever, and cholera, remain a threat. Wide social
gaps—between rich and poor, city and countryside—compound these problems.
The People and Society section of this article was
contributed by Philip Stott.
IV
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CULTURE OF THAILAND
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In the 13th century two Thai chiefs united to
form the kingdom of Sukhothai, the first Thai state. Lasting until the 15th
century, Sukhothai set forth a cultural foundation that developed throughout
Thailand’s history and continues today. Under Ramkhamhaeng, who ruled over
Sukhothai during the late 13th century and greatly expanded its territory, the
kingdom experienced a period of artistic growth. Ramkhamhaeng is credited with
developing the Thai alphabet and producing the first written inscription. The
various people living within the kingdom were united in part by Theravada
Buddhism, which had spread to the area from Sri Lanka (then Ceylon). Fostered
by the tenets of this new religion, Sukhothai reached a golden age of artistic
achievement during the 14th and 15th centuries. In this period, artisans
produced artifacts of exceptional quality in stone, bronze, and fired clay.
In the mid-14th century the kingdom of Ayutthaya
was founded in southern Thailand. It rapidly became a major power in the
region, ultimately absorbing the kingdom of Sukhothai as well as the Khmer
(Cambodian) kingdom of Angkor. Located on an island in the Chao Phraya River
with access to the sea, Ayutthaya lay well situated to serve as a port for the
increasing regional trade and for religious pilgrimages and commercial ventures
from Europe. Extended contact with foreign cultures and the solidarity of the
kingdom inspired a flowering of the arts. Ayutthaya lasted until the second
half of the 18th century, when it was sacked by the Burmese.
Today, the fundamental characteristics of traditional
Thai culture still prevail in many mediums. However, certain art forms, such as
painting, sometimes synthesize the ideals of Thai beauty and form with
Western-influenced modern concepts.
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Literature
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Thai literature evolved from a longstanding oral
tradition of myths and legends, handed down through the generations. Themes
were based on the Ramakien (a Thai version of the Ramayana, one
of the great Sanskrit epics of ancient India) and on the Jataka tales,
stories of the former lives of the Buddha. Sunthorn Phu was a classical poet of
the early 19th century Thai court who wrote renowned romantic epic poems.
In the late 19th century the first modern Thai
poetry, short stories, and novels appeared. These works addressed everyday
social issues of common Thai people. Notable 20th-century authors include Phya
Anuman Rajadhon (pseudonym Sathira Koses) and Kukrit Pramoj, a former prime minister
who wrote acclaimed short stories and novels.
B
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Architecture and Sculpture
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The most celebrated architectural form of Thailand
is the wat, the Thai Buddhist temple complex. The wat comprises several buildings
that serve the religious needs of the laity and the monastic community.
Buddhist structures from India, Sri Lanka, Myanmar, and Cambodia influenced the
form and decoration of the wat. The temples often have multitiered roofs with
rust-colored glazed tiles and overhanging eaves; wooden finials (crowning
ornaments) in the shape of mythical beasts; and gold-gilded beams, ridges, and
pillars. Ornamental features are often intricately decorated with mosaics of
colored glass, mirrors, porcelain, and inlaid mother-of-pearl. Among the
country’s many well-known and greatly admired temples are Wat Phra Kaeo (Temple
of the Emerald Buddha) and Wat Arun (Temple of Dawn), both in Bangkok.
Stone and bronze depictions of the Buddha in
sitting, standing, walking, or reclining positions are characteristic Thai
sculptural forms. Classic features, such as an oval face and a flamelike
protuberance at the head that is seen in works from the Sukhothai period,
continue in modern renditions.
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Painting, Ceramics, and Crafts
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Temple mural paintings are one of Thailand’s great
artistic achievements. Bold, vibrant colors enhanced with gold leaf adorn walls
in many temple buildings in a tapestry-like motif. The scenes, which cover
entire walls, are inspired by Buddhist doctrines and usually intended to teach
worshipers about religion and morality. They are painted without depth, shadow,
or perspective. Some Thai artists, particularly those who have traveled abroad
for training or exhibitions, are experimenting with combining Thai Buddhist
concepts and western abstraction. Others are producing paintings that maintain
traditional Thai cultural values but reflect problems in society.
Glazed ceramics are also one of the classic Thai
arts. Architectural ceramics adorned the numerous temples built by the kingdom
of Sukhothai. Thai glazed ware later included bowls, dishes, jars, bottles, and
pots made for export to other areas of Southeast Asia.
The Thai crafts of cotton and silk weaving
have a long tradition of royal patronage and continue to reflect the country’s
distinct national identity. In weaving centers in the north, the northeast, and
parts of the south, weavers reproduce traditional Thai patterns. Other crafts
include ornamental woodcarving, lacquerwork, and mother-of-pearl inlay. The
country is also known for its metalwork, including intricate use of twisted and
soldered metal threads to form a filigree pattern.
D
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Music, Dance, and Theater
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Thai classical dance developed from the court music
of India. Today, the movements of Thai dance and the music accompanying it
remain predominantly Indian, although some of the instruments used in a Thai
orchestra are unique. A typical work begins with a structured composition that
evolves naturally into improvisation. The music and dance of Thailand is
closely related to that of Cambodia and Laos. Themes are often drawn from the
Ramakien and focus on Rama and his beautiful wife Sita.
Private and government-sponsored groups have been
working to preserve Thailand’s heritage in music and dance. The premier dance
troupe at Srinakharinwirot University has achieved international acclaim for
its performances abroad, which have included venues in the United Kingdom,
Europe, the United States, and Asia. Some dancers have received royal titles
conferred by the king in recognition of their contributions.
Thailand’s traditional form of theater is khon (masked
drama), which is based on ancient court rituals and depicts tales from the
Ramakien. Performances involve elaborate, colorful masks and costumes and
highly formalized action. Lakhon, less formal than khon, is a
dance-drama involving elegant and fluid movement performed without masks. In nang
yai, large, black shadow puppets made from cowhide are manipulated by
dancer-puppeteers. See also Asian Theater.
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Libraries and Museums
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Thailand’s three major libraries are the National
Library, the library of the Siam Society (a preeminent research and scholarly
organization), and the Neilson-Hays Library. All three are located in Bangkok
and contain extensive collections on Southeast Asian culture.
The National Museum in Bangkok and its branches in
cities throughout the country have collections representing Thai culture from
the prehistoric period onwards. The branch in Bangkok occupies a group of
buildings, some of which were formerly part of a royal palace. It includes
artifacts from the ancient Thai capitals as well as modern crafts.
Several traditional Thai teakwood houses are now public
museums. The Kamthieng House, originally from northern Thailand, is now located
at the Siam Society. The Suan Pakkad Palace includes several traditional houses
and a number of art collections. Vimanmek, the world’s largest golden teakwood
mansion, was built during the reign (1868-1910) of King Chulalongkorn (Rama V).
And the Jim Thompson House, former home of an American who contributed
substantially to the development of the Thai silk industry after World War II,
houses collections on Thai art and archaeology.
The Culture section of this article was contributed
by Dawn F. Rooney.
V
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ECONOMY OF THAILAND
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The recent history of Thailand’s economy is defined
by more than a decade of sustained and rapid economic growth beginning in 1985,
followed by a severe recession that started in late 1997. During the boom
years, economic growth averaged more than 7 percent annually, one of the
highest rates in the world. The crisis of 1997 and 1998 wiped out some of the
gains of the boom and forced major adjustments in Thai industry and economic
policy.
Many different factors contributed to the rapid growth
of Thailand’s economy. Low wages, policy reforms that opened the economy more
to trade, and careful economic management resulted in low inflation and a
stable exchange rate. These factors encouraged domestic savings and investment
and made the Thai economy an ideal host for foreign investment. Foreign and
domestic investment caused manufacturing to grow rapidly, especially in
labor-intensive, export-oriented industries, such as those producing clothing,
footwear, electronics, and consumer appliances. These industries also benefited
from a tremendous expansion in world trade during the 1980s. As industry
expanded, many Thai people who previously had worked in agriculture began to
work in manufacturing, slowing growth in the agriculture sector. Meanwhile,
manufacturing growth spurred the expansion of service sector activities.
By 2006 Thailand’s per capita income reached
$3,050, making it an upper-middle income developing economy. Although Thailand
was technically still a poor country, spectacular income gains enjoyed by the
urban middle class made the country one of the world’s large markets for luxury
cars and other expensive consumer goods. However, by Asian standards the gains
of growth were not distributed equally among the Thai population: between 1981
and 1994 the incomes of the richest 20 percent of the population grew
significantly in comparison to those of the poorest 20 percent. Nevertheless,
nearly all Thai benefited in some fashion from growth. The percentage of the
population living in poverty fell from 23 percent in 1981 to less than 10
percent in 1994.
In the early 1990s a series of economic
policy reforms introduced by the Thai government made it easy and attractive
for foreign banks to offer loans to Thai banks. The Thai banks used the capital
to lend money to domestic finance companies, property developers, and other
investors, stimulating an investment boom. In an atmosphere of great optimism
about continued rapid growth, the resulting investment boom created a “bubble
economy” based on speculation in urban property and stocks. The bubble burst in
1996 and 1997, when stock and property prices declined steeply. As speculators
in these sectors failed to repay loans, many Thai banks became unable to
service their foreign debt, causing investor confidence to fall sharply. The
consequent outflow of capital caused the Thai banking system to crash in
mid-1997. The resulting credit shortage drove many companies into bankruptcy
and created a large pool of unemployed workers. Thailand’s economy remained
deep in recession through 1998, with gross domestic product (GDP) shrinking an
estimated 8.5 percent that year. In the early 2000s Thailand made a full
economic recovery, driven by strong growth in exports.
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Role of Government
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Thai governments, including unelected military regimes,
have in general worked to ensure price stability while promoting economic
growth. Other than in some key infrastructure and energy sectors, the
government has not made extensive use of direct interventions in the market.
Instead, it prefers to exert influence through indirect measures, such as
investment incentives and taxes on trade.
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Labor
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The Thai labor force totaled 36.5 million
workers in 2006. Although agriculture’s share in national income is now very small,
official statistics indicate that 43 percent of the labor force is still
employed in that sector, with 20 percent in industry and 37 percent in
services. These statistics are likely to overstate agriculture’s true share of
the labor force, as many rural Thai engage in seasonal migration, working in
cities for part of the year and returning to the countryside during peak demand
periods in agriculture, such as the rice harvest. Within industry, most
employment is with small firms (those with less than 50 employees). Less than
10 percent of the labor force is unionized, although that figure rises to more
than 20 percent in larger firms of 50 or more employees.
The economic boom of 1985 to 1996 caused
massive growth in total employment, especially of unskilled and semiskilled
workers. From 1990 to 1996, real wages (adjusted for inflation) rose by about
10 percent per year. The employment boom drew many Thai from rural areas to
urban centers and resulted in a large influx of illegal immigrants from poorer
neighboring countries, such as Laos and Myanmar.
Following the 1997 collapse of Thailand’s economy,
unemployment and underemployment became serious problems, with the former
peaking at nearly 3 million jobless in mid-1998. Some of the unemployed
returned to rural areas, but many more remained in the cities in the hope that
jobs would become available again once the economy recovered.
A longer-term issue for the Thai economy is the
prevailing low educational attainment of Thai workers, as compared to their counterparts
in other middle-income developing economies. Although the literacy rate is
high, official figures show that only 56 percent of children of high school age
are enrolled in high school.
C
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Agriculture, Forestry, and Fishing
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Agriculture was traditionally the mainstay of the Thai
economy. However, along with the remarkable acceleration of economic growth in
the 1980s came rapid changes in the country’s economic structure. While
agricultural production increased, the economic contributions of industry and
services grew faster, which decreased the relative importance of farming.
Agriculture’s share of GDP fell from 23 percent in 1980 to 11 percent in 1996
as Thailand moved into the ranks of the so-called newly industrializing economies.
Thailand has 18 million hectares (44 million acres)
of land under cultivation. Of this total, about 5 million hectares (12 million
acres) of irrigated land produce most of the country’s major crop, rice. Other
important crops include sugarcane, natural rubber, corn, soybeans, coconuts,
and other tropical fruits. Agricultural exports, especially of rice, were the
basis for most of Thailand’s early trade. The country is still a major exporter
of rice, but its agricultural trade has diversified to include rubber, cassava,
fruits, flowers, and many other products.
Much of the expansion of agriculture has taken
place at the expense of forest cover, which is disappearing at a rate of 0.6
percent per year. The timber harvest in 2006 was 28 million cubic meters (1
billion cubic feet), nearly all of which was burned for fuel. Following severe
flood damage caused by deforestation, the Thai government banned all commercial
logging in 1989. Formerly an exporter of tropical hardwoods, Thailand now
imports much of its timber from neighboring countries.
Fisheries in the Gulf of Thailand and the Andaman
Sea, along with inland and coastal fish farms, yielded 3.7 million metric tons
of fish and shellfish in 2005, up from 1.8 million metric tons in 1980.
Thailand is one of the world’s leading exporters of fish and seafood products,
especially farmed shrimp.
The rapid growth of agriculture and fisheries
has raised concerns about the long-term sustainability of these industries.
Urbanization and the spread of irrigation have generated water shortages and
spawned conflicts over water use. In dryland agriculture (farming in dry areas
using methods other than irrigation), intensive cultivation has led to soil
erosion and land degradation, which in turn have required farmers to increase
fertilizer use in order to maintain yields. Mangrove swamps and other coastal
ecosystems have been severely depleted to create fisheries, and the rapid
expansion of the commercial ocean fishing fleet has reduced catches. These
natural resource management issues pose major policy problems for current and
future Thai governments.
D
|
Mining
|
Thailand is not richly endowed in mineral resources.
Chief mineral products include lignite (a form of coal), zinc ore, lead
concentrates, tin, gypsum, and iron ore. However, supplies of most minerals are
insufficient to satisfy the growing domestic demand. An exception is gemstones,
which form the basis of an export-oriented jewelry industry.
E
|
Manufacturing
|
Manufacturing has led Thailand's economic growth.
Manufacturing output grew at 10 percent annually during the 1980s and early
1990s, much faster than the economy as a whole. As a result, the manufacturing
share of GDP rose from 22 percent in 1980 to 35 percent in 2006. While all
industries grew, expansion was most rapid among manufacturers of
labor-intensive products, such as clothing, footwear, and consumer appliances.
Industrial production diversified considerably, spurred by foreign investment,
new technologies, and the growth of domestic and export markets. Major
industries include food processing, textiles and clothing, electronics, motor
vehicles and parts, cement, petroleum, plastics, and chemical products.
F
|
Services and Tourism
|
Thailand’s rapid growth transformed the services sector.
This sector, which includes housing, restaurant and hotel services, personal
services, wholesale and retail trade, and many other related activities, grew
very quickly in response to increased demand, especially from the expanding
urban population in and around Bangkok. The service share of GDP was 45 percent
in 2006. The sector has shifted from low-skilled jobs to formal, high-skilled
jobs in banking, finance, management, and trade.
Tourism is a major industry within Thailand’s
services sector, with 13.9 million tourists visiting the country in 2006.
Revenues from tourism make up the largest single component of Thailand’s export
earnings. Popular tourist destinations include Bangkok and the country’s beach
resorts.
G
|
Energy
|
In 2003 Thailand produced 114.7 billion kilowatt-hours
(kwh) of electricity, up from about 3 billion kwh in 1968. Of this, 92 percent
was produced by generating plants powered by oil, gas, and coal. Thailand is
heavily dependent on imported fossil fuels and electricity to meet its energy
demands. The country imports electricity from hydroelectric plants in
neighboring Laos, and natural gas along a pipeline from Myanmar.
H
|
Transportation
|
Thailand has an extensive network of inland waterways,
based on the Chao Phraya River and linking the agricultural heartland of
central Thailand to Klong Toey Port in Bangkok. These waterways provided the
major mode of transport until just a few decades ago and are still widely used
to ship bulky products, such as rice and oil. Ferries on Bangkok’s extensive
system of canals (khlongs) serve thousands of commuters every day.
Thailand’s railway system, established a century ago,
consists of 4,071 km (2,530 mi) of track. It links Bangkok to the northern city
of Chiang Mai as well as to the country’s western, northeastern, and southern
extremities. The country has 57,400 km (35,700 mi) of roads and highways. Major
improvements to the road system, begun in the 1970s, have brought all but the
most remote communities within relatively easy reach of markets and services.
In September 2006 the Suvarnabhumi Airport opened
in Bangkok to replace the overloaded Don Muang International Airport. The new
international airport ranked as one of the largest in Asia. Smaller domestic
airports are located throughout the country.
I
|
Communications
|
Thailand has a thriving newspaper industry, in
large part due to the 1991 repeal of a press censorship law. Network television
is largely controlled by corporations owned either by the government or by
institutions such as the military. Satellite technology has helped television
reach almost every town and village. In 1997 Thailand had 234 radio receivers
and 281 television sets for every 1,000 residents. Although there are only 110
fixed telephone lines per 1,000 people, the rapid spread of cellular telephones
has facilitated personal communications in all parts of the country. In 2004
there were 430 mobile phones per 1,000 people. That year there were 58 personal
computers per 1,000 people.
J
|
Foreign Trade
|
Thailand’s economy is closely linked to world markets
through trade, as well as through investment and other capital flows. The
composition of trade has shifted dramatically toward manufactures; between 1980
and 2003 manufactures as a percentage of total exports increased from 25
percent to 75 percent. In 2003 Thailand’s exports earned $80.3 billion, while
the cost of imports totaled $75.8 billion.
Thailand’s economy is highly vulnerable to fluctuations
in world prices of its major imports, such as oil. On the other hand, it has
successfully taken advantage of growth in world demand for many of its exports,
including seafood products, clothing and textiles, and electronics. The United
States and Japan are Thailand’s largest trading partners. The establishment of
the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Free Trade Area in 2002
substantially increased Thailand’s trade with other Asian economies.
K
|
Currency, Banking, and Foreign Capital Flows
|
Thailand’s basic unit of currency is the baht.
The central bank is the Bank of Thailand (established in 1942), which issues
the currency. Until 1997 the Thai banking system combined private and publicly
owned banks, with limited participation by foreign banks.
In the late 1980s economic policy reforms
greatly facilitated foreign purchases of Thai stocks and bonds as well as
international borrowing by Thai banks. Whereas private foreign capital flows
had previously consisted mainly of direct investments in factories and
equipment, by the early 1990s the major source of foreign capital was
short-term loans to Thai banks. The boom in capital inflows placed great
stresses not only on the private banking system (to which most foreign loans
flowed) but also on the capacity of the Bank of Thailand to monitor and
regulate the financial sector. These institutional weaknesses formed fault
lines along which the Thai financial economy fragmented when capital inflows
abruptly reversed in 1997.
Beginning in the mid-1980s the baht’s exchange rate
with the United States dollar was fixed at approximately 25 baht to U.S.$1.
However, the 1997 capital outflow forced the abandonment of the fixed rate.
Allowed to float, the baht fell as low as 60 to the dollar before stabilizing
at around 36 by late 1998. The 1997 crisis also led to a number of reforms in
banking and finance. Restrictions on foreign ownership of Thai banks, property,
and corporations were relaxed, and measures were passed to improve the
structure of the banking sector and the transparency and efficiency of
financial transactions.
The Economy section of this article was contributed
by Ian Coxhead.
VI
|
GOVERNMENT OF THAILAND
|
Thailand was ruled by an absolute monarchy from
1782 until 1932, when a small group of rebels seized control of the country and
persuaded the king to accept the introduction of a constitutional monarchy. The
country’s first constitution called for a government headed by a legislature
(the National Assembly), with the king maintaining an advisory role as head of
state. When the king sought to dissolve the new legislature the following year,
the army moved to prevent him, thus becoming the dominant political force in
the country. For most of the next half century, Thailand was under the control
of various military governments.
In 1997 Thailand’s 16th constitution took effect.
It was the country’s first constitution to be drafted by a process involving
public debate, and the first to include a bill of rights guaranteeing equality
and basic human rights to all citizens. The constitution was intended to move
the center of power away from the military and bureaucracy and toward the
elected members of the legislature. It contained guarantees for social welfare
and environmental protection and required the government to report its activities.
Following a military coup in September 2006, the 1997 constitution was
rescinded. The military government drafted a new constitution, which voters
approved by referendum in August 2007.
Thailand is a unitary state, in which the authority
of the central government is superior to that of the country’s provincial and
municipal governments. However, in recent years pressure has increased for more
devolution of power to the provinces and municipalities. All citizens age 18
and older are eligible to vote.
A
|
Executive
|
The king is Thailand’s head of state and the
commander-in-chief of the armed forces. Although the king has little direct
power, he may exercise considerable influence on political leaders and moral
influence on society as a whole. Since 1946 the king of Thailand has been
Bhumibol Adulyadej, or Rama IX.
The country’s chief executive official is the prime
minister. The prime minister is designated from among the members of the House
of Representatives and is usually the leader of the dominant party following
elections. The king formally appoints the prime minister. The prime minister
heads the cabinet, which consists of no more than 35 members. Under the 2007
constitution the prime minister is limited to two four-year terms in office.
B
|
Legislature
|
Legislative power in Thailand is vested in a
bicameral (two-chamber) National Assembly (Ratha Sapha), consisting of a
House of Representatives (Sapha Poothaen Rassadorn) and a Senate (Woothi
Sapha). The House of Representatives has 480 members; 400 of them are
elected from single-member constituencies (geographical areas that each have
one representative) and the remaining 80 are elected through a party-list
system. House members are elected to four-year terms, but these terms can be
cut short if the king decides to dissolve the legislature and call for new
elections. The Senate has 150 members, 76 of whom are directly elected from
districts corresponding to Thailand’s provinces and 74 of whom are selected by
a committee. Most provinces have a single representative in the Senate, but the
larger ones have additional representatives. The elected members of the Senate
serve six-year terms, and the appointed senators serve three-year terms.
C
|
Judiciary
|
Thai citizens are guaranteed due process and equal
justice under the law. At the top of the court system is the San Dika (Supreme
Court), located in Bangkok. It serves as a court of final appeal in all civil,
criminal, and bankruptcy cases. Below the San Dika is the San Uthon (Court of
Appeal), which has appellate jurisdiction in all cases. Courts of first
instance include magistrates’ courts, provincial courts, and courts with
exclusive jurisdiction in Bangkok and its immediate environs. The 1997
constitution recognized, and increased the independence of, the judiciary. As
part of the country’s reforms to enhance the rights and freedoms of the Thai
people, a royal decree created the 15-member Constitutional Court in 1998. This
court makes final and binding decisions in cases involving constitutional
issues, and it may recommend amendments to the constitution.
D
|
Local Government
|
Thailand is divided into 76 provinces (changwat),
each headed by a governor. Except for the governor of Bangkok, who is
elected by popular vote, the provincial governors are appointed by the minister
of the interior. The provinces are divided into 744 districts (amphoe),
headed by appointed district officers. Municipalities are governed by elected
and appointed officials, while elected heads hold power at the village level.
E
|
Political Parties
|
Thailand’s political parties were severely restricted
for several decades following the 1932 change of government but have multiplied
since that time. Many parties serve as the personal political machines of
individuals or small groups, and few represent defined ideologies. The populist
Thai Rak Thai (Thais Love Thais) Party, founded in 1998 by businessman (later
prime minister) Thaksin Shinawatra, was ordered to be disbanded by the
Constitutional Court in May 2007 for breaking electoral laws in the April 2006
election campaign for parliament. Former members of the Thai Rak Thai party
regrouped to form the new People’s Power Party (PPP), which won the 2007
elections. Other prominent parties include the Prachatipat (Democrat) Party,
founded in 1945 as a royalist party, and the Chart Thai (Thai Nation) Party of
former prime minister Banharn Silpa-archa.
F
|
Social Services
|
Thailand has an extensive network of public health
facilities down to at least the district level, and an expansion of medical
education has increased the number of doctors. The average life expectancy in
Thailand (72.8 years as of 2008) is high by world standards. Basic medical care
is heavily subsidized by the government. Medical services have been strained by
the spread of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) and the human
immunodeficiency virus (HIV) that causes the disease. The World Health
Organization estimated that the number of HIV-infected people in Thailand was
about 560,000 in 2005, with 236,000 new cases reported annually. The country’s
AIDS-prevention campaign, launched in 1991, was among the first in Southeast
Asia. Thailand does not have unemployment insurance, disability provisions, or
retirement benefits.
G
|
Defense
|
Military service is compulsory for two years for
all able-bodied men between the ages of 21 and 30. In 2004 the armed forces
included an army of 190,000 members, a navy of 70,600, and an air force of
46,000. Beginning in the early 1990s, the proportion of GDP spent on the
military was reduced substantially. In 2003 military expenditures totaled 1.3
percent of GDP.
H
|
International Organizations
|
Thailand joined the United Nations (UN) in 1946 and
has been an active member of the organization. The country also belongs to a
number of UN agencies, including the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the
International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (World Bank), the United
Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), the Food
and Agriculture Organization (FAO), and the Economic and Social Commission for
Asia and the Pacific. Thailand is a member of the Association of Southeast
Asian Nations (ASEAN), which plays a central role in the country’s foreign
policy. Thailand became a member of the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 1995.
The Government section of this article was contributed
by David K. Wyatt.
VII
|
HISTORY OF THAILAND
|
Although Thailand only recently took its current name
and assumed its present-day borders, its history extends back many thousands of
years. One of the pervasive themes of the country’s history has been the
ability of its inhabitants to adapt to, and accommodate, the changes that have
constantly surrounded them.
A
|
Early History
|
It is natural to think that the history of
Thailand is the history of the Thai people, but in fact it is much more than that.
The Thai were relative latecomers on the scene, becoming the majority of the
region’s population only 700 or 800 years ago. The lands now included in
Thailand have been inhabited for 4,000 or 5,000 years. Even long ago, people of
the region were adept at adopting new technologies and absorbing new
populations.
The society and economy of Thailand’s earliest
inhabitants, in prehistoric times, went through a long evolution. As is
demonstrated by archaeological discoveries at Ban Chiang and other sites, these
early peoples were among the first in the world to make and use bronze tools
and weapons, to which they later added iron. They domesticated pigs and
chickens, cultivated rice and caught fish, and produced fabrics from bark and
fibrous plants. They lived in small villages scattered over a broad area.
In early historic times, the peoples living in what
is now central Thailand probably spoke Mon-Khmer languages (a group of
languages of the Austro-Asiatic language family) and were absorbed into a
number of local states that developed in the area. Especially between the 6th
and 9th centuries, the kingdom of Dvaravati dominated the central plain of the
Chao Phraya River system and the Khorat Plateau to its east. The most enduring
legacy of this period was Theravada Buddhism, which was strongly influenced by
the Buddhism of Sri Lanka (then Ceylon). Many of the region’s inhabitants
embraced Buddhism. Many also were exposed regularly to foreign trade by traders
passing through the region when traveling between China and India by sea.
Between the 9th and 13th centuries the central
plain and the Khorat Plateau were incorporated into the Khmer (Cambodian)
kingdom of Angkor, centered on the ancient city of Angkor in what is now
western Cambodia. This added a Khmer element to a population that already
included indigenous and Dvaravati elements.
The Thai people began to incorporate themselves
into this mixture of peoples from the 10th or 11th century onwards. The Thai
had been moving steadily southwestward from the border region between Vietnam
and China, usually occupying the mountainous areas between major lowland
states. They may have founded tiny upland principalities in the upper Mekong
River region near present-day Chiang Saen as early as the 7th century. However,
only in the early 13th century did they suddenly burst upon the scene in the
Dvaravati and Angkor domains.
B
|
Sukhothai and Ayutthaya
|
Beginning in about 1220 a number of states, most of
them Buddhist, arose in the region. In general, the southernmost states tended
to assimilate the broadest range of cultures and languages, while those to the
north tended to be more heavily Thai. By the end of the 1200s the most
important such states were Sukhothai, Phayao, Chiang Mai, and Nakhon Si
Thammarat. Of these, Sukhothai was the largest. Under King Ramkhamhaeng, who
ruled in the late 1200s, Sukhothai prospered, gaining tributary territories
that extended the kingdom’s territory to the Andaman Sea to the west, into
present-day Laos to the east, and to the southern Malay Peninsula to the south.
The acquisitions were opposed by the kingdom of Angkor, whose western outpost
at Lopburi (the preeminent Khmer city of the central plain) contested control
of the Chao Phraya valley and seaborne international trade.
The Thai people continued moving southward onto the
central plain. This movement brought about the establishment of a new center of
Thai power, the kingdom of Ayutthaya, founded by King Ramathibodi I in 1351.
Ayutthaya was on an island in the Chao Phraya, located at a point reachable by
seagoing vessels. Thus the kingdom was visited regularly by trading ships from
Japan, the Ryukyu Islands, China, India, and Persia. International trade was a
significant source of Ayutthaya’s strength, but so was its relative cosmopolitanism—the
fact that its people were so varied and their skills and outlooks so diverse.
The first century of Ayutthaya’s existence was
filled with warfare, which culminated in its defeat of its main rivals, Angkor
(in 1434) and Sukhothai (in 1438). When Ayutthaya’s next ruler, King
Borommatrailokanat, or Trailok, came to the throne in 1448, he focused his
efforts on reforming the kingdom’s laws and strengthening his administration.
Trailok also extended the wars of conquest farther afield, beginning a long
series of wars with the kingdom of Lan Na, centered on Chiang Mai in the far
north.
The Burmese kingdom (present-day Myanmar) conquered
Ayutthaya in 1569 after virtually annexing Lan Na in 1558, inaugurating a
period of warfare that persisted throughout the century. Ayutthaya did not
reestablish its independence until the 1590s, under the great warrior king
Naresuan. Naresuan and subsequent kings worked to strengthen the state by
further developing its international trade with the Dutch East India Company,
the English East India Company, and, somewhat later, with China. Meanwhile,
Ayutthaya increasingly became known to visitors as Siam.
In the mid-1700s the Burmese monarchy under
King Alaunghpaya began another period of expansion, turning again to the south.
In 1760 Burma launched an invasion against Ayutthaya. The military effort
lasted until 1767, when the Thai capital finally fell following a two-year
siege that resulted in many deaths and widespread famine and destruction.
The Burmese might have remained to colonize Siam,
but a series of Chinese invasions of Burma forced them to beat a hasty retreat.
In the immediate aftermath of Ayutthaya’s fall, a competition ensued for the
Siamese throne. The prize fell to a former governor who came to be known as
Taksin. Taksin was an excellent general who had fled Ayutthaya to the southeast
and built up an army. After defeating his kingly rivals, he abandoned the
ruined Ayutthaya and established a new capital farther south at Thon Buri, on
the western shore of the Chao Phraya. Taksin sent his forces far afield, south
along the Malay Peninsula, east to Cambodia and Laos, and north against Lan Na.
In the last years of his reign, Taksin’s successes went to his head. He became
arbitrary and dictatorial, even requiring Buddhist monks to pay homage to him.
Such actions infuriated Taksin’s contemporaries, who deposed him and brought to
the throne his chief general, known as the Chakri (in reference to his
function) or as Chaophraya Mahakasatsuk (his title, meaning “Great King of
Warfare”). This marked the beginning of the Chakri dynasty, which continues to
rule the Thai state.
C
|
Early Years of the Chakri Dynasty
|
The Chakri took the throne as King Rama I
(Phraphutthayotfa) in 1782. It was natural that at a time of ongoing, bitter
warfare with Burma, an exceptionally able general should have been chosen as
king. However, Rama I was much more than that. He was highly intelligent and a
natural leader. He also was related by blood or marriage to all the leading
families of the kingdom and thus had strong connections with Thai trading
interests, including China and India.
The new king moved the capital across the
river to the eastern shore because the main Burmese military threat to the Thai
came from the west. The new capital came to bear the name of the village it
supplanted (Bang Kok, or Bangkok), although the Thai state continued to be
known abroad as Siam.
Rama I was not free of the Burmese threat
until 1805; nevertheless, he devoted effort to laying the foundations for a
modern kingdom. He undertook fundamental legal and administrative reforms as
well as extensive cultural, religious, and artistic activities. When his son
succeeded him as King Rama II (Phraphutthaloetla) in 1809, the Thai kingdom was
stronger and more extensive than ever, encompassing all of present-day Laos as
well as portions of northeastern Burma, western Cambodia, and the northern
Malay Peninsula.
Rama II died in 1824, and one of his sons
succeeded him as King Rama III (Nangklao). By this time, the world seemed a
more threatening place to the Thai. The British were beginning their colonial
involvement in the Malay Peninsula and entering into war with Burma. Rama III
faced increasing pressure from the British to open up Siam’s trade. Following
the British victory over Burma in 1826, the Thai government agreed to sign a
treaty with Britain that allowed British merchants some trade concessions in
Siam. The Thai signed a similar treaty with the United States in 1833.
In the 1830s and 1840s Siam went to war with
the Vietnamese over Cambodia and Laos, emerging with its dominant position
grudgingly recognized. As the end of Rama III’s reign approached around 1850, Siam
faced a renewed threat from the West. Both Britain and the United States sent
missions to Siam demanding free trade, extraterritorial rights (which allowed
the people of these foreign nations to live in Siam under the laws of their own
countries), and other reforms. The royal court refused the demands quietly,
explaining that progressives in the Thai government could not afford to appear
too lenient with the West. However, the foreigners were encouraged to return
once the progressives had managed the accession of a new king who would be more
receptive to concessions.
D
|
Colonialism Averted
|
The new monarch was King Mongkut (Rama IV),
the younger son of Rama II, who assumed the throne in 1851. Mongkut had spent
27 years as a Buddhist monk and had used the time in intellectual pursuits,
learning Western languages and science. He was well acquainted with the few
British and Americans in Bangkok and had much more experience of the lives of
common people than had any of his predecessors. Mongkut and his son
Chulalongkorn (Rama V), who reigned from 1868 to 1910, are given much credit
for Siam’s conciliation of the West during the next half-century. While this is
justified, much credit also is due to their ministers. Together they blunted
the force of Western imperialism, which swept over much of the rest of the
world during this period. In 1855 Siam signed the Bowring Treaty, which yielded
free trade, extraterritorial rights, and some special privileges to Britain.
The treaty served as a model for subsequent treaties with the United States,
France, Japan, and many other nations. These treaties were known as unequal
treaties because they placed Thailand in a subordinate diplomatic position.
However, by upholding these treaties, avoiding offending the imperial powers,
and playing those powers against one another, Siam managed to secure its own
independence while working to earn the respect of the West.
As modern as King Mongkut might have been in
the eyes of the West, he undertook no fundamental reforms during his reign.
Such reforms would have been bitterly resisted by Siam’s entrenched noble and
bureaucratic families. His successor, Chulalongkorn, was unable to undertake
real reform until the leading members of the old families began to retire from
public life in the 1880s.
Cambodia had come under French control in 1863, and
in 1885 France completed its conquest of Vietnam. Britain took the last
remaining portion of Burma the same year. When in 1893 Siam mounted a
resistance against French troops sent to Laos to press Vietnam’s claims there,
France sent gunboats to Bangkok. The Thai capitulated and had to yield to
France their sovereignty over Laos and also pay a large indemnity. Most of Laos
then became part of French Indochina, France’s colony in the region. France
gained additional territories in Laos and Cambodia from Siam by treaty in 1904
and 1907. In 1909 Siam ceded to Britain the four northern Malay states (Perlis,
Kedah, Kelantan, and Terengganu), while the British agreed to assist in
financing a Bangkok-Singapore rail line and to yield some of their
extraterritorial rights.
Meanwhile, between about 1890 and 1910 Chulalongkorn’s
government launched a major administrative reform, establishing virtually all
of Siam’s modern government. The existing departments were reorganized into
twelve ministries, including ministries of war (for a new army), justice,
education, interior (for administration of the countryside), and public works,
as well as specialized departments for such things as postal services,
railroads, and hospitals. Chulalongkorn also established new, modern schools
and encouraged study abroad. The kingdom’s new administration made tax
collection possible. The government used the tax revenues to finance reforms
and to create jobs for the many modern educated people emerging from the
kingdom’s new schools.
In 1910 Chulalongkorn was succeeded by his son
Vajiravudh (Rama VI), who had been educated in England. King Vajiravudh was an
active proponent of the idea of the nation, and he popularized the idea of
sacrificing, and even dying, for Siam. In July 1917 he entered Siam in World
War I on the side of the Allies, winning for the kingdom a seat at the
Versailles peace conference. Vajiravudh hoped to gain a sympathetic hearing for
Siam’s wishes to end extraterritoriality. His strategy worked, and in the early
1920s the Western nations and Japan agreed to end their unequal treaties with
Siam as soon as Siam completed modernizing its laws and courts.
But King Vajiravudh wastefully spent the nation’s
budget on his favorites and on personal pursuits, forcing his younger brother
and successor, King Prajadhipok (Rama VII), to institute a massive cutback of
expenses. The worldwide economic slump known as the Great Depression, which hit
Siam by 1930, intensified the country’s financial troubles. Although
Prajadhipok favored modest democratization, he was overruled repeatedly by his
elderly uncles. Dissatisfaction grew within the kingdom, especially among young
Siamese educated abroad who objected to the tight political control maintained
by their country’s rulers.
E
|
The Revolt of 1932 and Its Aftermath
|
On June 24, 1932, a small revolutionary group,
including European-educated civilians and discontented army officers, overthrew
the absolute monarchy in a bloodless coup. The leaders of the coup and their
associates—a group that became known as the Promoters—persuaded the king to
accept the introduction of a constitutional monarchy. However, they argued that
the country was not yet ready for true democratic government and thus kept the
army in control. The Promoters were divided into leftist and rightist factions.
In 1933 Pridi Phanomyong, the most influential civilian Promoter and an
intellectual who had been influenced by French socialism, proposed an economic
plan with an emphasis on nationalization of land and elimination of private
trade. The rightist factions denounced the plan as communist. They were
supported by monarchists, who mounted a rebellion against the new regime that
year. The monarchist forces were soon overcome, and in 1935 King Prajadhipok
abdicated in favor of his young nephew, Prince Ananda Mahidol. The prince was,
at the time, studying in Europe, so a regency was appointed to carry out the
functions of the monarchy until he returned.
The 1930s brought about a more strident and
assertive Thai nationalism, an increased role for the military in national
life, and a sharp decline in the role of the monarchy and of royalty in
general. By 1937 the unequal treaties and extraterritorial rights of the
imperialist era had finally been eliminated, and the Thai government obtained
complete autonomy over its internal and external affairs. During this period,
public education improved dramatically, and industrialization and urbanization
grew.
In 1938 Siam came under the prime ministership
of Phibun Songkhram, a field marshal who had helped lead the revolt of 1932. In
1939 Phibun changed the name of the country from Siam to Thailand in an effort
to popularize the idea of its leadership of all speakers of the Tai languages,
not just those inhabiting Siam’s narrow bounds. In changing the country’s name,
Phibun also wished to emphasize Thai identity and distinctiveness against the
country’s Chinese minority, which by this time amounted to more than 10 percent
of the population.
F
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World War II
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In 1940 Thailand fought a brief war with French
Indochina, which had become cut off from France as a result of World War II.
With Japanese mediation, the Thai government regained the territories in Laos
and Cambodia that had been ceded to France in 1904 and 1907. On December 8,
1941, Japanese troops landed on Thailand’s southern coast. This was around the
same time that the Japanese launched attacks on Pearl Harbor, Midway, Guam,
Manila, Hong Kong, and other sites. After tense meetings with the Japanese and
his cabinet, Phibun agreed to allow the Japanese to move their troops through
Thailand to invade and occupy the British-controlled Malay Peninsula,
Singapore, and Burma. In January 1942 Thailand declared war against Britain and
the United States. In 1943 Japan rewarded the Phibun government for its
cooperation with the Japanese by awarding Thailand part of the territory that
had been incorporated into British Burma in 1885 and the four Malay states that
Siam had been forced to cede in 1909.
Meanwhile, considerable anti-Japanese sentiment was developing
in Thailand. With aid from the United States government, Pridi and M. R. Seni
Pramoj, the wartime Thai ambassador to the United States, organized the
underground Free Thai Movement to agitate against Japanese influence. In July
1944, as the war began to turn against Japan, Phibun was forced from office,
and Khuang Aphaiwong, a civilian, took over as prime minister. Pridi continued
to be a major power behind the scenes. When the war suddenly ended in August
1945, M. R. Seni Pramoj returned to become prime minister. He faced not only
chaos and the disruption caused by nearly four years of Japanese presence but
also extensive demands by European nations that threatened to turn Thailand
into a Western colony. With strong American support, Thailand successfully
resisted these pressures. However, the Thai government did restore to Britain
and France the territories in Indochina, Burma, and the Malay Peninsula that it
had gained during the war. After doing so, Thailand was admitted to the United
Nations (UN) in December 1946.
In June 1946 King Ananda died under mysterious
circumstances, an event for which many irrationally blamed Pridi and others
seen as opposing the monarchy. Ananda’s younger brother succeeded to the throne
as King Bhumibol Adulyadej (Rama IX), but a regency council ruled until 1951
while Bhumibol completed his studies abroad.
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Domestic Instability
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The Thai government faced significant challenges in
the immediate postwar period, including rampant inflation and shortages,
widespread corruption, and inexperience among civilian officials. These
conditions paved the way for a return to military rule, and in November 1947 a
group of military officers seized the government. The new military regime was
presided over by Phibun as prime minister.
Phibun’s government, like the military regimes that
followed it, made close relations with the United States and other Western
nations central to its foreign policy. The government sent a small force to
assist UN forces in the Korean War in 1950 and accepted massive U.S. military
aid, which further strengthened military rule.
Thai representatives took part in the Geneva Conference
of 1954, which temporarily ended the First Indochina War (see Geneva
Accords). Later that year, Thailand became a founding member of the Southeast
Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO), which established its headquarters in
Bangkok. This alliance formed to provide defense and economic cooperation in
Southeast Asia and the South Pacific.
Increasingly shunted aside by his military lieutenants,
Phibun attempted to win popularity and legitimacy by staging elections in 1957.
However, the widespread accusations of corruption and ballot stuffing that
followed the elections served to further discredit the government. When Phibun
and his interior minister Phao Sriyanond attempted to defend their beleaguered
regime, General Sarit Thanarat, backed by considerable popular support, staged
a military coup that ended Phibun’s rule. Sarit temporarily went abroad to seek
medical attention, handing power over in early 1958 to a coalition government
headed by his deputy, lieutenant-general Thanom Kittikachorn. In October Sarit
returned to stage yet another military coup. He suspended the constitution,
declared martial law, and banned all political parties. Sarit declared his
intention to carry out a new “revolution” in Thai society, restoring authority
and discipline through measures such as improved public education and rural
development.
Both Sarit and Thanom (who became prime minister
following Sarit’s death in 1963) were alarmed by growing unrest and
insurgency—mainly motivated by poverty—in rural Thailand, especially in the
impoverished northeast and the south. Even more worrisome to them was the
decline of pro-Western regimes in Cambodia and Laos, territories the Thai
military considered natural wards of Thailand. The military believed these
territories had to be saved from the Communism that was threatening to overcome
Indochina with the Vietnam War, which had begun in 1959. This war pitted the
Communist North Vietnamese and the National Liberation Front (a Vietnamese
nationalist group based in South Vietnam) against the South Vietnamese, who
were eventually assisted by the United States.
H
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The Vietnam War
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During the 1960s Thailand increasingly was drawn
into the conflict in Indochina. The Thai government sent a military contingent
to fight in South Vietnam, lent considerable covert military support to
right-wing forces in Laos, and established Thailand as a major air power base.
Numerous military bases were built in Thailand to house U.S. military
contingents. New roads, improved railroad service, and telecommunications
linked the bases. All of Thailand, but especially Bangkok, benefited
economically from the heightened activity the war produced.
Thailand’s increasing involvement in Indochina stimulated
Vietnamese and Chinese Communists to support rebellion among rural Thai, which
engulfed most of Thailand’s outer provinces in the 1960s. As direct American involvement
in Vietnam began to diminish beginning in about 1969, Thailand was left with
considerable involvement in Indochina (especially in Laos) as well as
persistent internal problems.
I
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Struggle for Democracy
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As a result of improved education and
heightened prosperity among the Thai people, as well as frustration with
governmental corruption and inefficiency, the country’s military rulers came
under increasing political pressure by the late 1960s. Thanom’s government took
gradual steps to restore the political rights suspended in 1958. Elections to
municipal councils were held for the first time in a decade in 1967, and a new
constitution was promulgated in 1968. In 1969 Thailand held legislative
elections. The United Thai People’s Party won a plurality of 75 seats in the
House of Representatives, while the largest opposition group, the Democrat
Party, won 56 seats.
As the United States gradually decreased its
military involvement in Vietnam and moved to establish friendly relations with
Communist China, Thailand sought to establish a more flexible foreign policy,
especially toward China and North Vietnam. Meanwhile, the United States
withdrew from Southeast Asia, contributing to a decline of the Thai economy, and
opposition to Thanom’s government increased in the outer provinces and in
Bangkok. The government responded by reestablishing military rule in 1971,
abolishing the constitution, and dissolving the legislature.
In 1973 a series of student-led
demonstrations against the military government resulted in Thanom’s resignation
and the appointment of a civilian cabinet. A new constitution was approved in
late 1974, and a new government was freely elected in early 1975. Stability
remained elusive, however, and elections in 1976 made little difference.
Thailand became deeply polarized between liberals and conservatives, especially
after Communist regimes took power throughout Indochina in 1975 and the
monarchy was abolished in Laos. When Thanom returned from exile abroad in
mid-1976, demonstrations grew into bloody battles on the streets of Bangkok
between leftist students and Thanom’s right-wing supporters. In October the
Thai military and police launched a bloody assault on students demonstrating at
Thammasat University. As disorder spread, a military group led by Admiral
Sa-ngad Chaloryu seized control of the country and installed a civilian and
former Supreme Court judge, Thanin Kraivixien, as head of a conservative
government.
Thanin’s government proved to be more authoritarian than
even the most repressive of the country’s military regimes. In October 1977 he
was overthrown by Sa-ngad and his group and replaced by General Kriangsak
Chomanand. The many students who had fled Bangkok slowly began drifting back to
a society that was slowly righting itself.
The military maintained tight reins on the government
until a new constitution was promulgated (December 1978), elections were held
(April 1979), and military leaders were sufficiently satisfied with the new
order. The military then allowed the installation of a new cabinet headed by
General Prem Tinsulanonda as prime minister. Elections in 1983 confirmed Prem
as head of a new coalition government, and he was reelected in 1986. General
Chatichai Choonhavan replaced Prem following elections in 1988, but in 1991 the
military overthrew Chatichai and installed their own interim coalition
government. When the military manipulated 1992 elections to guarantee a
victory, demonstrations broke out in Bangkok calling for democratic reforms.
The protests were violently suppressed. Thailand’s king then intervened, ending
military rule and installing another interim prime minister, Anand Panyarachun.
J
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Civilian Governments
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In September 1992 new elections brought a genuinely
civilian government to power under prime minister Chuan Leekpai, leader of the
Prachatipat (Democrat) Party. Chuan began the process of writing an entirely
new and more democratic constitution for Thailand, which was completed in 1997.
He also presided over a period of economic boom during which Thailand
experienced one of the highest economic growth rates in the world.
Chuan’s government collapsed in 1995 following
accusations of corruption. He was succeeded by Banharn Silpa-archa, leader of the
Chart Thai (Thai Nation) Party. However, Banharn’s government was soon accused
of corruption and other wrongdoing, and he resigned from office in 1996.
Chavalit Yongchaiyudh’s New Aspiration Party won September 1996 elections, and
Chavalit became the new prime minister.
In mid-1997 Thailand’s economy experienced a significant
setback as the Thai currency fell sharply against the U.S. dollar. Many
businesses and financial institutions failed, and unemployment rose sharply.
The crisis then spread, affecting the economies of other Asian nations. To
control and contain the situation, the International Monetary Fund stepped in
with a package of loans, in return for which Thailand accepted measures
intended to restore its economy to health. By late 1998 the exchange rate had
improved.
Thailand’s economic crisis spawned a number of related
problems, including urban unemployment, a widening gap between rich and poor,
and a decline in social services. The crisis made it difficult for the
government to fund adequate educational reform and to care for the country’s
considerable population of AIDS and HIV patients. A test of Thailand’s strength
in the years to come will be its ability to restore its own self-confidence and
surmount these and other challenges.
In November 1997, meanwhile, Chavalit resigned as
prime minister in the face of criticism for his economic policies. Chuan
Leekpai was appointed to the post a second time. The January 2001 general
elections were the first to be held under the reformist 1997 constitution,
which created the Election Commission to monitor elections for vote fraud. The
Thai Rak Thai (Thais Love Thais) Party of telecommunications tycoon
Thaksin Shinawatra won by a landslide on a populist platform, promising
economic initiatives to benefit small businesses and farmers. Thai Rak Thai
entered a three-party coalition controlling 325 of 500 seats in the House of
Representatives, and Thaksin secured a parliamentary mandate to become prime
minister. His party then merged with the New Aspiration Party (NAP) and the
Seritham (Liberal Democratic) Party to gain 50 additional seats, making it the
first governing party in the country’s history to secure a simple majority.
Thai Rak Thai won another landslide victory in
the February 2005 parliamentary elections, taking 377 seats. Forming the
relatively powerless political opposition in the legislature were the Democrat
Party, with 96 seats; the Chart Thai party, with 25 seats; and the Mahachon
Party, with 2 seats. Thaksin was appointed to a second term as prime minister
and formed Thailand’s first democratically elected single-party government.
K
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Tsunami Disaster of 2004
|
On December 26, 2004, the world’s most powerful
earthquake in 40 years struck deep under the Indian Ocean. The magnitude 9.0
earthquake was centered off the northwestern coast of the Indonesian island of
Sumatra. The earthquake triggered a tsunami (massive waves), which
crashed into the coasts of 14 countries from Southeast Asia to the eastern
coast of Africa. The western coast of Thailand, about 480 km (about 300 mi)
from the quake’s epicenter, was hit by huge wave surges within two hours.
Thailand’s many offshore islands, such as the popular tourist resorts of Ko
Phuket and Ko Phi Phi Le, were hit during their busy holiday season. In the
absence of a tsunami early warning system in the Indian Ocean region, coastal
communities received no warning of the impending disaster.
The tsunami was the deadliest in recorded
history. The International Committee of the Red Cross reported a death toll of
more than 250,000 people as a result of the tsunami and the earthquake.
Indonesia, nearest the epicenter of the quake, suffered the largest loss of
life. Thailand, Sri Lanka, and India reported high death tolls from the tsunami.
Thai officials estimated that about half of the more than 5,000 people known to
have died in the country were foreigners, most of them vacationers from Europe.
The tsunami destroyed entire coastal communities in the
stricken countries. Millions of survivors were left in desperate need of food,
water, shelter, and medical care. A number of countries and international
humanitarian organizations responded to the widespread devastation with one of
the largest relief efforts in modern history.
L
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Military Coup
|
Thailand entered a period of political crisis in
early 2006. After the Thaksin family sold a 49.6 percent stake in the
telecommunications firm that it controlled, opposition forces renewed charges that
Thaksin had used his political position to bolster his fortune. In response to
charges of corruption and abuse of power, Thaksin dissolved parliament and
called for new elections to win a show of confidence.
Three opposition parties boycotted the April election,
which Thaksin’s Thai Rak Thai Party won with more than 50 percent of the vote.
The large protest vote combined with the opposition boycott led Thaksin to
announce his resignation the day after the election. He handed over power to a
deputy prime minister, the April elections were annulled, and new elections
were scheduled. Thaksin returned to work as caretaker prime minister in May. In
September, while Thaksin was out of the country attending a session of the UN
General Assembly in New York City, a military coup was staged. A “Democratic
Reform Council” was formed, headed by General Sonthi Boonyaratkalin, leader of
the coup. The 1997 constitution was rescinded, and the council appointed
retired army chief General Surayud Chulanont as interim prime minister until
new elections could be held.
In May 2007 the Constitutional Court ruled
that Thai Rak Thai had violated electoral laws in the April 2006 election and
ordered that the party be disbanded. Earlier the court had acquitted the
Democrat Party, finding that it had not violated election laws. In disbanding
Thai Rak Thai, the court also ruled that more than 100 Thai Rak Thai officials,
including Thaksin, could not participate in politics for five years. That would
prevent them from running in elections that the military government promised to
hold by the end of 2007.
The military leaders made the holding of elections
contingent on the approval of a new constitution, which they claimed was needed
to curb executive power. In August 2007 nearly 58 percent of voters approved a
referendum on a new constitution drafted by a military-appointed panel. Among
other changes from the 1997 constitution, the new charter imposed a two-term
limit on future prime ministers and made it easier to impeach them.
Elections to choose a new civilian government were
held as promised in December 2007. The People’s Power Party (PPP), a new party
formed by former members of the dissolved Thai Rak Thai, won the largest share
of the vote and formed a governing coalition with five smaller parties. PPP
leader Samak Sundaravej, a veteran politician and supporter of Thaksin, became
the new prime minister of Thailand.