300 115 36MB
English Pages [311] Year 1981
R U R A L DEVELOPMENT IN NORTHERN THAILAND AN INTERPRETATION A N D ANALYSIS
C.L.J. van der Meer, Rural Develggmewt in Northern Thailand. }3RRg1_ page
10 11
line
3
"Thai" should read "Tai"
Table 1
first
pow
should read: 1°11
8.8*
\
Note: all figures are corrected CCIllSLiS
12
Table 2
data except for 1911
Note : uncorrected census data which differ from the estimated
figures in Table 1 114
25
15
Table
"Thai" should read "Tai"
u
Note: "the Tables 1 and 2" should read "Table
26
i
37
32
H2
8
1"
"Policy" shou?d read "Polity" "policy" should read "polity
should read' ".appointment is only valid if1".
19
71+
l
"and" should read "that" 'Q
should read: 'fertilizer application
vary..." 88
u
delete "ha".
91
1"-l
E) g
Table 19
last figure of col 2: "65 3 651"
last figure of col 7: U 5% 5" should read: "production which supports the vieuw..
1145
Table 2u
H
1990" should read "1980"
line 2:
II
line
1980 should read "1990"
Q
153
37
should read: "...Only few settlers.
166
39
should read: "..cultivation by the land owner then .
J tJ I
Table 27
• •
v
11
H
figures of the middle part should be rived to t`p@ left •D *the 5Las~*~5--'€¥w
figures are:
H F,l.L*
52.7'.' l.
188
20
190
1
delete first line
192
1
delete first line
203
2
should read:
26I+
delete
"Ecological arguments also".
II I
O
.the protected domestic • » . H
heading of part A should read: Paddy Housing Land"Total land H holding area
\
RIJKSUNIVERSITEIT TE GRONINGEN
RURAL DEVELOPMENT IN NORTHERN THAILAND AN INTERPRETATION AND ANALYSIS
PROEFSCHRIFT
ter verkrijging van het doctoraat in de economische wetenschappen op gezag van de Rector Magnificus Dr. M. R. van Gils in het openbaar to verdedigen op donderdag 4 jun 1981 des namiddags
to 4.00 our
door
CORNELIS LODEWIJK JOHANNES VAN DER MEER geboren to Spijkenisse
ITS
krips repro repel
'r-
Promoter : Prof. Ir, R. van Hees Co-referent : Prof. Dr. A. Maddison
Acknowledgements
My
in
interest
problems
intricate
the
of
of
development
w o r k e d in 1975/76 when I Nor t h o r n T h a i l a n d was c r e a t e d in at the Nor t h o r n Region A g r i c u l t u r a l an UNDP/FAO pro j e t C h i a n g M a i . Af t e r m y c o n t r a c t D e v e l o p m e n t C e n t r e (NADC) in with this pro ject I s t a r red this research with supper t from
The University of Groningen. the Faculty of Economics, permission to National Research C o u n c i l of T h a i l a n d g r a n t e d carry out fieldwork. Dr. Krui Punyasingh, former direc tor o f NADC, o f f e r e d o f f i c e f a c i l i t i e s a t NAUC, a n d w a s h e l p f u l Deputy for my r e s e a r c h from the in obtaining approval U n d e r - s e c r e t a r y o f S t a t e o f t h e M i n i s t r y o f A g r i c u l t u r e and During the Thamrongnavasawat. Co-operatives, Dr. Thalerng in a friendly periods of fieldwork I enjoyed much h e l p atmosphere f r o m M r . P a i r o j P h o l p r a s i t , d i r e c t o r o f NADC, a t NADC, and M r . Lynn J. H e w i t t , UNDP/FAO p r o j e c t m a n a g e r
NADC's
from
Planning
Mr.
staff.
Branch
of
Attinuth
NADC,
Chief
Bhromsiri,
gave
Of
the
professional
valuable
supper t .
Because this s t u d y covers widely divergent subjects, it could only be carried o u t w i t h c o - o p e r a t i o n f r o m many p e r s o n s and o r g a n i z a t i o n s . I b e n e f i t e d in par t i c u l a r f r o m a d v i c e and c o m m e n t s o n d r a f i s f r o m : Mr.
Amway
Korvanich,
Suwanbubpa,
Mrs.
Dr.
J.P.
Andriesse,
Aree Wiboonpongse,
Mr.
Aran
dr.
Professor
C.J.L.
B e r t h o l e t , M r s . K a t h e r i n e B o w i e , M r . Cham N a n - R u a n g s a n g , M r . Cha yan V a d d h a n a p h u t i , Mr. P . G . D e k k e r , Mr. C . A . van D i e pen, Mr. J. Lindsay Falvey, Mr. Trevor Gibson, Professor
dr.
F.P.
Mr.
Krirkklat
Jansen,
Dr.
G.
Kalshoven,
Pipatseritham,
Dr.
Mr. Peter
K a n g wan D e v a h a s t i n , Kunstadter,
Mr.
Paul
( V o n g p h a c h a n h ) L i o u , D r . Manu S e e t i s a r n , M r . C l i v e M a s s e y , D r . J o h n M. M c K i n n o n , D r . A . J . N i e l s M u l d e r , M r . P a i r o j , S u c h i n d a , D r . R o b e r t A. R a l s t o n , M r . A . G . R i j k , M r . S o m k i a t Osotsapa,
Dr.
Somnuk
Sriplung,
Mr.
Shimbhanao,
Mr.
Mr. Anders Tandrup, Wanat Bhruksasri. Professor Dr. Angus Maddison improving Dr.H.P.
very
the
final
Schapper,
beginning
stimulated
draf t .
I
University
in
1975/76
my i n t e r e s t
in
of
when the
Surasinghsamruam T h a n a Tong t o n a n d
gave valuable am e s p e c i a l l y Western
was
he
subject
and
at
_
advice for grateful to
Australia.
my
Dr.
At
supervisor, the
end
he
the
he did
t h e i n d i s p e n s a b l e e d i t i n g . M o s t o f a l l I am g r a t e f u l f o r the f r i e n d l y supper t from Professor Ir. R . v a n H e e s , who supervised this study. I thank a l l persons and o r g a n i z a tions
who
emphasized
sole
supper red
that
the
this
study.
conclusions
However,
and
possible
lt
need
errors
to
be
are
my
responsibility.
J:
A study like this is difficult to combine with obligations of kinship and friendship. For this I feel especially indebted to Irene, Marcille and Jaas, and thank them for Hans M a r i n and understanding. their and van Leeuwen, Gloria and Lynn Hewitt gave warn hear red care when my health
Finally, I thank my colleagues of the was in trouble. Depar trent of Applied Economics for their encouragement, and Mrs. Maidra Lukkien-Bernadina and Mrs. Gera Jolink for typing, and Mr. A.G.M. Nijensteen for assisting with the index. C.L.J. van der Meer
Groningen, The Netherlands
May 1981
_.ii-
Measures I baht
1
i S about
0 . 0 5 U S $ or 20 baht
1,600 square
raj
20
1 tang
metros and 6.25
is about raj
1 US
$
= 1 hectare
l i t res
Abbreviations
ARD
Accelerated Rural Development Organization
CPT
Agricultural Requisites Scheme for Asia and the Pacific Communist Par ty of Thailand
DAE
Division of Agricultural Economics
ARSAP
ESCAP
Economic and Social Commission for Asia
and the
Pacific FAO
FFT ILO MOAC NADC NEDB NESDB ONCB RFD TALD
Food and Agriculture Organization of the'United Nations
Farmers Federation of Thailand International Lab our Organization Ministry of Agriculture and Co-operatives Nor thorn Region Agricultural Development Centre National Economic Development Board
National Economic and Social Development Board Office of the Narcotics Control Board Royal Forestry Depar trent
Thai Australian Land Development Pro ject United Nations UNPDAC United Nations Programme for Drug Abuse Control UNDP United Nations Development Programme UN
Glossary changed amp fur tambol
province district sub-district
iii
and
Definitions
Concepts
its "swidden" term The from dialects to origin owes England, Nor t h e n or also as "swithen" where i t appears " s w i v v e n " , meaning a " b u r n i n g and c l e a r i n g " , or as a v e r b " t o c l e a r by b u r n i n g " ( W a t t e r s , 1 9 6 0 ; K e e n , 1 9 7 4 ) . I t has by some w r i t e r s t o d e s c r i b e a wide v a r i e t y of been adopted commonly used in is of s h i p ting c u l t i v a t i o n and i t types study this In Thailand. to refers "swidden agriculture" a g r i c u l t u r e f o r which s l a s h and burn t e c h of kinds all in and used niques are which a f i e l d is let t in f allow
of t e r
being c r o p p e d f o r one o r a l i m i t e d number of c o n s e c u Related words years. five "swiddens" "swiddening", are bidden agriculture, practising meaning and " s w i d d e n e r s " ,
bidden
fields,
and
f armers
practising
swidden
agricul-
turn. II
f arming s y s t e m s are Fallow systems" where land in f a l l o w percent 33 and 67 between covers of area local the of which hoe- or p l o u g h - c u l t i v a t i o n a g r i c u l t u r a l l a n d , and in i s more imper t e n t than s l a s h i n g a n d b u r n i n g . F a l l o w l a n d i s unregulated grazing. m o s t l y used f o r A f arming s y s t e m in
f allow vegetation for upland "Permanent a f arming system c u l t i v a t i o n " is w i t h l e s s t h a n 30 p e r c e n t f a l l o w l a n d and w i t h annual c r o p p i n g o f u n i r r i g a t e d error is
which
grazing,
made
are
called
is
a
improve
to
"ley
system "
.
fields. production to refers production" "Subsistence for production subsistence towards Orientation use.
direct
means
a
directly goods and food of preoccupation with provision this sense is u s e d b y h o u s e h o l d s . A s u b s i s t e n c e s o c i e t y in and l i t t l e m a r k e t - o r i labor one w i t h l i t t l e d i v i s i o n o f e n t e d p r o d u c t i o n , where a small par t o f c o n s u m p t i o n at ti-
cles
and
food
is
obtained
from
outsiders.
This
concept
of
the where usage p o w e r t y in to a state of "subsistence" refers which the s e c u r e d . be hardly can l i v e hood of means barest poor, our s e n s e may b e v e r y S u l b s i s t e n c e . s o c i e t i e s in but t h e y may a l s o b e r e l a t i v e l y p r o s p e r o u s . subsistence
should
not
be
confused
with
t o the body o f , p e r s o n s h o l d i n g p u b l i c refers "Bureaucracy" In this sense it duties. official in or engaged office i r r e s p e c t i v e whether officials, government all comprises in an a g r i c u l t u r a l r e s e a r c h s t a t i o n , in a r e engaged they l o c a l a d m i n i s t r a t i o n , a p l a n n i n g b o a r d , or in t h e m i l i t a r y .
-iv
Contents
Acknowledgements / i Measures
/iii
Abbreviations
/iii
Glossary /iii
Definitions and Concepts L i s t of Contents /v List of Tables /vii List of Appendices /viii Figures /1x
/iv
CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTION /1 CHAPTER 11. THAILAND AND ITS UPPER NORTH /6 1 1 . 1 . Physical Characteristics / 6 II. 1.1. L o c a t i o n / 6 1 1 . 1.2. Climate /9 Population / 1 0 11.2. t1.3. 11.4.
H e r i t a g e of the P a s t / 2 0 P o l i t y and A d m i n i s t r a t i o n / 2 6
11.5.
Some
Social
Aspects
/39
CHAPTER III. THE SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC SITUATION /48 111.1. 111.2. 111.3.
111.4.
From Subsistence To Commodity Production /48 Production Structure and Economic Growth /52 Income Distribution /56 Financial Stability /59
CHAPTER IV. AGRICULTURE /63 CHAPTER
v.
LAND-USE /71
Land-Use Systems /71 v.1.1. I r r i g a t e d Agriculture /72 V.1.2. S w i d d e n A g r i c u l t u r e / 7 7 V.1.2.1 N a t u r e and C l a s s i f i c a t i o n / 7 7
v.1.
v.1.2.z V.1.2.3
V.l.3.
Par rial Swiddeners / 7 8 Integral Swiddeners / 8 0 Forestry /84
v.
CHAPTER
CONTINUED
V. 2 Land-Use /86 V 3 Land Tenure /92 V . 3. 1 . Land-Use Rights /92 Tenancy and Distribution of Land /94 V. 3 . 2 C onflicts /98 V v . Landlords, Tenants and Labourers /98 v . 2. Farmers and Foresters /103 v 2 1 Economic and Social Aspects /103 V . Ism 2. 2 Environmental Aspects /110 1
*
I
l
l
I
l
l
l
l
is44
l
I
I
CHAPTER VI. ANALYSIS OF RURAL DEVELOPMENT /125
VI.1.
Development
Policies
/125
VI. 1.1. Policy and Change /125 VI.l.2. National Development Plans /126 VI. 1.2.1 Status and Role of Development plans /126
... .
VI 1 2 2 Development Aims /130 Efficiency in Rural Development V I 1. 3 I
VI.2.
Administration /135 Creation of Productive Employment /143
VI.3.
Land-Use Policy /152 VI.3.1. Land Allocation /153 VI.3.2. Distribution of Land /162 VI.3.3. Land Titles /170 v1.4. Price Policy and Marketing /172 v1.5. Development of Irrigated Agriculture /184 VI.6. Highland Development Policies /194 VI.7. Development in Swidden Agriculture /20 8 VI.8. Improvement in Forestry /219 VI.8. 1. Forest Management and Protection /219 vI.8.2,
Reforestation /220
VI.8.3. VI.8.4.
The Forest Village System /223
v1.9.
Agro-Forestry /229
Foreign Assistance /232
CHAPTER VII. PROSPECTS FOR DEVELOPMENT /_2/+3 Appendices
/252
Bibliography
/273
S u b j e c t index / 2 8 2
Authors
index
/288
S a m e n v a t t i n g (Summary
in Dutch) / 2 9 0
vi-
Llst Table
l
Tabla
.. 2
Population
of t a b l e s
Growth,
Distribution
of
-
1911
Population
pggg 11
1970 and Land
1970 o f M i n o r i t i e s in Thailand b y P r o v i n c e in t h e U p p e r N o r to
3.
Resources, Population
Table
4.
Population
Table
5
1?
Table
6
Rate of migration by Province 1965-1970 Overall and Sectoral Targets and Actual
7
Growth R a t e s Change in Composition
513
Table
Table
8.
in 1 9 1 9 , 1 9 i 7 , 1 9 6 0 and
1970
of Gross
16
Domestic
Table
Product Trends in Gross Regional Product 1971 - 1 9 7 6 Income per Worker by Main ' Occupation in 1 9 7 6 Income Distribution Among Household Groups in D i f f e r e n t Regions Using Income C a t e g o r i e s
Table 11
Income
Table
C o m p o s i t i o n o f T o t a l Agricultural Production 1962-1976 Major E x p o r i s 1 9 6 2 - 1 9 7 0 Y i e l d s o f Major Crops Farm P r i c e s o f M a j o r P r o d u c t s Average Size o f Landholding per Farm Family
9. Table 10 u
of 1973 of
Typical
1976 1.
12 15
Table
12.
Table 1 3 . T a b l e 14. Table 1 5 . Table 16.
Agricultural Households,
55 55 56
57 58
64 61+
65 66 68
1975 Table 1 7 .
Average
Yield
of Paddy per
Raj Planted
Table Table
P h y s i o g r a p h i c Land U n i t s
70 86
F o r e s t e d Land in the Upper Nor th 1 9 7 3 ; Comparison o f NADC and RFD Figures Tenure o f Farm Land by Region, 1 9 7 1
91 95
1976/77
Table 2 0 . Table
21.
Tenure
o f Farm Land in
the U p p e r
Nor th
95
1973
ll+3
Table
Pro jected
Table
Growth T a r g e t s the W o r l d Bank
Table
P r o j e c t e d L a b our Force in the U p p e r N o r th Assumed Increase of the A g r i e u l t u r a l
145
Area, 1 9 7 3 - 2 0 0 0 E x p e c t e d Increase in Employment From Land Allocation for Agriculture in the Uplands
161
and H i g h l a n d s ,
161
Table
Table 2 6 .
Table 2 7 .
Table 28 Table
29.
Growth o f Employment for
Employment P r o p o s e d
by 141+
1973-2000
Land Tenure by D i f f e r e n t I n t e n s i t y o f Cropping and D i f f e r e n t Farm-Sizes Number o f Farmers' Groups and members o f
167
Major
178
Agricultural
Institutions
Sources o f Income in in 1 9 7 6
two F o r e s t
Villages 227
vii
.l-
List Appendix
A.1
Regions,
of
Appendices
Sub-Regions
and
Provinces
page 252
Appendix B-1
Some Regional Annual Climate Data
253
Appendix B.2
Annual Rainf all and Number of Days with Rainf all, 1962-1975
254
Appendix B.3
Monthly Climatic Figures for Chiang Mai Population, Households and Literacy in the Upper Nor th, 1970 Total Population by 5 Year A Group, 1970 Population II Years of Age and over by Type of Eeonomie Activity, 1970
.Appendix C.1 Appendix
C.2
Appendix C.3
255
256 257 258
Appendix C.4 Economically Active Population II Years Age and over by Major Industry Group, Appendix D.1 Appendix D.2 Appendix E.l Appendix E.2 Appendix Appendix
F.1 F.2
Appendix F.3
1970 Gross regional P r o d u c t ( G R P ) a t M a r k e t
259
Prices, 1976
260
Gross Provincial Product ( G P D ) at Marks Prices 1976, Upper Nor th Planted Area of Major Crops 1962-1976 Planted Area of Major Crops in the Upper Nor th, 1977
262
Upper Nor t h 1961
265
261
263 261+ Agricultural Landholding 1973 Forest Type Areas and Other Strata in the
Comparison of Forest Area in the Upper Nor th based on Air Photo Interpretation 1961, Satellite Imagery Interpretation 1973 and National Reserved Forests
266
1975 Appendix F.4 Appendix F.5
AppendiX F.6 Appendix G.1 Appendix G.2
Land-Use in the Highlands of the Upper Nor th 1973 267 Land-Use in the Upland of the Upper Nor th 1973 268 269 Distribution of Landholdings 1975 Planned and Aetual Development 270 Expenditures and Sectoral Priorities
Composition of Planned Development Expenditure to Agriculture
-viii-
271
THAILAND
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national frontier
--
provincial boundaries
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main roads
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5.0
100 km
CHAPTER I . This
INTRODUCTION
study
land.
It
is It
government.
in
pects
economic on
shows
Nor t h e r m
Central
development
land-use
that
It
are
re j e t s
bureaucracy
and
and
by
the
Nor thorn the
foreign
of
and
f avourable beliefs
the pros-
than
held
aid
Thai--
role
experience
less
popular
in
on
development
Thailand
Thailand.
government
such
about
concentrates
for
in
the
establishment
as'
-that
swidden a g r i c u l t u r e
-that
forest
should
destruction
and
be
abolished;
soil
erosion
are
major
prob-
lems; -that
only
tree
forest
plantations
-that
control
a c h i e v e d by -that
aid
-that
and
cheap
this
critical
of
sume
that
can
study
present
are
regime to
to
to
that
can
production
the
be
introduction
provide
assist
of
is
popular
beliefs it
a necessary the
are
f arm
modern
with marketing.
policies,
Within there
and
and
these
change
hills
development; with
required
re jeers
development. lead
opium
for
and
the
pro j e c t s ;
development
revolutionary
government
which
of
systems;
credit,
in
reforestation,
synonymous
agricultural
Although
successful
for
necessary is
co-operatives
inputs
acceptable
abolition
is
development
h i g h input
and
and
is
needed
income-replacement
foreign
-that
cover
are
existing
available
does
and
condition social policy
is
pre-
not
for
order options
development.
Thailand'S a g r i c u l t u r a l development during the l a s t hundred years is g e n e r a l l y considered to have been s u c c e s s f u l : i t s o u t p u t has grown f a s t e r than t h a t of most developing countries, its agriculture has contributed substantially to foreign exchange earnings and to government revenues, and its food p r i c e s have remained low. However, this development was mainly concentrated in and around the Central R e g i o n w h e r e t h e p r o d u c t i o n of e x p o r t c r o p s c o u l d be e a s i l y expanded.
the
Expansion
development
scribed
in
this
region
is
a
typical
example
of
of peasant agricultural expor i s as deby M y i n t l . In o t h e r r e g i o n s t h i s k i n d of d e v e l o p m e n t
was not tation. From
possible,
1850-1980
from
about
vation in
use,
opment
Briefly,
growth
and
ulation
The
of
is
greater
this with
that
by
by
increased
ninefold
area
1.5 of
now
is
under
to
good
crop is
how
that
for
is
to
agricultural
which
for
devel-
increase
pressure,
population
Malthus
and
past
answering
intensification
of
20
quality
expor is from
culti-
nearly
population
relevant
thesis
transpor-
strongly
growing
is
cheap
the
land
question
thesis
constrained
all
under
of
perhaps
differ
production
contrasts
from
for
main
production
lack
while
almost
prospects
Boserup's
questions. induces
Since
of
population
millions,
population
patterns.
whether
ture,
50
twelvefold
the
rural
agricultural and
to
hectares.
expanding
because
Thailand's
5.5
increased
million now
mainly
of is
increase agriculthat
production
this
pop-
possibil-
ities.
To i n c r e a s e a g r i c u l t u r a l p r o d u c t i o n now r e q u i r e s i n t e n s i f i cation of land-use and/or higher crop yields, but such developments are unlikely to follow the same p a t t e r n in v a r i o u s r e g i o n s of T h a i l a n d . There are great differences b e t w e e n r e g i o n s in endowment of n a t u r a l r e s o u r c e s , p o p u l a tion
pressure,
land-use,
and
tenure.
Areas
with
spectacular
growth in the past, such as the C e n t r a l Plain and i t s surrounding upland a r e a s , s t i l l have b e t t e r p o s s i b i l i t i e s for increased production than t h e Nor t h e a s t and the Upper N o r t h , w h i c h a r e t h e p o o r e s t r e g i o n s in t h e c o u n t r y . There
is
analyses
need of
in
and
Thailand
for
cations
of
different
systems,
and
population
a p p r e c i a t e d and and development
for
more
agricultural physical
detailed
development. conditions,
pressures
of t e n
are
regional
The
impli-
agricultural
insufficiently
play only minor r o l e s in economic analysis p l a n s . S t u d i e s of t h e s e f a c t o r s f o r b e t t e r
understanding of development processes could lead to more e f f e c t i v e government development programmers and pro j e c t s . The Upper irrigated lowlands, and
Nor t h has t h r e e d i f f e r e n t k i n d s of l a n d - u s e : the a g r i c u l t u r e w i t h w e t - r i c e as t h e m a i n c r o p in swidden a g r i c u l t u r e i n the u p l a n d s and highland
forestry
land-uses
has
in
the
uplands
basically
and
highlands.
different
_.2_
Each
of
these
characteristics,
which
problems and a d i f f e r e n t impact imply d i f f e r e n t development of population increase and external i n f l u e n c e s . Therefore p o l i c i e s are needed s e p a r a t e l y f o r lows p e c i f i c government l a n d s , u p l a n d s and h i g h l a n d s . H o w e v e r , t h e p r o b l e m s in d i f areas a r e interdependent and r e q u i r e a coordinated ferent policies. in a n a l y s i n g and p r e s c r i b i n g development approach
I n t h e U p p e r Nor t h o f T h a i l a n d a l a r g e n u m b e r o f s t u d i e s but l i t t l e has been out, and p r o j e c t s have been c a r r i e d d o n e t o u s e t h e s e f o r e v a l u a t i o n of t h e g e n e r a l s i t u a t i o n . The
main
purpose
this
of
to
is
study
and
combine
synthesize
also is into a regional framework that such information requires This interdependent with the national framework. and villages f arms, from information of interpretation national sociothe p e r s p e c t i v e of within the pro jects, economic
structure
and
polity.
harmful c o n f l i c t s c o n c e r n i n g land-use in the Upper the major emphaNor t h are a major o b s t a c l e to development s i s in t h i s s t u d y is to examine and a n a l y z e f a r m i n g s y s t e m s many f a c c t s l a n d - u s e t h e r e . L a n d - u s e has and p a t t e r n s of
Because
from e c o n o m i c , agronomic and a n d c a n be s t u d i e d A s i n g l e v i e w has l i m i t e d t i o n a l p o i n t of view.
instituuse f o r
and designing p o l i c i e s . Therefore understanding development t h i s s t u d y f o l l o w s a combined a p p r o a c h and is an a t t e m p t a t s y n t h e s i s . The aim is t o add t o u n d e r s t a n d i n g and knowledge various from information synthesizing and combining by and d i s c i p l i n e s , not t o add t o a par t i c u l a r monosources disciplinary
field
of
research.
main
field
of
interest
Another
in
this
the
is
study
impact
e r r o r i s . The a n a l y s i s of t h e s e government development the Thai government w i t h t h e r o l e of necessarily star is
of
b u r e a u c r a c y . I n many between distinction
cases it is government
impossible to policies and
make a c l e a r bureaucratic
the t o do things and willingness the between policies, and c a p a c i t y t o do them, and between p e r c e p t i o n of problems the e v a l u a t i o n of the Thus t a c k l e them. to policies the of government p o l i c i e s is an i n t r i c a t e s u b j e c t . In impact o f f i c e r s c a n e a s i l y be r o l e of g o v e r n m e n t some cases the u n d e r s t o o d by c o n s i d e r i n g them as a c l a s s , w i t h c o n f l i c t i n g
i n t e r e s t s with the r e a l i t y is
other more
classes. complex.
However,
in
Modernization
many and
situations the
influx
of ideologies and outlook, and among opinions are found.
ideas have changed the traditional government officers strongly diverging
The i n f o r m a t i o n in t h i s S t u d y was o b t a i n e d f r o m b o o k s , r e por i s , interviews, and f r o m many f i e l d t r i p s during the year 1975/1976, and during several shot ter periods of research work in following years. Because most of the r e s e a r c h was d o n e when the a u t h o r w o r k e d in a g o v e r n m e n t office in the Upper Nor t h , access to information from government organizer-tions and pro jects in the a r e a was r e l a t i v e l y e a s y . S p e c i a l e r r o r i s w e r e made t o a s s e s s which findings from pro j e c t s and from research were a p p l i c a b l e f o r development and which approaches a r e u s e l e s s or harmful. T h e r e was no a t t e m p t t o e v a l u a t e the e f f i c i e n c y or u s e f u l n e s s of s i n g l e p r o j e c t s . Studies society
$n development deal with processes of change in and i n v o l v e a number of m e t h o d o l o g i c a l p r o b l e m s . The complexity of s o c i a l r e a l i t y makes i t v i r t u a l l y imposs i b l e to cover a l l r e l e v a n t f a c t o r s . Data are always incomplete, of t e n u n r e l i a b l e and m o s t l y o b t a i n e d from unique events or experiments that cannot be r e p e a t e d . T h e r e f o r e assessment of r e l e v a n c e and reliability of information, interpretation of multi-interpretable f acts usually form imper t e n t elements for development studies. This study includes s t a t e m e n t s and a s s e t l i o n s based on i n t e r p r e t a t i o n s of data and on d i r e c t o b s e r v a t i o n s f o r which hard e v i d e n c e was not available. If development studies are restricted to hard f acts only, they inevitably are f at
behind
social
of
little
If
this
the
reality,
general
book
was
background
ever, for information
economy sable
Issues tenure cussed
little
written
only
information
readers on the
(CH.
for
of
III)
use
to
policy
making,
and
interest.
for
would
Thai
have
readers,
been
some
omitted.
of
How-
not f amiliar with Thailand, general c o u n t r y and i t s s o c i e t y (CH. I t ) , the
and
understanding
agriculture the
(CH.
situation
in
IV) the
are
indispen-
Upper
Nor th.
concerning land-use systems, actual land-use, and conflicts about land and l a n d - u s e , are in d e t a i l i n C h a p t e r V.
land dis-
V I there is an analysis of s e l e c t e d changes and In Chapter trends. The agricultural lab our f o r c e will g r o w about 3 0 percent risk
than
population
creasing
of
deterioration
of
land,
in
the
tive
are
policies,
Chapter
VII
discusses
lopment
par t l y
implementation
making and
summarizes
political
in
in-
highlands
problems,
ecological
uncontrolled occupation of
these
discussed, and
and
par t l y to
show
to
suggest
of rural development
some
aspects
major
and
more
effec-
in
policy
bottlenecks structural
prospects
for
programmers. elements
rural
and
deve-
the Upper N o r th.
Footnotes
1. M y i n t , H . , The E c o n o m i c s o f the D e v e l o p i n g C o u n t r i e s , Hutchinson U n i v e r s i t y L i b r a r y , L o n d o n , 3rd e d . , 1 9 6 7 .
2
B o s e r u p , E s t e r , The C o n d i t i o n s o f A g r i c u l t u r a l G r o w t h , T h e E c o n o m i c s o f A g r a r i a n Change under P o p u l a t i o n
Presume,
Aldine,
a in
of the past decades are policies trends and p r o s p e c t s . P o l i c y
common lands. Government d i s c u s s e d in r e l a t i o n to alternatives
of
because
impoverishment,
uplands
b i d d e n agriculture,
conflicts
and v i o l e n t
loss
and
result
will
this
pressure
sizes,
f arm
decreasing
risk
serious
a
that
past,
the
in
is
There
2000.
year
the
by
greater
Chicago,
1 9 6 5 , Ninth
printing,
1977.
CHAPTER I I
n
THAILAND AND I T S UPPER NORTH
I n this chapter general background information this study. In addition to general features country, contrasting features of the v a r i o u s p e c i a l l y the U p p e r Nor t h a r e d e s c r i b e d . II.l.
is given f o r of t h e whole regions, es-
Physical Characteristicsl
11.1.1.
Location
Thailand2 i s l o c a t e d i n t h e h e a r t of s o u t h e a s t A s i a . I n t h e w e s t a n d n o r t h i t h a s a common b o r d e r with Burma, in the n o r t h e a s t w i t h L a o s , in the s o u t h e a s t w i t h Cambodia and on the M a l a y a n p e n i n s u l a in the s o u t h w i t h M a l a y s i a ( s e e F i g u r e 1). In the southwest i t l i e s on t h e Andaman Sea a n d i n t h e s o u t h e a s t on t h e G u l f of S i a m . The e x t r e m e nor t h e r m and southern
5°36
' N,
97°22'E
points of the and the western and l 0 5 ° 3 8 ' E .
border are and eastern
within
The country has a t o t a l area of 513,500 sq. l e s s t h a n F r a n c e w i t h 549 , 4 0 0 s q . k m . , and i t
population
of
The c o u n t r y
is
44 m i l l i o n
whereas
France
Again
within
had
these
regions
f o u n d y e t each of these t u r e s . The b o u n d a r i e s of ministrative boundaries. l i s t e d by ( s u b ) r e g i o n s .
are
are
and within
km., slightly had in 1977 a
52 m i l l i o n .
not g e o g r a p h i c a l l y homogeneous
t i c a l p u r p o s e s the f o l l o w i n g r e g i o n s Central Region, the Nor t h e a s t , t h e
20°28'N
borders
and f o r
prac-
distinguished:
nor t h
considerable
and
the
the
South.
differences
are
r e g i o n s has i t s own t y p i c a l f e a regions follow the provincial adIn Appendix A all provinces are
T h e South is the par t of T h a i l a n d on the Malayan p e n i n s u l a and t h e r e f o r e also called Peninsular Thailand. I t has more r a i n than o t h e r p a r i s of the c o u n t r y . T i n mining is an lmpor t e n t economic a c t i v i t y . In a g r i c u l t u r e rubber and cocon u t p r o d u c t i o n a r e r e l a t i v e l y imper t e n t in a d d i t i o n to wet
f o r local consumption. Along the marine f i s h e r i e s have developed.
rice production lines extensive
coast
long
T h e Nor t h e a s t , a l s o c a l l e d the K o r a t P l a t e a u , is g e o g r a p h i Phetchabun by the c a l l y separated f r o m the C e n t r a l Region i n f l u e n c e d more by t h e been has history it In its Range. population Its par i s of the country. Khmer t h a n o t h e r is e t h n i c a l l y v e r y s i m i l a r t o t h e L a o i n L a o s . The N o r t h e a s t is t h e p o o r e s t r e g i o n . The s o i l s a r e poor and d r y , and a g r i c u l and cassava a r e the t u r a l y i e l d s low and u n r e l i a b l e . Kenaf of the d r y u p l a n d typical products wet r i c e is where in the country,
the The
lower
areas a n d , just as e l s e crop in the predominant
areas.
Central
hear t
the
Region, because
subdivided,
of
its
of
the
heterogeneity.
country, Its
of t e n
is
centre
is
the
area. This the big r i c e producing C e n t r a l P l a i n , which is p l a i n i s , a n d h a s f o r a l o n g t i m e b e e n a c e n t r e of p o l i t i c a l Central the to belong also mountains western The power. I n some s t a t i s t i c s t h e W e s t is d i s t i n g u i s h e d a s a Region. is t r e a t e d as s e p a r a t e s u b - r e g i o n . More of t e n the S o u t h e a s t f r u i t s and marine a sub-region. Here cassava, sugar cane, the Bangkok M e t r o p o l i s , Of t e n dominate. fisheries products
is shown o n l y b i g u r b a n a r e a of t h e c o u n t r y , s t a t i s t i c s . I t s economy is urban and average much h i g h e r than in o t h e r a r e a s . the
in
Most confusing Central Region.
separately income i s
is the d i s t i n c t i o n between the Nor t h and the agencies define Some a u t h o r s a n d g o v e r n m e n t
nor therm p r o v i n c e s , seven the of region and o t h e r s t a k e a number someprovinces O v e r t i m e the M i n i s t r y of A g r i c u l t u r e has where in between3. Nor th f r o m seven to sixteen i t s d e f i n i t i o n of the changed the N a t i o Now t h e n a t i o n a l S t a t i s t i c a l O f f i c e , provincesh*. the
some
nal
Nor t h
take
as the sixteen
Economic
Agriculture
and and
Social
Planning
Cooperatives,
Board
follow
this
and
the
Ministry
of
definition.
F o r p l a n n i n g p u r p o s e s t h e N o r t h c a n be s u b d i v i d e d i n t o t h e U p p e r N o r t h a n d t h e L o w e r N o r t h . The L o w e r N o r t h c o n s i s t s of v a l l e y s and f o o t h i l l s , a n d has much g e n t l y s l o p i n g l a n d of r e c e n t l y been good q u a l i t y , which has q u i t e in use, taken e s p e c i a l l y f o r m a i z e , and t h e r e f o r e has a n e t i m m i g r a t i o n .
7
The Upper Nor t h is t h e a r e a of t h i s r e s e a r c h and i t s Eea-° t o r e s d e s e r v e more a t t e n t i o n . I t c o n s i s t s of the p r o v i n c e s o f C h i a n g R a j , C h i a n g M a i , Mae H o n g S o n , N a n , P h r a e , Lam p a n g a n d Lamp f u n (see Figure 2). The area c o n s i s t s mainly of h i l l y and mountainous a r e a s w i t h a s e r i e s of r i d g e s f r o m nor t h to south. The mountain ranges a r e generally 1,000 to i n e l e v a t i o n . The t o t a l a r e a i s a b o u t 2,000 metros 90,000 sq. kms. of which about 7 0 p e r c e n t c a n be c l a s s i f i e d a s h i g h l a n d s , 20 p e r c e n t a s u p l a n d s a n d 10 p e r c e n t a s l o w l a n d s . Geographically the area is s i m i l a r t o b o r d e r a r e a s in n o r t h e a s t Burma and Yunan in China. T h e m i d d l e p a r t of the Upper Nor t h is d r a i n e d by f o u r r i v e r s : the P i n g , t h e W a n g , t h e Yom a n d t h e N a n . D o w n s t r e a m they join and f o r m the Chao P h y a , the l a r g e r i v e r of the Central P l a i n . The w e s t e r n par t is d r a i n e d by t r i b u t a r i e s of the Salween r i v e r and the nor the a s t e r n par t by t r i b u t a r i e s o f the Mekong r i v e r . Along the r i v e r s t h e r e a r e b o t h n a r r o w and wide basins of a l l u v i a l d e p o s i t s a t e l e v a t i o n s of about 300 m e t r o s . These basins are densely p o p u l a t e d , whereas the h i l l y and mountainous a r e a s a r e s p a r s e l y p o p u l a t e d .
A l a r g e v a r i e t y of s o i l s is f o u n d in the a r e a . In t h e lowlands alluvial soils are predominant. Most s o i l s in the bottoms of v a l l e y s in the basins are fer tile. I n t h e uplands,
which a r e
rolling
terrain
and
foothills,
of t e n
rather
poor sandy and l a t e r i t e soils are found. These have low n u t r i e n t content and low moisture r e t e n t i o n . The n a t u r a l v e g e t a t i o n is dry d i p t e r o e a r p f o r e s t s . B e t t e r upland soils c o n t a i n l o a m a n d m a y be o f b a s a l t o r l i m e s t o n e o r i g i n . On these
soils,
forests
are
if
have
they
dominant.
a
Where
deep
profile,
moisture
is
mixed
more
near streams, e v e r g r e e n f o r e s t s may be f o u n d . lands several soil types are found, ranging brown ear ths related to weathering products with sandy
a
high and
moisture late rite
retention soils.
and
Natural
h i l l e v e r g r e e n f o r e s t s t o mixed d i p t e r o c a r p f o r e s t s d e p e n d i n g on i t y of t h e s o i l s .
_8_
a
deep
as
In the highfrom reddish of limestone
profile
vegetation
deciduous
abundant,
to
poor
ranges
from
deciduous f o r e s t s and d r y the a l t i t u d e and the q u a l -
Climate
11.1.2.
general the rainy season The period f r o m October. d r y and the months of Fe-
In in
has a monsoon climate. Thailand s t a r i s i n A p r i l o r May a n d e n d s
and
cool
is
January
to
November
March and A p r i l a r e hot and d r y . In the South and bruary, less d i s t i n c t , without S o u t h e a s t the dry season is shot t e r , and r a i n f a l l is h i g h e r than in the r e s t a clear cool period, I n t h e Upper Nor t h and t h e Nor t h e a s t the the country. of have p e r i o d s w i t h c o l d w e a t h e r when c o n t i n night f r o s t s However, Asia. from Central blow
can
cool season e n t a l winds
o n l y o c c u r o n high e l e v a t i o n s o v e r 1000 o r 1500 m e t e r s . I n A p p e n d i x B . 1 some b a s i c c l i m a t i c d a t a a r e g i v e n by r e g i o n .
in
provincial
four
for
the
three
basins.
lower
years
five
to
damaged
the
seasonal
for
Chiang Mai.
climate
Average
rainf all
season,
exceeds
piration. allows mental
Climatic
is
rainf all
may
be
in
throughout
the
Every
that
crops
so
extreme
Variations
in
Appendix
B.3
in
the
growing
evapotraus-
potential
rainf a l l
may
cause
Temperature
years.
some
year,
located
unpredictable.
in
variability
shot tages
all
Nor t h ,
drought.
average
B.2
Appendix
July-October,
period
varies
rainf all
in
illustrated
are
estimated
the
are or
floodings
the
in
water
cropping water
rains
pattern
the
However,
considerable
Monsoon of
because
are
shown
the Upper
in
capitals
that
is
is
This
years.
between
considerably
Thailand
of
feature
imper t a n k
An
that
provided
supple-
available.
conditions
in
the
differ
mountains
somewhat
from
is temperature year the Throughout conditions. lowland e s p e c i a l l y a t n i g h t . B e c a u s e of t h i s , c u l t i v a t i o n of lower, possible a t higher e l e v a t i o n s . Rainf a l l temperate c r o p s is
i s i n g e n e r a l h i g h e r a t h i g h e r e l e v a t i o n s , b u t o n e s i d e of a m o u n t a i n may r e c e i v e m u c h m o r e r a i n t h a n t h e o t h e r . I n t h e mountains,
with
fewer
rainf all
torrential
is
relatively
showers
than
-9-
more
in
the
equally
distributed
lowlands
11.2. The
Population
great
majority
of
the
Thai
population
belongs
to
the
Thai ethnic groups of which a l s o a r e living in neighbour countries and in Chinas. Culturally and politically the C e n t r a l Thai a r e d o m i n a n t . The nor t h e r m T h a i , l o c a l l y c a l l e d khan myang, and the nor the astern Thai, of ten referred to
w i t h the somewhat d e r o g a t o r y t e r m l a o , have both d i a l e c t and d i s t i n c t c u l t u r a l c h a r a c t e r i s t i c s .
The Chinese a r e the most rently since early Thai s e t t l e d in t h e c o u n t r y and
imper t e n t ethnic history Chinese
a
distinct
minority. immigrants
Appahave able to
some w e a l t h y C h i n e s e w e r e reach the h i g h e s t p o s i t i o n s in the c o u n t r y 6 . Many C h i n e s e f a m i t i e s have been a s s i m i l a t e d af t e r a f e w g e n e r a t i o n s , but the Chinese o r i g i n of s e v e r a l i n f l u e n t i a l old f a m i t i e s is g e n e r a l l y known.
I n the nineteenth c e n t u r y , wage-rates in Bangkok were report e d l y t;h.e h i g h e s t i n A s i a , a p p a r e n t l y as a r e s u l t o f u n d e r population7. S o u t h e r n C h i n a , on t h e c o n t r a r y , was o v e r p o p u l a t e d and had low wage l e v e l s . Chinese peasants in these a r e a s were more used to drudgery and low c o n s u m p t i o n l e v e l s than Thai peasants. In the first par t of the nineteenth c e n t u r y the number of C h i n e s e i m m i g r a n t s s t a r r e d t o i n c r e a s e and,
with
a
considerable
few
interruptions,
throughout
immigration
the.nineteenth
and
figures first
were
half
of twentieth century. Most immigrants were employed as coolies in urban areas f o r construction of i n f r a s t r u c t u r a l f a c i l i t i e s ( c a n a l s , r a i l w a y s ) and a s w o r k e r s in t i n m i n e s . the
the
Relatively
remarkably, upward
few
Chinese
vir tually
mobility
many
were
employed
none became
engaged peddlers,
in
in
agriculture
rice
growing.
traders,
and m e r c h a n t s , and p l a y e d imper t e n t r o l e s in of r i c e p r o d u c t i o n and t r a d e in the n i n e t e e n t h
and,
By
shopkeepers
the expansion century.
T r a d e and manuf a c t u r i n g became dominated by t h e C h i n e s e and only r e c e n t l y have Thais become s u b s t a n t i a l l y engaged in e n t r e p r e n e u r i a l o c c u p a t i o n s . The n u m b e r of C h i n e s e in T h a i -
land
is
Moreover, Southeast
unknown,
s i n c e most of them have Thai c i t i z e n s h i p . Chinese in T h a i l a n d i n t e g r a t e e a s i e r t h a n in o t h e r Asian c o u n t r i e s and many have i n t e r m a r r i e d w i t h
-
10-
Thai. Many urban Thai have Chinese ancestors. There are several million people whose culture retains Chinese influonces.
There are several other minority groups in Thailand. In urban areas are a few Indians engaged mainly in business. Some southern provinces have a considerable Malay population. The Nor th has several minority groups, usually, but incorrectly,
called tribes, mainly living in the hills and mountains8. The
first
results
enumerations
1911 of
to
the
for
189210.
was
are
do
in
Table
not
end
for
1977
the
1911:
in
conducted
given
Thai p o p u l a t i o n
estimate
The
The
1970
1.
exist,
lngram9 g i v e s an e s t i m a t e T e j Bun nag e s t i m a t e s 5 . 2 .
are some e s t i m a t e s . p e o p l e for 1 8 5 0 and peoplell.
Thailand
in
census
from
Previous 'but
there
of 5-6 million million people is
his
million
population
fast
is increase striking. U n d o u b t e d l y p o p u l a t i o n g r o w t h by a f a c t o r of 5 in less than s e v e n t y y e a r s is bound to have had f a t reaching implications society. on the for especially Chapter I V , A s s h o w n in
agricultural drastically
population, of the
because
changed have must outlook the emerging scarcity of land.
Table 1. Population Growth, 1911-1970
Average annual Population Census
Intercensal
Growth Rate (percent)
(millions)
1911
1919
9. 8
1929 1937 1947
12. 2
2 2 2 2 2 2
14 .5 17 . 8
26. 8 36. 3
1960 1970
Source . Economic and
3 2 3 1 Social
Commission for Asia and the
( E S C A P ) , P o p u l a t i o n o f Thailand, Country M o n o g r a p h S e r i e s N o . 3 , Bangkok 1976, pp. 11, 210
pacific
The regional distribution of the population is given in Table 2. The Nor t h e n region (Upper + Lower Nor th) has the lowest population density. The Central Region has a popu-
lation density of more than 100 per sq.km. 11
Table
2.
Distribution
of
P o p u l a t i o n and
Land
Resources,
1970.
Percentage of Land Area
Percentage
Population of (millions) Population Kingdom
34.4
Central
10.6 12.0
Nor t h e a s t Nor t h o r n
7.5 4.3
Southern
Source:
100.0 30.8 35.0 21.8 12.4
ESCAP,
op.
cit:.,
Density (per _/sq_.km. )
.
100.0 20.2 33.1 33.0
67 103 71 MY 61
13.7 14 .
p.
T h a i l a n d h a s a s m a l l u r b a n p o p u l a t i o n : o n l y 13 p e r c e n t o f t h e t o t a l p o p u l a t i o n l i v e s in u r b a n a r e a s . A n o t h e r 9 p e r c e n t live in the so-called semi-urban S a n i t a r y D i s t r i c t s 1 2 . The Bangkok M e t r o p o l i s with 2 . 9 million people in 1970 is the only big urban area. The second l a r g e s t town, Chiang Mai, has about 150,000 inhabitants. I n the period between the 1960 and 1970 censuses the urban p o p u l a t i o n g r e w a n n u a l l y by 6 . 5 p e r c e n t . Since 1970 the Bangkok p o p u l a t i o n has i n c r e a s e d r a p i d l y because of i n t e r r e g i o n a l m i g r a t i o n , e s p e c i a l l y f r o m t h e N o r t h e a s t . O f f i c i a l r e g i s t r a t i o n of i n h a b i t a n t s i s i n e f f e c t i v e a n d t h e 5 m i l l i o n m a r k may h a v e b e e n p a s s e d b y 1 9 7 8 . Family
planning was s t a r r e d in the 1960s by p r i v a t e and government o r g a n i z a t i o n s . The government instituted policies o f v o l u n t a r y f a m i t y p l a n n i n g only in 197013 s i n c e when f ami-
l y p l a n n i n g has s p r e a d r a p i d l y , most c l e a r l y in u r b a n a r e a s , b u t i n c r e a s i n g l y in t h e c o u n t r y s i d e . The 1970 c e n s u s indicared
lotion
already
by
a
slow
down
one year cohor t urban areas the
0-8. I n decreasing
from
the
age
of
of
population
was becoming numbers per
13
years
growth,
as
the
popu"
constant f o r ages of one-year cohor t are
o1d1".
In
the
C h i a n g Mai
v a l l e y the number of c h i l d r e n e n t e r i n g lower e d u c a t i o n has d e c l i n e d as a r e s u l t of d e c r e a s i n g b i t t h r a t e s . The main reason f o r t h i s is that there are no s t r o n g c u l t u r a l and religious
objections
against
famity
planning.
Where
f amity
planning f a c i l i t i e s are available bit th control techniques a r e a d o p t e d q u i c k l y . Government e r r o r i s to make f a m i t y p l a n ning f a c i l i t i e s a v a i l a b l e throughout the c o u n t r y are l i k e l y t o have a s t r o n g e f f e c t on p o p u l a t i o n g r o w t h .
-12
are for inat the census15. in r u r a l areas teachers Local carefully. out
figures that Thailand's census is generally agreed It n o t r e l i a b l e . The t o t a l 1970 p o p u l a t i o n of t e r a d j u s t m e n t t o be a b o u t 36 m i l l i o n s under-enumeration is estimated
s t e a d of t h e 3 A . A e n u m e r a t e d carried not is census the t o c a r r y o u t the census d i d not v i s i t a l l houseentrusted was the information h o l d s as p r e s c r i b e d and i n some cases the a v i l l a g e c o f f e e shop. More imper t e n t f o r in gathered
been e n u m e r a t e d 1 6 . o r k h a n rnyang a r e t h e d o m i n a n t g r o u p of t h e U p p e r N o r t h . They f o r m a b o u t 80 p e r p o p u l a t i o n and speak a d i s t i n c t Thai d i a -
Thai
Nor t h o r n
The
the population in c e n t of t h e t o t a l
C e n t r a l T h a i , the schools in used older people and
lect. guage Among
tribe"
"hill
called
so
the
of
most
probably
that
is
Nor t h
g r o u p s have not
is the only l a n o f f i c i a l language, administration. and in g o v e r n m e n t i n r e m o t e a r e a s many p e r s o n s s t i l l
not or a r e h a r d l y a b l e t o speak C e n t r a l T h a i , but almost the Nor t h e r m centuries In past it. understands everybody T h a i l i v e d mainly i n the b a s i n s of the r i v e r v a l l e y s . P o p u l a t i o n g r o w t h r e c e n t l y has led t o a h i g h p o p u l a t i o n p r e s s u r e i n t h e s e v a l l e y s a n d g r o w i n g n u m b e r s of p e o p l e have m o v e d t o are
the
terraces
higher
adjacent
higher
even
and
foothills
in
into
mountains. present an imper tent group in them are occupied in government
Central Thais l a n d . Many o f and
assimilated Thai
Central
areas
habits
Even
are
of
elite.
local
the
e a t i n g h a b i t s of p e t t y o f f i c i a l s v i l l a g e r s of Ban P i n g a r e c l e a r
d e s c r i p t i o n of o p i n i o n s 'among
Thai
Nor thorn
many
Thai.
dialect
and
among
especially
imper lance,
Central
the
with
also
areas
urban
In
business.
in
become
Nor t h o r n T h a i administration
in rural increasing Moermans'
and
related
evidence
of
a s s i m i l a t i o n 1 7 . I n t h e e y e s of t h e Nor t h o r n T h a i , a d o p t i o n and a s s i m i l a t i o n of C e n t r a l Thai language and h a b i t s enhance o n e ' s s t a t u s and chances f o r advancement.
the
entered
group
Chinese
from
the
seas
during
sively
groups
two
are
There
in
Chinese
in
the
Upper
Nor t h u g .
One
region f r o m the South; they a r e descended who e n t e r e d T h a i l a n d f r o m o v e r immigrants
last
the
engaged
of
This
centuries.
business
and
trade.
13
group
is
almost
exclu-
The
other
group
came
overland from Southern China. Chinese had a long h i s t o r y of t r a d e i n Nor t h o r n T h a i l a n d a n d N o r t h e n B u r m a . Af t e r t h e c o m m u n i s t v i c t o r y in China i n 1949 s e v e r a l groups of r e f u g e e s a l s o m o v e d s o u t h . I n c l u d e d w e r e r e m n a n t s o f t h e Kuo M i n T a n g a r m y . As t e r t h e s e a r m y groups were d r i v e n out of Burma in the 1950s they s e t t l e d i n . c o n s i d e r a b l e numbers in Nor t h e n T h a i l a n d a l o n g t h e Burmese b o r d e r s 9 . They s t i l l have m i l i t a r y s t a t u s but are formally c o n t r o l l e d by t h e T h a i m i l i t a r y . Including their relatives and descendents from intermarriage with local g r o u p s t h e r e may be a b o u t t e n t h o u s a n d of such persons in t h i s g r o u p . T h e y a r e e n g a g e d in t r a d e , s m u g g l i n g t o a n d f r o m B u r m a , o p i u m t r a f f i c , a g r i c u l t u r e a n d , a p p a r e n t l y s t i l l , in
from Yunan probably
m i l i t a r y a c t i v i t i e s . Another group of r e f u g e e s f r o m Yunnan i n S o u t h e r n China a r e m a i n l y Muslims and C h r i s t i a n s . Most of t h e m a r e Y u n n a n e s e a n d a r e c a l l e d Haw C h i n e s e . Some o f t h e m
settled in villages in the mountains and a r e engaged in a g r i c u l t u r e and t r a d e . Others have s p r e a d over the a r e a and a r e e n g a g e d i n t r a d e , e s p e c i a l l y in t h e m o u n t a i n s , a n d f o r m a n i m p e r t e n t c h a i n i n l o c a l o p i u m t r a f f i c a n d t r a d e . Kuo M i n Tang Chinese a n d Haw C h i n e s e together were recently e s t i mated at over 15,00020. Although can a l s o
l i v i n g p r i m a r i l y in t h e Shan S t a t e s of B u r m a , Shan be f o u n d i n Mae H o n g S o n a n d C h i a n g M a i a l o n g t h e
Burmese b o r d e r . n u m b e r has b e e n ing population
The
Shan
are
a
sub-group
of
the
Thai.
Their
d e c r e a s i n g in r e c e n t y e a r s as u n d e r i n c r e a s pressure the Nor t h o r n Thai s e t t l e in a r e a s w h e r e S h a n l i v e d a n d some of t h e l a t t e r h a v e moved t o Burma. The Shan a r e mainly w e t - r i e e c u l t i v a t o r s but many p r a c t i s e in addition swidden a g r i c u l t u r e . In the mountains there are several minority groups21. G r o u p s s u c h as t h e Khmer, L u a a n d H ' t i n , b e l o n g i n g e t h n i c a l ly to the Austroasiatic f amity, are remnants of groups living in Thailand b e f o r e the T h a i p e o p l e s e m e r g e d as the dominant
group.
All o t h e r g r o u p s , the Karen, Meo, Yao, Lisu, A k h a , a n d Lahti a r e u s u a l l y c l a s s i f i e d e t h n i c a l l y as S i n o - T i b e t a n s , but the o r i g i n s of the Meo, Y a o , and Karen a r e s t i l l d i s p u t e d . Most of these groups have moved i n t o the area from Southern China and Burma over the past two c e n t u r i e s . Because of
-IA
w a r s and p o p u l a t i o n p r e s s u r e in Nor t h o r n Indo-China t h i s process continues up to
Burma, Yunan the present
and
)
day.
T h e K a r e n a r e more n u m e r o u s t h a n o t h e r g r o u p s . They l i v e along the Nor t h o r n and W e s t e r n b o r d e r i n T h a i l a n d . I n the U p p e r N o r t h t h e y l i v e c h i e f l y i n t h e p r o v i n c e s Mae H o n g S o n a n d C h i a n g M a i . I n b o r d e r i n g a r e a s in Burma t h e r e a r e s e v o r a l m i l l i o n s of K a r e n . T h e r e a r e no p r e c i s e d a t a on t h e p o p u l a t i o n s ty groups, but two surveys have been made.
of the m i n o r i The f i r s t was
m a d e f o r a UN t e a m i n 1965/66; the second survey was Tribal Data Pro ject 1973-197722. Data are presented
the in
Table 3. According to these data the minority groups in the Upper Nor t h t o t a l l e d 270,000 persons in 1973-1977. Possib l y t h i s f i g u r e is l e s s than the a c t u a l number as not a l l areas were well covered and some v i l l a g e s may have been overlooked. S i n c e t h e r e i s a n o n g o i n g i m m i g r a t i o n a n d as population in minority communities repot redly growing is r a p i d l y , i t may be a s s u m e d t h a t t h e t o t a l m i n o r i t y populat i o n i n t h e U p p e r N o r t h i s a t l e a s t 300 , 0 0 0 A large par t of this population s t i l l does not have Tha 1 c i t i z e n s h i p . Only in the r e c e n t p a s t have l a r g e n u m b e r s i n some a r e a s
Table
3.
Population
of
Minorities Tribal
UN S u r v e y
Thailand
in
Data
Pro ject
1973-1977
Team 1 9 6 5 / 6 6 * Whole
, , 1 1 , 303
53,031 15,994 9,4110 1 6 , 119 6,442
Lua
n.a.
K h a Mu H'tin
H w a n
Only above e l e v a t i o n s Sources: United Nations United Tribal
, 250 , ,
6 3 15 19 3 9 8
, 269 , 990
274,241
*
13 , 566 11
19 3 9 8
n.a.
Total
,
12 , 5 4 5 22 , 652
2 1 , £176 13 , 5 6 6 10, 966 6 , 315
49,835
Others
184 , 6 4 8 43 , 239 22 584
139 529 25 8 1 5 2 1 , 622
123,380
Karen
Meo Lahu Lisu Yao Alfa
Whole Kingdom
Upper Nor t h
Kingdom
336
, 197
of
the
of 6 0 0 m . Survey Team, Repot t
Nations Survey Team, Bangkok, 1967; Research C e n t r e , Tribal Data Pro ject
1973-1977,
Summary T a b l e s ,
Chiang M a i ,
1977.
15-
G L ; L u n u
.La
.
F
u
1 -
\..»\.rn.ILI11il;.l.\:..Ll:_x...lLJ"
\ . . - < _ \ L - : - - r v -
1
i n
.l-
p;
L
4 l
L
.|.
I
-
been registered as Thai nationals and only because they were
wanted as voters for some candidates in the national elections23. In the census of 1970 a large par t of the minorities as well as the Haw Chinese and the Kuo Min Tang Chinese were not enumerated, so that the total population in the Upper Nor th may be several hundred thousand higher than actually repot red.
The census data of 1970 (Appendix C.l) shows that only 5.5 percent of the population in the Upper Nor to live in municipal areas and only 16.8 percent in the so-called semi-urban Sanitary Districts. In many Sanitary Districts 50 percent of the households are classified as agricultural households. Literacy in the Upper Nor th is optimistically repot red almost 70 percents"'. However a in remote areas of the Upper Nor th and among minority groups few people can read and write.
Comparison of census data since 1919 indicates a rapid overall population increase (see Table 4). Population growth in the Upper Nor th, however, is somewhat lower than that of the whole Kingdom. Table
A. Population by Province in the Upper Nor th in
1919, 1947 a 1960 and 1970.* Average Annual G r o w t h
Population in Thousands 1919 9,207 Kingdom Upper Nor th 1,3l»2 266 Chiang Rai
1919- 1947- 19601960 1970 1947 1947 1960 1970 3.2 2.7 17,443 26,258 34,397 2.3 2.9 2.6 2,024 2,952 3,813 1.5 4.1 3.2 812 1, 112 2.2 485
Chiang Mai Nan
350 164
536
798
1.5
3.1
2.5
211
240
311
0.8
1.1
3.2
Phrae
104
213
299
366
2.6
2.6
2.0
104 583
1.0
1.6
2.6
0.7
2.7
2.2
311
1.1
2.5
2.3
Mae Hong Son Lam pang L a m p fun
50
66
276
332 180
133
81 472 250
1,026
* Uncorreeted census data, which d i f f e r from the estimated figures presented in the Tables 1 and Source
Chiang R a j has the most r a p i d growth. r a t e s and d e a t h r a t e s m i g r a t i o n p l a y s the
2.
National S t a t i s t i c a l Office, Statistical Yearbook 1 9 7 2 / 7 3 , and p r e v i o u s Yearbooks.
provinces
in
the
Upper
Nor th
_16_
In a d d i t i o n an imper tent
only
Chiang
Raj,
to bit th r o l e . Of Chiang
population from high f o r Chiang R a j , because Chiang Rai has a r e l a t i v e l y l a r g e proper l i o n of Lam p a n g a n d L a m p f u n h a v e s i g n i f i agricultural land. Phrae, out-mia net cant out-migration rates. Overall there is mainly to the Lower Nor t h , g r a t i o n f r o m the Upper Nor t h , where more land is a v a i l a b l e , and to the Bangkok M e t r o p o l i s i n s e a r c h of jobs and b e t t e r e d u c a t i o n .
Mai
and
(see
Table
5.
Rate
Table
of
The
5).
increase
in
in-migration
is
a net
Son show
Mae H o n g
migration
by C h a n g e d
Migration
per
(rate
Out
C h i a n g Mai Nan Phrae Mae Hong S o n
Lam pang
20.7
Lamp fun
18.3
Source:
ESCAP,
18. 1 20 • 3
36.5 27.4 16.3 17.2 34.6
Chiang R a j
op.
cit.
1
p.
of
1,000
In
1965-1970 population) Net
18.1
28. 3 36 6 16. 3
7.1 -12.0 -19.4 18.3
44 . 6 46. 1
-23.9 -27.8
.
22
I n t h e U p p e r N o r t h a v e r a g e p o p u l a t i o n d e n s i t y is l o w e r t h a n i n o t h e r p a r i s of t h e c o u n t r y . H o w e v e r , t h e b a s i n s in t h e a r e a s in the populated the most densely Upper Nor t h a r e w i t h p o p u l a t i o n d e n s i t i e s of t e n 5 0 0 / s q . k m . and i n country, The upland and mountainous some a r e a s c l o s e t o 1 0 0 0 / s q . k m . . land total the of percent 90 about occupy which areas, a r e a , h a v e l o w d e n s i t i e s v a r y i n g b e t w e e n 2 a n d 10 p e r s o n s / and somewhat h i g h e r d e n s i t i e s in a r e a s w i t h f e r t i l e sq.km., s o i l s . B e c a u s e of t h e high g r o w t h r a t e , T h a i l a n d has a h i g h p r o p e r l i o n of i t s p o p u l a t i o n i n t h e l o w e r a g e g r o u p s . I n t h e U p p e r Nor t h more t h a n 43 p e r c e n t of the p o p u l a t i o n is l e s s t h a n 15 y e a r s of a g e ( s e e A p p e n d i x C . 2 ) , and o n l y 6 p e r c e n t o f t h e p o p u l a t i o n i s a b o v e 6 0 . Of t h e t o t a l p o p u l a t i o n 4 9 p e r c e n t is r e p o t r e d e c o n o m i c a l l y a c t i v e ( l a s t l i n e of Append i x C . 3 ) , w h i c h i s 7 2 p e r c e n t o f t h e p o p u l a t i o n o f 11 y e a r s and over.
17
T h e r e a r e two r e a s o n s f o r the h i g h p e r c e n t a g e of e c o n o m i c a l f o r only f o u r F i r s t , basic e d u c a t i o n is ly active people. a n d s o m e h a v e l e s s . O f f i c i a l l y s e v e n y e a r s of e d u c a years, facilities
school
areas
most
in
but
prescribed,
is
tion
are
a v a i l a b l e only f o r f o u r y e a r s o r l e s s . Seeond, i n Thai s o c i o e t y almost everyone par t i c i p a t e s in p r o d u c t i o n . I f t h e r e is a
way
possible
to
earn
useful
goods
gather
to
or
money
for
i t is t a k e n u p . I n t h i s s e n s e a l a r g e m a j o r i t y the household t h a n 10 y e a r s i s e m p l o y e d o r l o o k i n g of i n d i v i d u a l s older T h i s d o e s n o t mean employment. or temporary f o r permanent a c t i v e person is a f u l l ~ t i m e w o r k e r . that every economically
most
In
active
provinces were males
figure
is
lower.
more
(Appendix
are
data
census
The
of
thirds
two
than
employed
c.3).
the e c o n o m i c a l l y F o r women t h e
for
the
March
period
During there-
2 5 - 3 1 , which is almost: a t the end of the d r y s e a s o n . t h i s p e r i o d t h e r e is l i t t l e a g r i c u l t u r a l a c t i v i t y and f arm
the
people,
some
fore
especially In
season.
women,
idle
remain
of
percentage
the
Rai
Chiang
for waiting unemployed
t o s t a r t is much h i g h e r waiting f o r the f arm season people 41 and males the of p r o v i n c e s : 39 p e r c e n t other in than p e r c e n t of the f e m a l e s .
of
tion
period
the
of
in
females
small
Upper
Services
Nor t h
and
popula-
not
work-
employed
previously
t h e m a l e s a n d 86 p e r c e n t o f for a Manuf a c t u r i n g a c c o u n t s
of the w o r k f o r c e : e c o n o m i c a l l y a c t i v e men a n d
sector.
those
of
proper lion
the
for
or, was
question,
83.4 percent (Appendix C . 4 ) .
active
economically
the
Nor t h was e m p l o y e d
agriculture:
the of
Upper
the
during
ing
in
majority
overwhelming
The
only 3 . 3 women a r e
provide
commerce
b u t many c o t t a g e enterprises, in which more and handicraf is
in
this The
s c a l e manu a c t u r i n g
than
as
such
industries women
percent
employment.
more
has very few modern l a r g e
3.7 engaged
and
men
are
textiles employed.
R e t a i l t r a d e i s a l s o d o m i n a t e d by women w h i c h i s r e f l e c t e d i n t h e d a t a f o r commerce. O v e r a l l , the s t a t i s t i c s show an a g r i c u l t u r e - b a s e d e c o n o m y c a p p e d b y some s e r v i c e s , c o m m e r c e a n d t r a n s p o r t a n d m i n o r manuf a c t u r i n g a c t i v i t i e s . I t w o u l d be w r o n g t o i n f e r t h a t a l l of t h e 85 p e r c e n t of a g r i c u l t u r a l w o r k e r s a r e engaged w h o l l y in a g r i c u l t u r e . I n t h e Nor t h e r m Thai
economy
many
persons
Large
numbers
is there s t i l l more than have of
f arm
workers
little
one are
_18_
lab our
source
of
permanently
specialisation: lab o u r income. or
temporarily
Also,
construction
and
or
towns
people
may
groups
in
the
be
agricultural
tural
income
percent
classified
earned
income
to
income
of
OE t h e i r
as
workers
operating
a
in
f arm.
agricultural than
agricultural.
agricultural
total
workers
income.
-1 9
is
may
than may
have
Average
usually
many
industrial
other
worker
workers
hand
other
More
and
road
employment
temporary the
On
a non-agricultural
by
and
seek
or
handicraf i s .
on
work
may
local
traders
butchers,
they
off-season,
maintenance,
produce
addition
income
cultural
in
as
such
activities
electricians,
carpenters,
riceraillers. in
n o n - f arm
par t-time
in
engaged
blacksmiths,
half be
more
of
agrinon-
non-agricul-
close
to
25
11.3.
Heritage
of
the
Past
T h e h i s t o r y of t h e T h a i p e o p l e b e f o r e t h e f o u r t e e n t h c e n t u r y U n t i l then t h e a r e a had s e v e r a l kingdoms dominais obscure. t e d by Mon, Khmer and o t h e r s 2 5 . P r o b a b l y Thai l i v e d in the the In dominant26. politically not were they but area, c h i e f doms and k i n g century small Thai-dominated thin t e e t h Shan S t a t e s and i n the Upper in the first doms emerged,
in the Nor t h , but soon a l s o more to the South in Sukhothai power I n 1351 Ayudhya was f o u n d e d and i t s Plain. Central the S o u t h and the Lower the C e n t r a l Region, over extended of A y u d h y a was Nor t h . The emergence and p o l i t i c a l expansion
u n i f i c a t i o n of a l r e a d y political of result the probably wars a g a i n s t Sukhotai and e x i s t i n g t o w n s , and of s u c c e s s f u l t h e K h m e r e m p i r e 2 7 . T h e A y u d h y a n s t a t e , k n o w n by t h e E u r o p e a n s as S i a m , remained a power i n the a r e a f o r most of t h e by t h e Burmese b u t t i m e 2 8 . I n 1767 Ayudhya was d e s t r o y e d w a s s o o n r e g a i n e d . A new c a p i t a l w a s f o u n d e d , independence f i r s t in T h o n b u r i , and was moved t o Bangkok i n 1 7 8 2 2 9 . U n t i l the end of the Siam. of independent
t h e U p p e r N o r t h was nineteenth century Nor th the thin teenth century In the
t h e C h i e f of and became o v e r l o r d o r k i n g of the whole a r e a . I n l o c a l o f f a i r s , howa u t o n o m o u s . The Nor t h o r n Kingdom the c h i e f s remained ever, though of t e n a t war w i t h S i a m , remained i n d e of Lanna t a i , I t was u n t i l t h e m i d d l e of t h e s i x t e e n t h c e n t u r y . pendent by s o u t h e r n n e i g h b o u r , but by i t s f i n a l l y over thrown, not t h e B u r m e s e , a n d f o r the n e x t t w o h u n d r e d y e a r s was a v a s s a l o f the kingdom of Burma.
had
many
Chiang
Af t e r
petty
Mai
the
chiefdoms.
gained
control
destruction
of
Around over
the
Ayudhya
year
other
the
in
1767
1300
chiefs
when
the
Central
Thai l i b e r a t e d themselves from the Burmese, they a l s o sent in d r i v i n g t o the Nor t h and i n 1773 succeeded their armies o u t o f - t h e N o r t h . A s a r e s u l t i n 177A t h e Burmese a r m i e s p r i n c i p a l i t i e s o f C h i a n g M a i , L a m p f u n a n d Lam p a n g d e the
t h e i r a l l e g i a n c e t o S i a m a n d t h u s b e c a m e v a s s a l s of to regain tried Burmese the I n a s e r i e s of wars Siam30. c o n t r o l . The N o r t h was d e v a s t a t e d , l o s t much of i t s p o p u l a With abandoned. and destroyed was Mai Chiang and tion, Burmese were armies, the a s s i s t a n c e f r o m the Central Thai a n d d r i v e n o u t . C h i a n g Mai was r e b u i l t i n 1887 and defeated
clared
-20
Nor th
Upper
the
was
repopulated
by
imper r e d
people
from
@lSeWhEf€3 l .
Apar t
the
from
s u p p e r t i n t i m e of w a r or r e b e l l i o n , were states tributary the on demands j u r i s d i c t i o n and taxation, in autonomous
military
government's the were They slight.
in f o r e i g h r e l a t i o n s , and t o some e x t e n t , administration, p r o v i d e d t h a t no h a r m was done t o i n t e r e s t s of t h e Bangkok
The p r i n c e s and t h e n o b i l i t y of the t r i b u t a r y government32. s t a t e s were s u p p o s e d to take t h e o a t h of a l l e g i a n c e t w i c e a to to
and year According
as
considered Bangkok
as a demonstration tribute send LeMay, the p r i n c e of Chiang M a i ,
overlord
of
the
Upper
Nor t h ,
loyalty. of who c o u l d b e had t o go t o
tr1ennially33.
tribuatary the r u l e r s of the T h e t r a d i t i o n a l a u t o n o m y of s t a t e s was c h a l l e n g e d w i t h t h e a p p e a r a n c e o f w e s t e r n p o w e r s . the i n f l u e n c e I n the second p a r t of the n i n e t e e n t h c e n t u r y o f f o r e i g n e r s , m a i n l y the p e r s o n n e l of t e a k l u m b e r c o m p a n i e s and
missionaries,
increased.
In
1855
King
Mongkut
signed
the
by B o w r i n g T r e a t y w i t h G r e a t B r i t a i n , l a t e r t o be f o l l o w e d treaties These countries. other with treaties similar g r a n t e d e x t r a - t e r r i t o r i a l r i g h t s t o s u b j e c t s of t h e s e c o u n with conflicts resolve to procedures provided and tries Nor therm r u l e r s were these s u b j e c t s . However, the autonomous t o t h e i r own way i n d e a l i n g w i t h f o r e i g n e r s a n d accustomed s o in f a c t t h e t r e a t i e s d i d n o t a p p l y t o t h e Nor t h . T h i s c a u s e d a s e r i e s of c o m p l a i n t s i n B a n g k o k . A d i r e c t t h r e a t t o Nor t h e r m autonomy was t h e f a c t t h a t some c h i e f s c h e a t e d the the in concessions same the selling by companies lumber
forests
to
different
eompanies3'+.
Resulting
eonfliets
t h r e a t e n e d to p r o v i d e a b a s i s f o r c o l o n i a l powers to i n t e r f e r e on behalf of t h e i r s u b j e c t s . King Chulalongkorn chose r a t h e r t h a n r i s k t h e s u b j e c t i o n of t o t a k e a c t i o n himselft h e N o r t h by c o l o n i a l p o w e r s . He s o u g h t a n d f o u n d opp o r t u n i -
ties to Nor t h .
gradually
establish
Central
Thai
control
over
the
T h e f i r s t a c t i o n w a s t o s i g n a t r e a t y w i t h B r i t i s h I n d i a in 1871+ o n b e h a l f o f t h e N o r t h . I n 1883 a new t r e a t y w a s c o n * c l u d e d w i t h B r i t a i n which r e s u l t e d in the s t a t i o n i n g of a C e n t r a l Thai h i g h c o m m i s s i o n e r in Chiang Mai. Local c o m m i s s i o n e r s were s e n t t o the Nor th.
..21_
Gradually more c h i e f s opposed
and
t h i s i n t e r f e r e n c e but they l o s t administrative w e a k e n e d by t h e
were
they
which
to
f u r then
was
power
their
reforms
s u b j e c t e d in the e i g h t e e n n i n e t i e s . The c h i e f s , s t r i p p e d of i n t o the Central Thai t h e i r p r e r o g a t i v e s , were incorporated Thai by C e n t r a l replaced finally and service government
v a n i s h e d . The o f f i c e r s . By 1 9 2 0 t h e i r p o w e r h a d c o m p l e t e l y i n c o r p o r a t i o n of t h e N o r t h e r m t r i b u t a r y s t a t e s m u s t b e s e e n the second half during a g a i n s t the i n t e r n a t i o n a l background the n i n e t e e n t h c e n t u r y . The o l d e n e m y , Burma, had been of Malayan S t a t e s , by t h e B r i t i s h , a s h a d t h e S o u t h e r n occupied a n d t h e F r e n c h had t a k e n o v e r i n I n d o - C h i n a . T h e t r a d i t i o n a l t o r e s i s t the colonial s t r o n g enough kingdom was not Thai
powers. system
old
The
from
extracted
st
mulati-on
of
countries
wars
countries
was
to
to
task
was
escape
control were
capture
royal
extol t
of
to
capital.
resettle from
areas
not
the
and
A11
main
keeping accu-
the
of
the
southeast
a main
purpose
from
other
administrative
population
under
be
again-
core
The
population The
areas.
could
for for
and
lab our.
under-populated
and
surplus
people
states,
cru-
meet
defense
revolts,
local
scarce
over
well-controlled
in
vent
the
to
surplus
successful
tributary
of
in
then
Enough
for
of
suppression
rulers
wealth
the
was
system
of
the
of
countryside
suited
was
kingship
stability.
for
the
for
invaders,
control
Asian
absolute
of
requirements
cial
and
to
pre-
control.
The p o p u l a t i o n c o n s i s t e d of s e v e r a l k i n d s of s l a v e s , bonded o f f i c i a l s who f o r m e d a n a p p o i n t e d n o b i l i t y , and commoners, restricted the royal f a m i t y . The l a t t e r group, members of of a q u e e n a n d of d e s c e n d e n t s t o the f i r s t f o u r g e n e r a t i o n s w i t h decreasing ranks f o r successive g e n e r a t i o n s , occupied many of the main e x e c u t i v e p o s i t i o n s in the government s y s tem.
f o r the goA m a i n s o u r c e of income and m i l i t a r y s t r e n g t h v e r n m e n t w a s s e v e r a l m o n t h s p e r y e a r o f c o r v é e l a b o u r of a l l m a l e c o m m o n e r s b e t w e e n 18 a n d 6 0 y e a r s o f a g e . Of t e n p a r t o r a l l of t h i s o b l i g a t i o n c o u l d be f u l f i l l e d by p a y i n g a s e r v t a x . I n a d d i t i o n a l l k i n d s of t a x e s a n d i c e or commutation r e g i s t r a t i o n f e e s were l e v i e d on economic a c t i v i t i e s and on p r o p e r t y . U s u a l l y government o f f i c i a l s were not p a l d . They had t o take c a r e of themselves and had the r i g h t t o e x t o l t a
_.22_
surplus
place
from
in
the
l a b o r
of
cials.
Taxes,
Officials
was
par t l y
could
their
use
own
both
benefit.
the
benefit
legal
fines
many
which o f f i c i a l s
an
imper t e n t
taxation or
and
This
illegally.
Moreover
through
business
for
and
back.
also
own
also
used
fees
kept
was
their
but
of ten
f arms
tax
to
Business
protect
for
ways,
registration
or
out
profit.
legal
commoners
increased rented
population
several
offi-
he
were
c o u l d make
legal
of
of
could
taxes
source
the
business
took
Corvée
of
a
income.
apparatus
protégés
to
against
competitors. In
theory
owned
the
all
dismiss that
whomever
he
the
king
on
for
members
inefficient
tions New
and
gap
rulers.
between
cial
When
in
Bun nag h a s and
were
powerless
reform would
of have
1855
opened rights
by
the met
and
it
pointed
practice35. as
became the
In
was
their
for
and
in
of ten
obliga-
themselves. harmful
there
practice
powerful
as
semi-heredi-
was
out,
member
was
king of
small
the
most
In
was
at was
was
for
a big
provin-
many
autonomous
the in
treaties
vested
were
of
as
15,
hands
f amity.
because
situation
impossible from
age the
powerful
decline
this
opposition
years
following
1868,
in
and
administration much
in
administration
officials.
too
if
heavily
well
raising
surplus
enforce
and
states.
a
income
government
to
almost
and
was
became
death,
practice
was
as
fulfil
not
extol red
Te j
theory
who
the
did
He
capital
families.Tax
hard
As
his
and
appoint
seems in
it
appointments
was
life
could
powerless.
in
officials
tributary
regent
rather
f amities f act
over and
However,
powerful
Chulalongkorn
was
laws
much o f
appropriation
In
of
governors
rulers
a
kept
powers
be
in
because
legislation
local
he
could
So
absolute promulgate
wanted.
powerful
provinces.
tary
had
could
dependent the
king
land,
a
of
of The
mis-
drastic
because
lt
interests.
accepted,
which
the c o u n t r y f o r f o r e i g n trade. The e x t r a - t e r r i t o r i a l granted to f o r e i g n e r s caused s e r i o u s troubles. For-
c o u l d o n l y be p u t o n t r i a l i n c o n s u l a r c o u r i s , w h i c h t o be s t r o n g l y b i a s e d in f a v o u r of f o r e i g n interests and thus became a s e r i o u s t h r e a t t o Thai autonomy36. W i t h the expansion of the c o l o n i a l dependencies on T h a i l a n d ' s borders large numbers of Asian s u b j e c t s of the colonial signers
proved
powers
also
s t a r red
to
claim
consular
..23_
protection.
Foreign
of
*f a l l u r e
conflicts
and c l a i m s
provincial
of
the
in
tributary
that
cient
internal
scale
reform
system
was
Nor th,
East
The
was
a
the
of
South the
division
for
the
several
new
of
lost
thorough
reform
administration
to
central
functions
a
full this
in
the
of
states
tributary
and
French
and
provincial
between
was
suffi-
Before
implementation
the
it
a
created
administration.
provincial
were
had
direct
However,
needed.
Chulalongkorn
base
a
of
from
powers
including
urgently
was
was
number
growing
subjects,
the case
in
government
Thai the
colonial
keep their
of
implemented, and
principle
tion
to
king
power
of
restrict
to
administration,
states,
1892
by
and
behalf
on
intervention
only
order
In
the
protection
provide
to
responsible.
made
subjects
outside
Never t i e l e s s
administration.
existing
was
This
country.
the
their
protect
to
government
throughout
the
of
scope
the
ordered
consuls
efficiently
British. administra-
ministeries,
be-
and between divisions depar tments within a ministry tween w i t h i n a d e p a r t r e n t . E s p e c i a l l y the l o s s of f i s c a l a u t o n o m y a n d c e n t r a l i z a t i o n o f t a x r a i s i n g w a s h e a v i l y o p p o s e d by t h e c e n t r a l and l o c a l e l i t e s . S e v e r a l o t h e r measures were t a k e n local e l i t e s : - the the weaken to intention full the with of the corvée a b o l i t i o n of s l a v e r y , and replacement gradual traditional Also tax. by a c a p i t a t i o n obligation lab our e l i t e s were s t r i p p e d of t h e i r p r i v i l e g e s and economic r e many were p e n s i o n e d o f f , o t h e r s were o f f e r e d a p a i d sources' government function under d i r e c t c o n t r o l and s u p e r v i s i o n of the k i n g ' s A r o u n d 1 9 2 0 t h e r e f o r m was f u l l y i m p l e officers. rented, disapelements had traditional all not although peered.
e d u c a t i o n a n d w e s t e r n i n f l u e n c e s c r e a t e d a new m i d d l e of commoners m a i n l y employed i n t h e c i v i l s e r v i c e and bureaucracy and the in positions top Most military. the the royal f o r members of reserved were s t i l l government m e m b e r s of t h e new m i d d l e c l a s s w a n t e d a Ambitious f amity. s h a r e o f p o w e r . I n t h e 1 9 3 0 s T h a i l a n d was s e v e r e l y a f f e c t e d by the economic d e p r e s s i o n . S a l a r y r e d u c t i o n s and d i s m i s s a l o f many led to s t r o n g d i s s a t i s f a c t i o n among the m i d d l e c l a s s and c i v i l i a n s a n d in 1932 a g r o u p of young a r m y o f f i c e r s a s u c c e s s f u l coup d ' e t a t . The a b s o l u t e m o n a r c h y was launched a b o l i s h e d a n d r e p l a c e d by a c o n s t i t u t i o n a l m o n a r c h y .
Modern
class
_24_
t o be i n t h e claimed b e e n s h o t t; only have
t h e r e v o l u t i o n was Although u n t i l now t h e r e democracy, with
elected
an
parliament.
In
f act
the
1932
name of periods
revolution
was
elite the Within oligarchy37. to from autocracy a move various between power a continuous struggle for there is
changing and factions of decline and Growth f actions. for risk a continuous bear f actions between coalitions Every year or at most every few years a every government. f a l l s b e c a u s e o f i n t e r n a l s p l i t s o r b e c a u s e of a government coup
d'etat.
Since
New g o v e r n m e n t s
draf t process
a
new
1932
of t e n
one
Thailand
abolish
legitimize
to
constitutionalism
m a t i o n of a u t h o r i t y
the
of
became
the ruling
-25_
had
has
previous
their the
13
constitutions.
constitution
existence.
new
elites38.
source
of
In
and
this
legiti-
11.4. An
policy
imper t e n t
the
primacy
and
Administration
f e a t u r e of T h a i s o c i e t y t i l l r e c e n t t i m e s w a s of the government b u r e a u c r a c y : the main power
w i t h i n the bureaucracy. In the old system of the " p o l i t i c i a n s " were the top bureaucrats, and they o f ten belonged t o r o y a l t y which was the a p e x of the o l d s y s t e m . Af t e r t h e r e v o l u t i o n of 1 9 3 2 m e m b e r s of r o y a l t y
centres
were
kingship
r e v o l u t i o n a r i e s . These were i n f a c t by t h e an emerging m i d d l e c l a s s who s e i z e d p o w e r a n d became the new e l i t e . S i n c e , the e l i t e was a l m o s t e n t i r e l y recruited from the upper layers of the c i v i l a n d m i l i t a r y bureaucracy. Cabinet members almost e x c l u s i v e l y had a backwere
displaced
members
ground
of
as
so
bureaucrats,
did
the
large
majority
of
the
legislature39.
Business, although C h i n e s e , was u n d e r ces,
taxation,
long
since
firm
control
monopolies
mainly
and
of
in
the
the
hands
elite
of
through
"protect2ion"L*0.
Thus
ethnic licenthe
old e l i t e a l s o - had much economic power and c o u l d a t l e a s t control b u s i n e s s p e o p l e . Af t e r the 1932 r e v o l u t i o n the new p o l i t i c a l e l i t e managed a l s o to gain c o n t r o l over business. First nationalistic campaigns were launched with racist t e n d e n c i e s , which t h r e a t e n e d the Chinese b u s i n e s s communityL|+1_ A t t h e s a m e t i m e many s t a t e m e m b e r s of t h e T h a i p o l i t i c a l e l i t e b e c a m e m e m b e r s of t h e b o a r d s of d i r e c t o r s a n d a d v i s e r s of C h i n e s e owned b u s i n e s s f i r m s . The c l e a r reason f o r the Chinese t o i n v i t e them was to o b t a i n " p r o t e c t i o n "
and
"f avours"
Since t h e l a t e 1960 s t h e p r i m a c y of the b u r e a u c r a t i c e l i t e has been c o n s t a n t l y under c h a l l e n g e by new power groups. T h e r e a s o n f o r t h i s s e e m s t o be a r a p i d u r b a n g r o w t h , which
h a s l e d c o d i f f e r e n t i a t i o n of u r b a n s o c i e t y . M o s t c l e a r i s the successful political emancipation of b a n k e r s , b u s i n e s s men a n d i n d u s t r i a l i s t s . T h e i r w e a l t h a n d t h e i r n u m b e r h a v e increased considerably. These new elites are n e c e s s a r i l y c l i e n t s of t h e b u r e a u c r a t i c e l i t e s .
so
called
"democratic
period",
1973-1976,
a
no longer During the
considerable
number of p e o p l e b e l o n g i n g t o the g r o u p of b a n k e r s , businessmen and i n d u s t r i a l i s t s a p p e a r e d in parliament and in t h e c a b i n e t ' * 2 . The p o l i t i c a l e m a n c i p a t i o n of t h e s e g r o u p s has been enhanced by s e v e r a l f a c t o r s . The w e a l t h y C h i n e s e
26-
f a m i t i e s a s s i m i l a t e d r a p i d l y by a d o p t i o n of T h a i c u s t o m s many of t h e i r a n d by i n t e r - m a r r i a g e w i t h T h a i s . M o r e o v e r ,
with
children
good
education
for
prestige
probably
vice,
sys
bureaucratic
the
with
links
direct
and
independent
establish
to
well
as
ser
government
entered
have
reasons
t e m * 3 . At t h e s a m e t i m e g r o w i n g n u m b e r s o f t h e T h a i p o l i t i in bank have become engaged e l i t e and their children cal i n g , b u s i n e s s , and i n d u s t r y . d e v e l o p m e n t and d i v e r s i f i c a t i o n of the econo economic professionals of class middle upper technocratic various specialists, i n t e l l e c t u a l s a n d m a n a g e r s has d e v i l
With
a
my
government tech-
the
by
distrusted
and
disliked
was
which
(1976/1977),
the
of
management
Kraivixien
Than i n
The
apparatus.
the
on
influence
increasing
with
oped,
bureaucratic
and
met p a s s i v e r e s i s t a n c e f r o m the t e c h n o c r a t s nocrats, the business world, and could achieve l i t t l e .
an
activities
their of
f armers
ry
groups,
noted
just
their
established. and
f armers still
ever, armed
to
people
star red
power
existing
the to
seem
not
the
in
one,
threat
does
have
students
a modest
main
The
most
Never theless
to
play
student
play
unions
activities
a
were was
labourers
that
agree
Af t e r
forbidden
role,
although
Thai p o l i t i c s .
of
socio-economic o r d e r , these
from
come
other
of
a
culmi
1976.
were
pol 1tica1
of
control
tight
and
of
unions
activities
the
arrested,
leaders
restricted,
lab our
and
student
several
this,
star red
which
activist
d'etat
coup
the
before
the
of
suppression
bloody
the
in
organization,
paramilita
groups,
actions
violent
other
and
murders
years
open p r o t e s t
of
response,
in
ultra-rightist
by
organized
of
series
However,
following
forms
many
stimulated
have
labourers.
and
the
of
end
the
to
the
In
1973.
in
dictatorship
led
that
process
the
in
role
imper t e n t
Than o r - P r a p a s
poll played
actions
Student
success.
in
share
a
claim
to
began
less
with
but
power,
tical
also
groups
other
Several
groups,
but
how from
l e d by t h e C o m m u n i s t P a r t y o f revolt developed armed 1960s f i r s t i n t h e N o r t h e a s t , and s p r e a d g r a d u a l l y o v e r t h e court Many r e m o t e a r e a s a l l o v e r t h e c o u n t r y a r e d o m i n a t e d t r y _ rural areas, the During
revolt in (CPT). Thailand
by
the
that
CPT a n d
these
from
areas
the
were
spread
of
extending
_27_
armed
till
clashes
1979.
it
Af t e r
appeared
the
coup
in
d'etat
1976
from
urban
1977
the
cratic nlsts, is
Forces
of
formed
joined for
(CCPDF)
socialists
invasion
radicals,
and
Committee
apparently
have
many
areas
and
a
was
founded
student and
serious
CPT
by
the
as
for
and
comprises The
fled
groups.
members,
communists.
following
setback
Patriotic
which
leaders
students,
guerilla
Co-ordinating
dominated
Cambodia
especially
with
In
Demo-
commu-
but
which
Vietnamese
events,
however,
fur then
expansion
seem
to
of
the
and
the
CPT.
Despite
the
growing
share
in
power
by
new
groups
c h a l l e n g e of a r m e d r e v o l t , i t i s l i k e l y t h a t t h e b u r e a u c r a cy w i l l c o n t i n u e t o p l a y a dominant r o l e i n many f i e l d s . Therefore, a s t u d y in r u r a l development must g i v e due c o n s i d e r a t i o n t o t h e r o l e of the bureaucracy and the Many W e s t e r n a u t h o r s , mainly American, have w r i t t e n
polity. on Thai
p o l i t i c s and the Thai buraucracyL'5. Whether they are Eor e i g n a d v i s e r s , such as W o r l d Bank and U.N. e x p e l i s , cons e r v a t i v e o r l e t l i s t s c h o l a r s , they s h a r e p e s s i m i s t i c and negative
conclusions
about
the
system.
The
main
conclusions
a r e that the s y s t e m is c o r r u p t and i n e f f i c i e n t . There a r e several controversies among s o c i a l s c i e n t i s t s a b o u t the c o r r e c t f r a m e w o r k f o r a n a l y s i s of the Thai s o c l a l system 5 . As t h e b u r e a u c r a c y has a c e n t r a l place in Thai s o c i e t y , these controversies are reflected in the methodology of several studies on the role of the bureaucracy. 1 9 5 0 s and 1960s most a u t h o r s c o n c e n t r a t e d mainly on
I n the individual behaviour and on " v a l u e s " , whereas relatively little a t t e n t i o n was g i v e n t o socio-economic s t r u c t u r e . I n the 1970s r e l a t i v e l y more weight is given to socioeconomic r e l a t i o n s , as in p a t r o n - c l i e n t r e l a t i o n s and in c l a s s a n a lysls.
The
from tion
present
bureaucracy
has
developed
the t r a d i t i o n a l bureaucracy, of surplus f r o m the mass of
without
major
breaks
w h i c h d e p e n d e d on e x t o r the p o p u l a t i o n . This ex-
tor lion is a basic characteristic of a pre-capitalist class. A bourgeois government, on t h e o t h e r h a n d , d e p e n d s m a i n l y on taxes and payments f o r services which i t prov i d e s , a n d i t f o r m s p r i m a r i l y p a r t of t h e e x c h a n g e e c o n o m y . Both t y p e s of government need d i f f e r e n t i d e o l o g i c a l j u s t i fication. In many respects the present bureaucracy can s t i l l be c o n s i d e r e d a s a p r e - c a p i t a l i s t c l a s s . W i t h i n t h i s
_28_.
inefficient-
and/or
will
a
career.
During cers
Reorganization
of
government
been
"problems"
initial
have
changes
had
social
structure.
Status
and p o w e r
There
is
general
abroad
the
in
a
services
making
on
with
meets
and
accepted
be
reorganizations
apparatus,
because
exist,
that
bureau-
for
government
influence
agreement
f actor
Thai
of
government
still
little
training
Thai
for
character
and
as
includes
cosmetic
thousands
trained
phenomenon
normal
had
have
to
reorg-
and
advocated
training
may
it
Never t h e l e s s ,
decades,
recent
have
imper t e n t
an
appear
on
later
goal
be
difficulties.
more
it
if
major
to
appears
it
and
crats,
a
is
abroad
Training
Foreign
course,
Of
work.
par ticularly
re jected,
be
not
abroad.
rarely
usually
are
of
undesirable
bureaucrats
Thai
of
services
remedies
These
7.
remedies
Training
government
of
anization
behaviour
motives.
their
of
ever
easily
misinterpreted
t h e i r behaviour i s
that
disap-
they
(if
The
sometimes
is
Pre-
account.
completely
f o r m a t i o n can
dominant.
from
at
conclude
of ten
class
traditional
the
into
not
ideology,
in
change
all-dominant
understanding
of
lack
of
advisers
f
politicians
and
bureaucrats because
is
but
perceived
be
,
have
modern
hand,
other
services,
taken
be
longer
no
are
they
On t h e
were).
Economic
government
influenced
contradictions
class
but
peared,
have
must
and
government
of
role
capitalist
simplistic.
for
ideas
foreign
all
f actors
other
many
and
of
influx
modernization,
groups
new
from
pressure
is
alone
contradictions
class
on
change,
based
analysis
an
bu-
the
of
role
and
But
understood.
be
readily
may
reaucracy
development
the
framework
historical
so
cultural
hierarchical
only. offiare
a
the
but
these
f ar
and
values
status
is
a
is d o m i n a n t s o c i a l v a l u e in T h a i l a n d . I n d e e d , much e m p h a s i s most However, status. enhance that activities to given o b s e r v e r s have given i n s u f f i c i e n t a t t e n t i o n to the r e l a t i o n b e t w e e n s t a t u s and p o w e r . Power c a n l e a d d i r e c t l y and i n d i And, r e c t l y t o s t a t u s . Power i m p l i e s p o s s e s s i o n of s t a t u s and benefits privileges, acquire to used be can power w e a l t h which i n d i r e c t l y l e a d t o an i n c r e a s e of s t a t u s . I n d i r t y , i t is T h a i s o c i e t y the use of power is n o t s o m e t h i n g
.
major lityL*9.
a
The someone
8oal48.
If
of power is h a r d l y s u b j e c t t o morafrom a benefits and power exercises
use
..29_
powerful p o s i t i o n he i s m o r e l i k e l y t o be a d m i r e d and to meet d e f e r e n c e t h a n t o m e e t d i s g u s t , even i f power is u s e d dishonestly for private goals. Power is something t o be u s e d , and if someone is a b l e t o u s e i t , he s o m e h o w d e s e r v e s it.
Bureaucratic
status
implies
authority
and
it
sanctions
t h e u s e of p o w e r . T h i n a p a n ' s s t u d y o n c o r r u p t i o n p r o v i d e s a n i n t e r e s t i n g i l l u s t r a t i o n of t h e T h a i i n t e r p r e t a t i o n of power50. I t appears that most people c o n s i d e r p u b l i c o f f i c e as
o f f i c e , and c o n s e q u e n t l y , and do not t h i n k i t o f f i c e r s to o b t a i n b e n e f i t s from t h e i r f u n c t i o n . e x i s t i n g legal codes concerning corruption cer t a i f l y
personal
wrong
The did
for
not
emerge
from
widely
held
social
norms.
Patron-Client Relations Patron-elient relations l a r g e , a n d e s p e c i a l l y in person's
are
imper t e n t
the
bureaucracy
in
Thai
and
in
society at politics. A
power
depends s t r o n g l y on t h e n u m b e r a n d p o s i t i o n i s a b l e t O m o b i l i z e . On t h e o t h e r h a n d in order t o a t t r a c t a n d t o k e e p c l i e n t s o n e h a s CO p r o v i d e scarce some b e n e f i t s , f avours and p r o t e c t i o n . Power over bureaucratic-, resources (proper ty, lab our or judicial-, a n d p o l i t i c a l p o w e r ) is t h e r e f o r e indispensable f o r having m a n y c l i e n t s . A p a t r o n who l o o s e s p o w e r may g r a d u a l l y l o o s e clients.
Of
clients
he
The word "f action" (khans) is mostly used for "groups" based on p a t r o n - c l i e n t r e l a t i o n s around p o w e r f u l p e r s o n s in p o l i t i c s and in the bureaucracy. These f actions are the main p o l i t i c a l u n i t s . Most p o l i t i c a l par t i e s a r e conservat i v e b u t t h e y l a c k a c l e a r i d e o l o g y . They a r e b a s e d on a few powerful persons, consequently political par t i e s cons i s t of f a c t i o n s . I f t h e r e is n o t an a l l d o m i n a t i n g strong
man
i n T h a i p o l i t i c s , who i s a b l e t o c o n t r o l s e v e r a l f a c t i o n s t h e r e s u l t may b e p o l i t i c a l i n s t a b i l i t y . P e o p l e who are dissatisfied with the existing par ty or government policy may c h a n g e allegiance resulting in the split of par t i e s and the break of c o a l i t i o n s . Apparently t h i s was o n e of t h e m a i n c a u s e s of t h e p o l i t i c a l i n s t a b i l i t y d u r i n g the so c a l l e d " d e m o c r a t i c p e r i o d " 5 l . But a l s o in non-democ r a t i c periods such i n s t a b i l i t i e s occur. Since 1932, breaks between f actions and new coalitions, mainly within the
-30_
source
and
ied,
percent
public
new
more.
crats
to
influence skills
powerful
the
persons.
of
a
f action
powerful
rivals
exchange
for
with
links
class~mates, ful their
the
In
friends, to
for
f avours
and
f actions,
several
who
people can
f actions little
make
combine
a
all
political
e.g. are
of
"obliged",
quick for
but
as
a
against
course
supper t .
through
with
imper t e n t
an
play
protection
claims;
f actions
-31_
relations
influence,
some
probably
has
supper t
and
intermediaries, capability
exercise
can
he
loyalty,
to
process
poli-
requires
establish
to
capacity
the
is
This
process53.
capability
charac-
is
system
skill
relevant
most:
bud g e t t i n g the
and
Thai
the
as
polity,
the
An i n d i v i d u a l
role.
member.
protégés.
and
skill
Riggs,
by
additional
offer
to
and
bureau-
senior
enable
some-
and
rake-off
percent
persons
clients
to
responsible
the
provides also
budgets
capable
benefits
bureaucratic
the
terized to
twenty
attract
Bureaucratic
tical
to
ten
Expanding
and
f amours
of ten
with a
bureaucrats times
buildings
benefits
Construction
considerable.
be
can
allocations
budget
from
the
than
direct
the
bureaucrats,
senior
For
price52.
market
normally
are
higher
percent
hundred
government
of
purchases
Government
one
to
lev-
actually
are
expenditure
the
of
taxes
of
amount
unnecessary.
twenty
prices
of
possible
is
pro jects
at
the
if ty
of
percent
is
f i f ty
only
that
estimated
have
Insiders
considerable.
tough
is
corruption
of
magnitude
The
high.
are
stakes
the
because
continuous
a
struggle
The
bureaucracy.
the
within
causes
procurement
budget
Therefore
tion.
struggle
not
administra-
efficient
reward
who
outsiders,
by
performed
within
is
allocation
budget
that
are
still
extent,
large
a
to
implies
This
bureaucracy.
the
In
and,
were
Thailand
in
cert res
power
real
re-
in
role
crucial the
seen,
we h a v e
As
procurement.
a
play
f actions
bureaucracy,
the
In
govern-
of
changes
frequent
for
d'etat.
coups
and
causes
the
were
military, ment
in
People
relatives, and
power-
career,
because
vital
purposes.
of
Technical
and
Technical tance in
and the
Professional
skills
professional
skills
fulfilled.
t o enhance chances f o r budget claims s m o o t h p e r f o r m a n c e of t e c h n i c a l t a s k s . of
technical
ic
and
related
probably
work.
secondary
of
are
impor-
b u r e a u c r a c y , as l o n g a s b a s i c t a s k s can be T e c h n i c a l a n d p r o f e s s i o n a l s k i l l m a y be a c q u i r e d
professional
to
a
Scientific
low
and
skills
social
r a t h e r than f o r the The low a p p r e c i a t i o n in
the
bureaucracy
appreciation
professional
for
is
scientif-
achievements
hardly
r e s u l t i n h i g h e r s t a t u s a n d t h i s in t u r n c a n a t least: par*t i a l l y e x p l a i n why a s c i e n t i f i c o r p r o f e s s i o n a l c a r e e r i n government services gives l i t t l e s a t i s f y a c t i o n . I n comparison with many o t h e r d e v e l o p i n g c o u n t r i e s , T h a i l a n d h a s many well
e d u c a t e d t e c h n i c i a n s and s e r v i c e . L a r g e numbers of
ment
sities
in
the
United
States,
professionals
Thai
have
in
the
govern-
at
univer-
studied
Europe
a n d A u s t r a l i a a n d many of them have a d o c t o r ' s degree. However, these qualities are poorly used in the Thai system. Research plans and p r o f e s s i o n a l work a r e of ten irrelevant to outside stan-
d a r d s , and t h e e x e c u t i o n of r e s e a r c h p l a n s is frequently harmed by l a c k of f u n d s . Young p r o f e s s i o n a l s and technicians in government s e r v i c e c a n r a r e l y make a c a r e e r in
their
field o f e x p e l r i s e . I f t h e y w a n t t o make a c a r e e r t h e y have t o become a d m i n i s t r a t o r s , and so s k i l l f u l p r o f e s s i o n a l s and r e s e a r c h e r s i n government research institutes a r e of t e n p r o m o t e d t o a d m i n i s t r a t i v e p o s t s . Productivity T o s t r i v e f o r h i g h p r o d u c t i v i t y is c e r t a i f l y not an import i n t value in the Thai b u r e a u c r a c y . This is, for people w o r k i n g in m i d d l e r a n k s , c e r t a i f l y r e l a t e d t o the low p r e s -
t i g e of s c i e n t i f i c and p r o f e s s i o n a l w o r k . I t is not p r e s t i gious t o work hard f o r a b s t r a c t goals and it does not enh e n c e c h a n c e s ~ f o r a f a s t c a r e e r . To make f r i e n d s , t o c r e a t e a p l e a s a n t a t m o s p h e r e a n d t o be a l w a y s r e a d y t o c a r r y o u t
ad
hoc
tasks
Consequently
for the
the pace
boss, of
are
work
in
more lower
imper t e n t
and
middle
slow.
i
..32_.
f actors.
ranks
is
Centralization
is
officials
different
quite
centralized
highly
is
bureaucracy
Thai
the
because
ranking
high
of
The s i t u a t i o n This
imper A11 d e c i s i o n s o f i m p e r l a n c e , a n d e v e n m a n y w i t h o u t h i g h l e v e l s . D i r e c t o r s of D i v i s i o n s at taken lance, are of Under-Secretaries Depar tments, of Director-Generals S t a t e , Cabinet M i n i s t e r s and the Prime M i n i s t e r a r e over approval for bureaucratic details submitted loaded with
of t a s k s b e c a u s e Long d e l a y s of t e n o c c u r in the e x e c u t i o n s i m p l e a d m i n i s t r a t i v e d e t a i l s a r e n o t s e t t l e d . I n t h e mean and
middle
many
time
Formal
administrative
rules
formal
centralization
is
of
rules
as
soon
seems
an
rules
as
are
the
garding
is
not
the
at
guideline rules.
necessarily
A burden
officers.
However
imper t e n t
Thus
keep
application seems
that
and
well
as
work
formal
as
of
regula
if
persons
powerful
with
peace
To
the
persons
bothers
one
no
neglect the
prescribe
Rules
in it
ranking
higher
cases
to
inter
or
values
decide
may
of
stake.
many
aside.
swept
major
decisive.
of
work
with
interests in
necessarily
the
minister
or
are
but
official,
lions is
as
groups
powerful an
officer long
not
prescribe
conflict
rules
as
ests,
to
but
centralistic,
strongly
are
inactive
remain
officials
low-ranking
dis r e
in
centralization
decisive.
An e x p l a n a t i o n f o r t h e h i g h d e g r e e o f c e n t r a l i z a t i o n may b e t o c o n t r o l many f o u n d i n the d e s i r e of b u r e a u c r a t i c p a t r o n s appointments d e t a i l s . F o r t o l o o s e g r i p on m o n e y s p e n d i n g , o f f a v o u r s , a p p l i c a t i o n of r u l e s m e a n s t o l o o s e granting the most imper t e n t b e n e f i t s f r o m the system a n d , moreover i t makes the b o s s v u l n e r a b l e . Lower r a n k i n g o f f i c i a l s of t e n respond
to
this
attitude
by
avoiding
decisions,
even
within
t h e i r a u t h o r i t y , i f the m a t t e r s a r e s e n s i t i v e o r d i s p u t e d They w i l l not r i s k problems w i t h p a t r o n s . In such c a s e s the to superiors for or to committees c a n be s e n t problems c o n s i d e r a t i o n , w h e r e p e r h a p s no d e c i s i o n is t a k e n e i t h e r I n o t h e r c a s e s t h e i m p l e m e n t a t i o n of m e a s u r e s a n d p o l i c i e s can
be
result
because
delayed
is
execution solved.
that and
rules the
top
are can
obstruction
of
found be
and
used
overloaded
33
conflicts.
and
to
prevent
with
or
problems
The
delay CO be
Staff A
Functions
typical
feature
of
the
Thai
is
bureaucracy
that
few
in-
s t i t u t i o n s h a v e s t a f f u n i t s . As f a t a s t h e y e x i s t t h e y a r e of ten weakly s t a f f e d , i . e . s t a f f e d w i t h l e s s s u c c e s s f u l and less powerful o f f i c e r s . The r e a s o n f o r t h i s is t h a t s t a f f
s e c t i o n s h a v e n o t much g r o u n d f o r b u d g e t c l a i m s f o r projects. Consequently, staff sections o f f e r few benefits for t h e i r o f f i c i a l s . In the p a s t many s t a f f s e c t i o n s have been s e t u p , b u t as a r u l e they worked as l i n e s e c t i o n s and soon became l i n e s e c t i o n s . S t a f f m e e t i n g as in western c o u n t r i e s do not function well in the Thai s i t u a t i o n . In meetings most junior personnel, even when they a r e s p e c i a l i s t s , w i l l
only feel
they
are
not
free
to
give
or
plans
of
views
are
they
when
speak
Mostly
to
asked
asked
and
if
their
own
opinion
they
speak
by
are
asked
if
these
superiors. they
rarely
oppose
the
superiors.
Top b u r e a u c r a t i c o f f i c i a l s of t e n have no p e r s o n a l s t a f f , o n l y c l e r k s , s e c r e t a r i e s a n d d r i v e r s . Of t e n t h e y o p e n t h e i r mail p e r s o n a l l y , not allowing anyone else to open i t . Self
p r o t e c t i o n of high o f f i c e r s is probably a main reason f o r t h e l a c k o f s t a f f a d v i s e r s : no o n e i s a b l e t o c h e c k s e n s i tive matters, s o n o o n e c a n be u s e d b y o u t s i d e r s . W h a t e v e r the reason, the effects a r e imper t e n t . The t o p o f f i c i a l s a r e not even a b l e t o read and s t u d y a l l i m p e r t e n t r e p o t t s , and, consequently, documents a r e regularly signed without any
cheek
Social
of
professional
staff
advisers.
relations
Relations largely
respect
between
the
privileged officials
while In
population
by
the
population e11te treat
deference cheated.
the
determined
the
can
be
divided
and
the
the
privileged
the words
common
common of
a
and
the
cultural
man Thai
is
bureaucracy
heritage.
into
man.
In
elite badly
two
In
groups:
day-to-day with served,
regard and
are this
the life and of ten
intellectual5:
If man h a s a l a r g e c a r w i t h a s p e c i a l emblem a t t a c h e d to the f r o n t , or h a s a s o l d i e r a s h i s d r i v e r , he c a n turn l e t t or right contrary to a traffic policeman's orders. Fur therm o r e , if t h e p o l i c e m a n h a s any f l a i r he will show his respect by saluting the car and its
34-
fur then impressing the p r i v i l e g e d man w i t h and r e i n f o r c i n g h i s f a i t h i n the p r o p r i e t y
occupant, own p o w e r
of
cleverness
....
subordinates
his
T h e c o m m o n man h a s t o t a k e t h e b u s t o hanging out the doorway, W h i l e he i s free
feels
tor
knows
collector
ever
be
full
him
at
shout
to
that
well
no
his
and
work. the t i c k e t
unceasingly,
privileged
collec the for man w o u l d
t r a v e l l i n g by b u s " .
I f a p r i v i l e g e d man h a s t o a r r a n g e s o m e t h i n g w i t h a g o v e r n r e n t o f f i c e he c a n m o s t l y s e t t l e t h e m a t t e r b y t e l e p h o n e o r s e n d s o m e o n e i n h i s p l a c e . I f he h a s t o go h i m s e l f he c a n bypass queues and lower o f f i c i a l s . to The common man has wait, to o f t e n v e r y l o n g , a n d he may b e s e n t f r o m o f f i c e
office insignificant matters. he c a n s e t t l e e v e n before to such an a v e r s i o n of going has c o m m o n man T h a i Every o f f i c e s , not o n l y b e c a u s e i t is a w a s t e of time but b e c a u s e h e k n o w s t h a t he w i l l be i l l - t r e a t e d b y t h e c l e r k , who i s p o o r l y p a i d and l o o k s o n t h e common man a s a s u p p l e m e n t a r y source o f income55. Almost a l l Thai a s p i r e t o become p r i v i -
leged
men,
even
if
only
on
a
temporary
basis.
name in someone's persons, to mention powerful t i m e , may o b t a i n f o r place and a t an a p p r o p r i a t e
To a c t the
for
proper
t h e common the man g o o d s e r v i c e , a n d f o r t h e m o m e n t h e may r e c e i v e Also in the o f s o m e o n e who c o u n t s . t r e a t m e n t and r e g a r d s petty between peasants and gaps social the countryside b u r e a u c r a t s a r e wide. S a l a r i e s of government o f f i c i a l s a r e l o w , but: t h e p o s t s a r e p r e s t i g i o u s i n t h e e y e s o f p e a s a n t s and they o f f e r b a s i c s e c u r i t y and o t h e r b e n e f i t s , pension, c a r e a n d a c c e s s t o e d u c a t i o n . Many p e o p l e s e e f r e e medical i t as a m a j o r aim to g e t one of t h e i r children into governservice.
ment
Elitism
the p o l i t i c a l e l i t e s , r e m i n i s c e n t of c l a s s i d e o l o g y . I t p l a y s a r o l e in main p o l i t i c a l i s s u e s a s well o f f i c e r s and government petty r e l a t i o n between the a s in run by a o l i g a r c h i c The s t a t e is common p o p u l a t i o n . the e l i t e . D i f f e r e n c e s of i n t e r e s t a n d views among the p o l i t i -
the
Throughout there
cal
is
elite
a
bureaucracy
strong
may
lead
sense
to
of
and
among
elitism,
continuous
35-
struggles
between
cliques
the struggles, these notwithstanding but f actions, and state, the guardian of the as a whol»= b e h a v e s as elite
The interest. national the and institutions, major the is which interest, national the serve to claim elite s t r o n g l y r e l a t e d t o t h e i r own i n t e r e s t as a g r o u p o r c l a s s ,
cliques and f aco r even only the i n t e r e s t of dominating implicit the interest national the To s e r v e tions. is issues like a coup and in major the e l i t e , ideology of sensitive
or
d'etat
matters
political
explicit
reference
legitimizing
for
interest
national
the
actions.
political
Other
to
made
is
of ten
a r e r e a d i l y seen as a t h r e a t to the s t a t e n o t p a t r i o t i c and i n s t i t u t i o n s , and therefore
ideologies
and
the
are
e a s i l y marked
major
"communist".
B u r e a u c r a t s and p o l i t i c i a n s m o s t l y presume t h a t the Common to achieve progress man is i n c a p a b l e t o make r e a l c h a n g e s , and t o c a r r y r e s p o n s i b i l i t i e s . I t is t h e r e f o r e t h e t a s k of the e l i t e to plan and to i n i t i a t e c h a n g e . In the t r a d i t i o n is population rural the relations superior-inferior al need they conservative: and dull awkward, considered l e a d e r s h i p and guidance f r o m the l o c a l and n a t i o n a l e l i t e s .
T h e r e f o r e , development sees the e l i t e what national
of
the
and
interest
rural
development s p e n d much
plans and policies r e f l e c t primarily the and desirable f o r necessary as f o r the p o o r . The wishes and o p i n i o n s
are
population policies.
error t
a primary
not
consideration necessary
considered with the communication not
is
It
in to
rural populaon because t i o n in o r d e r t o f i n d out what t h e i r o p i n i o n s a r e , the e l i t e t h i n k they know well what is in the i n t e r e s t of
the p o p u l a t i o n . In r e a l i t y however, the g r e a t m a j o r i t y of the Thai e l i t e know v e r y l i t t l e a b o u t l i v i n g c o n d i t i o n s and problems in the c o u n t r y s i d e . S o c i a l values do not m o t i v a t e o r t o be i n t e r e s t e d the e l i t e to communicate with peasants that f i l t e r s from rural areas to i n t h e m . The i n f o r m a t i o n mostly is bureaucratic channels through elite urban the and
incomplete,
cratic It
and
would
rural be
biased
towards
the
interest
of
the
bureau-
elites.
erroneous
to
think
that:
the
bureaucracy
is
homogeneous and t h a t l i t t l e change takes place w i t h i n the various between be found can differences Great system. a g e n c i e s . Of s p e c i a l i m p e r l a n c e i s t h e r o l e o f government
_36_
bureaucratic
individual custom
and
widespread
is
and
depends
Corruption
leaders.
possibilities,
in
some
on
agen-
a n d of l i t t l e i m p e r l a n c e in o t h e r s . The same a p p l i e s t o o f f i c e r s : some have a m p l e o p p o r t u n i t i e s o t h e r s none a t others behavior, traditional "typical" have some all, s t r i v e f o r n o n - t r a d i t i o n a l g o a l s a n d " n e w " p o l i c i e s . Some present the discontented with are young o f f i c e r s the of to be wrong would it However, situation. bureaucratic Young people expect s i g n i f i c a n t changes in the near f u t u r e . rank and a r e s t i l l w i t h o u t r e s p o n s i b i l i t y . In have lower existing the to themselves adapt may they future the
cies
realities.
socialized
Moreover,
persons
selection
reach
the
can
ensure
that
the
most
top.
military and universities of students among study a In a p p e a r e d t h a t more t h a n one t h i r d o f c o l l e g e s in 1972 i t t h e s t u d e n t s had l o w d e m o c r a t i c a t t i t u d e s 5 6 . A b o u t h a l f of
to this s t u d e n t s had a u t h o r i t a r i a n a t t i t u d e s . R e l a t e d t w o t h i r d of the s t u d e n t s had a d i s l i k e of c r i t i is Thailand in meeting s i n from persons Criticism cism. even of ten f e l t as an i n s u l t and as i m p o l i t e b e h a v i o r , showed t h a t among among p e o p l e of e q u a l r a n k . The s t u d y s t u d e n t s , who a l m o s t a l l w i l l c h o o s e a c a r e e r i n g o v e r n m e n t the
is
that
the t r a d i t i o n a l v a l u e s of the a majority shared service, i t i s n o t t o be e x p e c t e d t h a t i n Thai e l i t e . Consequently, institutions in government major changes near f u t u r e the a n d t h e i r o p e r a t i o n w i l l be g e n e r a t e d f r o m i n s i d e t h e b u -
is t h e e m e r g e n c e of a s t r o n g d e m o c r a t i c Neither reaucracy. m o v e m e n t t o be e x p e c t e d . M o d e r a t e s a n d " l i b e r a l s " w i t h i n may g r a d u a l l y o b t a i n a s h a r e i n p o w e r , ' b u t the bureaucracy f o r the n e a r f u t u r e only a modest one. Some
readers
may
question
whether
Thai
bureaucracy
and
p o l i c y d e s e r v e s o m u c h a t t e n t i o n a s g i v e n h e r e . Of t e n t h e argument is heard t h a t s o c i a l values and b u r e a u c r a t i c beh a v i o u r in a l l c o u n t r i e s show s i m i l a r i t i e s and t h a t t h e r e i s no r e a s o n t o t r e a t a p a r t i c u l a r b u r e a u c r a c y a s a s p e c i a l with the opinion that a l l one can s y m p a t h i z e c a s e . Although s h a r e some common f e a t u r e s , bureaueraeies humans and a l l t o t h e s o l u t i o n of p a r t i t h e s e a r g u m e n t s do n o t c o n t r i b u t e are more l i k e l y t o p r e v e n t c u l a r p r o b l e m s . Such a r g u m e n t s
understanding of
the
of
Thai
society
that
bureaucracy.
..37_
to c l a r i y the
operation
Another "modern
opinion Western
to be re jected is that the roots for rational" thinking and behaviour are found
in every culture and that in time a modern s o c i e t y w i l l emerge f r o m a t r a d i t i o n a l s o c i e t y just as happened in the West. Such opinions, theories, presume that
related to all Western
unilinear evolution societies are similar
traditional societies, whatever that all d i f f e r e n c e s , will follow s i m i l a r development paths.
and
38-
their
11.5.
Aspects
Social
Some
For a good u n d e r s t a n d i n g required is information and
the s o c i a l s i t u a t i o n background life rural health, education,
of
on
religion.
Education education
Modern
reign Modern
reforms
performed
education
has
in
the
been
and
In
for
process
primarily
of
the
the
implementation
of
new
tasks
had
to
many
for
the
monasteries.
the
in
monks
by
during
replaced
Thailand
(1868-1910>57.
required
was
education
administrative
be
given
education
traditional
into
introduced
was
Chulalongkorn
king
of
that
modernization.
oriented
providing
Since
then
government
officials.
is a r e q u i r e m e n t f o r ver t i c a l m o b i l i t y , a l t h o u g h theory than in p r a c t i c e . It gives access to employin teaching including organizations, government ment: i n and to concerning access Regulations education. primary a r e based on edueaorganizations p r o m o t i o n in government t i o n a l l e v e l s and on c i v i l s e r v i c e examinations. Neveris people of t h e l e s s the s o c i a l and economic background is e a s i e r f o r c h i l d r e n to education o f ten d e c i s i v e . Access urban c i t i z e n s than f o r c h i l d r e n of poor peasof wealthy a n t s . Most poor people cannot a f f o r d to send t h e i r c h i l d r e n t o town f o r s e c o n d a r y e d u c a t i o n . Education
more in
In
the
previous
section
emphasis
was
given
to
the
under-
u t i l i z a t i o n of a v a i l a b l e t e c h n i c a l and p r o f e s s i o n a l s k i l l s these s k i l l s are low valued in the s y s t e m . Morebecause have d i f f i c u l t i e s f i n d i n g o v e r , g r e a t n u m b e r s of g r a d u a t e s among unemployment considerable is There jobs. suitable school among especially and graduates university young from a from vocational highschools58. Graduates leavers middle class background than poor p e o p l e . Since
the
late
can
nineteenth
better
century
afford
it
has
to
be
been
unemployed
a
custom
for their children abroad t o send elite among t h e Thai e d u c a t i o n . Among g r a d u a t e s t h e r e i s a t o u g h c o m p e t i t i o n t o o b t a i n s c h o l a r s h i p s a b r o a d . C h i l d r e n of the e l i t e a r e s e n t
_.39_
anyway, because t h e i r f a m i t i e s pay in t h e e v e n t t h a t scholarship is not f o r thcoming. At present Thailand
the has
several thousands of people with foreign education and a m o n g t h e m t h e r e is a c o n s i d e r a b l e n u m b e r of p e r s o n s w i t h a a a Ph.D.. According to Thai intellectual in Thailand,
doctorate
has
now
become
a
status
symbol
as
the
title
of
the Sakdina system (traditional dignity marks). Persons with foreign education can mostly e n t e r the c i v i l s e r v i c e a t a h i g h e r l e v e l than people w i t h only Thai e d u c a t i o n , and their career prospects are better.
The general weakness of the Thai e d u c a t i o n a l s y s t e m is t h a t it is s t i l l o r i e n t e d t o w a r d s t r a d i t i o n a l b u r e a u c r a t i c w o r k . I t gives l i t t l e training f o r p r a c t i c a l work. For example, graduates
of
agricultural
colleges
are
mostly
not
familiar
f a r m - w o r k u n l e s s they a r e f a r m e r ' s c h i l d r e n . Most of them have a n o n - a g r i c u l t u r a l background and t h e r e f o r e they are rather unsuited f o r the posts they u s u a l l y g e t , i . e . a p o s t as e x t e n s i o n w o r k e r . The big s o c i a l gap b e t w e e n government o f f i c e r s and f armers is an imper t e n t reason f o r the persistence of such impractical education. It is d o u b t f u l whether a change in school p r o g r a m res w o u l d have much i m p a c t , g i v e n the dominant social values. with
S o c i a l v a l u e s can f o r m o b s t a c l e s in many o t h e r f i e l d s t o o . F o r e x a m p l e , a c c o r d i n g to the f o u r t h n a t i o n a l plan t h e r e is a g r e a t u n s a t i s f i e d demand f o r h i g h e r q u a l i f i e d and more appropriately t r a i n e d p e r s o n n e l in the f i e l d of a d m i n i s t r a t i o n and management59. Shor t a g e s occur in both government s e r v i c e and p r i v a t e e n t e r p r i s e , and among f u l l - t i m e m a n a g e r s as w e l l a s among p r o f e s s i o n a l w o r k e r s w i t h a d m i n i s t r a t i v e and management t a s k s . However, s p e c i a l t r a i n i n g measu r e s h a v e n o t b e e n q u i t e s u c c e s s f u l . I t is m o s t l i k e l y t h a t traditional cultural roots are the real bottlenecks for efficient modern administration. In general the r o l e of e d u c a t i o n and t r a i n i n g in solving these problems is overestimated.
Health The q u a l i t y of h e a l t h c a r e i n T h a i l a n d is g o o d , b u t h i g h l y concentrated in urban cert res. In the countryside few modern medical s e r v i c e s a r e a v a i l a b l e . In case of d i s e a s e
40-
have t o go to people free is care medical
be
long,
of t e n
are
for.
paid
and
65
countries.
health The
has to not bad come x p e c t a t i o n in
medication
situation
average
people
queues
life
is
i n I n d i a o n l y I+9 y e a r s a n d i n i s a l m o s t 60 y e a r s , the f i g u r e s For Malaysia and Singapore 46 y e a r s .
Thailand Indonesia are
average
and
limited,
capacities
The
other
to
pared
For poor treatment. town f o r h o s p i t a l s , but: in government
67
In
yearseo.
Thailand
diseases,
infectious
account f o r o n l y a modest par t of d e a t h s 6 1 . I n i s o l a t e d a r e a s a n d e s p e c i a l l y among m i n o r i t y g r o u p s the In the h i l l s h e a l t h s i t u a t i o n i s rnueh p o o r e r t h a n a v e r a g e . malaria
and
culosis
is
led shoes
hookworm
widespread.
respectively and
sanitary
by
are
the
These
main
three
problem,
and
also
diseases
can
be
medication,
prophylactic
measures,
and
by
prophylactic
tuber--
control-
by
wearing
inoccula-
mounthe in especially problem, An a d d i t i o n a l c a p a c i t y of opium The working opium a d d i c t i o n . of n o r m a l , and t h e i r o p i u m cononly 75 percent earn. Their they may c o s t a s m u c h o r m o r e t h a n sumption drug and of t e n decreases responsibility social of sense a d d i c t s a r e p a r a s i t e s on t h e i r f a m i t i e s . V i l l a g e s with a p e r c e n t a g e o f d r u g a d d i c t s a r e c o n s i d e r e d t o be m o s t high imper t e n t An innovation. organizational to unacceptive r e a s o n f o r t h e s t a r t of o p i u m u s e is the u s e of o p i u m as a pain k i l l e r . tions62.
is tains, a d d i c t s is
H e a l t h and power t y a r e c l e a r l y i n t e r r e l a t e d in the c o u n t r y s i d e i n Nor t h o r n T h a i l a n d . The d i r e c t e f f e c t of d i s e a s e s is t h e l o s s o f p r o d u c t i v e w o r k o f s i c k p e o p l e a n d o f t h o s e who h a v e t o c a r e f o r them. The r e s u l t is of t e n a d e c r e a s e of p r o d u c t i o n and i n c o m e . At the same t i m e n e c e s s a r y e x p e n d i and increases. Impoverishment ture f o r travel and treatment e v e n l o s s o f l a n d c a n be t h e r e s u l t 6 3 . On t h e o t h e r h a n d i t is in d i e t s and r e s u l t s power t y implies poor that clear the in widespread are Both anemia. and malnutrition and anemia cause a d e c r e a s e of countrys1de6L*. M a l n u t r i t i o n p h y s i c a l s t r e n g t h and an i n c r e a s e d l i a b i l i t y to d i s e a s e s . T h i s can a l s o d i s t o r t normal d e v e l o p m e n t of c h i l d r e n .
_g*1._
Rural
life
Numerous
Thai
Thailand
some
p0rcer66,
but
on
various
deserve
villages general
a
large
aspects
attention
been
have
are
studies
number
of
of
village
studied.
those
other
For
by
studies
1ife67.
Nor thorn
Moerman55 are
Only
a
and
available
few
points
here.
a h e a d m a n , e l e c t e d by t h e v i l l a g e r s , b u t is only if the c o n s e n t of the d i s t r i c t Some s i x officer is obtained. to twelve villages form a s u b - d i s t r i c t . The head of the s u b - d i s t r i c t is e l e c t e d f r o m
Every v i l l a g e has appointment valid
among
the to
the
village
government, the
village
but
government
The
headmen.
they
headmen
cannot
service.
government.
get
a
be c o n s i d e r e d
They
form
the
link
payment
as
from
belonging
between
the
They
r e p r e s e n t the v i l l a g e in and r e p r e s e n t the government a d m i n i s t r a t i o n in the v i l l a g e . C o n f l i c t s of l o y a l t y o c c u r of ten as social norms within t h e v i l l a g e a r e of t e n i n c o n gruous with legislation and government policy. Village
the
and
the
government
headmen
are
administration
inclined
to
obstruct
government
policies
and
meet resistance in the village. In Nor thorn Thailand usually the most powerful villagers are elected as village headmen68.
Nuclear f amities are m o s t c o m m o n , b u t t h e r e s e e m s t o be some p r e f e r e n c e f o r m a t r i l i n e a l extended f a m i t i e s . In these extended f amities the youngest married daughter and her husband and c h i l d r e n live in the parental house. If a y o u n g e r d a u g h t e r m a r r i e s , t h e f a m i t y of t h e o l d e r one moves out. In rare occasions a married son's f a m i t y l i v e s in the p a r e n t a l house. I f t h e r e a r e no d a u g h t e r s o r i f t h e e c o n o mic s i t u a t i o n does not a l l o w f o r the e x t e n d e d f a m i t y , f a m i -
l i e s a r e n u c l e a r . Of t e n m a r r i e d c h i l d r e n have t h e i r own house i n the p a r e n t a l compound. All children inherit in p r i n c i p l e a n e q u a l s h a r e o f t h e p r o p e r t y of e a c h o f t h e i r p a r e n t s , but the youngest daughter l i v i n g in the p a r e n t a l
h o u s e i n h e r i t s the house as a compensation f o r the o b l i g a tion t o care f o r the p a r e n t s in t h e i r old age. P r a c t i c a l c o n s i d e r a t i o n s may l e a d t o d i f f e r e n t arrangements.
42
Religion The B u d d h i s t m o n a s t e r y has a c e n t r a l p l a c e in t h e v i l l a g e . M o s t male v i l l a g e r s s p e n d some t i m e in the m o n a s t e r y as a
in or monk. The c l e r g y is n o r m a l l y n o t e n g a g e d o f f a i r s , a l t h o u g h m o n k s may be a s k e d f o r a d v i c e o n
novice jar
Very
problems. many
ceremonies
imper tent in
and
ritual
their
is
the
outside
task
monastery.
secy"
many
concerning
The
clergy
is
D a i l y f o o d has on d o n a t i o n s of the l a y - c o m m u n i t y . are services and money periodically and offered be to c o n s t r u c t i o n , and o t h e r e x p e n d i required f o r maintenance, place f o r the also of ten is temple compound The tores dependent
.
village
o f f airs temple
festivals,
of
the
committee,
fairs
and
monastery consisting
are of
other
activities.
the
responsibility
older
male
Material
of
the
villagers-
Buddhism, called exclusively although religion, Popular of The s t u d y doctrines. from Buddhist strongly differs f o r m a l B u d d h i s t d o c t r i n e s is n o t v e r y h e l p f u l a n d c e r t a i f l y n o t s u f f i c i e n t , f o r t h e u n d e r s t a n d i n g of p e o . p l e ' s r e l i g i o n opinion the to tend Several scholars and social values. asa s p e c t s are more imper t e n t than Buddhist that animist
a repot red murders ten thousand With more than pects69. year, plus a large unregistered number, innumerable robberi e s a n d many o t h e r f o r m s of v i o l e n c e , T h a i s o c i e t y is among I t is e a s i e r to u n d e r s t a n d the most v i o l e n t in the world. t h i s i n the l i g h t of the a n i m i s t w o r l d view as d e s c r i b e d by d o c t r i n e s , which M u l d e r 7 0 t h a n in t e r m s of f o r m a l B u d d h i s t n e i t h e r now n o r i n t h e p a s t f o r m e d a n e f f e c t i v e r e s t r i c t i o n o n t h e u s e of p o w e r a n d v i o l e n c e .
A3-
Footnotes
1. For a detailed geographic description see: Donner, W o l f , The F i v e F a c e s
of T h a i l a n d ,
A n Economic
2
Geography, Institute of Asian off airs, Hamburg, 1978. Since 1939 the official name of the country has been Thailand. Before that time, and during a shot t period
3
of ter the Second World War, the official name was Siam. The name Siam will be used only a few times in a historical context. Since 1977 the number of provinces is in f act 8 and 17 because a new province Phayao has been made of the southern par t of Chiang Raj province. As statistical data have not yet been subdivided we will use the name
Chiang Rai for the former whole province. 4. In Thailand the "Ministry" indicates prlmarly the
office of the Under-Secretary of State. Depar tents, official
belonging
to a c e r rain M i n i s t r y , are n o t
automatically connoted when reference is made to that Ministry. Depar tments of the Ministry of Agriculture use regional sub-divisions, different from the Ministry itself. 5. The word Tai is mostly used to indicate the entire ethnic f amity, whereas the word Thai indicates those
groups living in Thailand. 6. Charnvit Kasetsiri, The Rise of Ayudhya, A History of Siam in the Four teenth and Fif t e e t h Centuries, Oxford
University Press, 1976; Skinner, G. William, Chinese Society in Thailand, An Analytical History, Cornell, Ithaca, New Yor k. 1957.
7 Skinner, loe.cit., PP. 28-32, 91-92. 8. Walker, Anthony R., Introduction, Nor th Thailand: Hills and Villages, Hillman and Lowlanders", in: Walker, Anthony R., ed., Farmers in the Hills, Upland Peoples of Nor th Thailand, University Sains Malaysia, 1975, p.13. Walker argues that it is incorrect to use the term "tribes" as there is no supra local political organization, no considerable cultural uniformity, and no occupation of a definite territory. 9. Ingram, James C., Economic Change in Thailand, 18501970, Stanford University Press, 1971, p. 7. 10. Te j BUn nag, The Provincial Administration of Siam
1892-1915, Oxford University Press, 1977, p. 266. 11. Estimate provided by the Regional and Provincial Accounts Section of the NESDB. 12. National Statistical Office, Population and Housing Census 1970, p. 8.
ESCAP, op. cit., p. 83. National Statistical Office, op.cit., pp. 9-11. Although demographers have expressed doubt about the low number of children repot red they think the numbers between 0-4 years old are underrepor red
-
there is sufficient evidence of a decreasing b i t thrate. _44..
-
15. Arnold, Fred and Mathana Phananiramai, Revised Estimates of the 1970 population of Thailand, Research Paper No. 1, Bangkok, National Statistical Office, 1975. 16. In addition there are nowadays thousands of refugees f r o m Indo-Chinese wsmammm
c o u n t r i e s living in refugee camps
,
,
of
Programmers
Young 2 G o r d o n The Hill Tribes ed Bangkok , 1974, and Walker province and became gradually available
r e r a t e d province by
23.. An example of the way in which these people were used for elections was observed in 1976. A headman of a
Karen village was asked about his duties as a headman. He responded that his last duty was to bring all his villagers to the election office. 24. Literacy is defined as the percentage of the
population of ten years of age and over who can read and write simple statements. 2 5 . For general references see: Coed's, George, The Indianized States of Southeast Asia, Honolulu, East-West
Centre Press, 1968, and: Keyes, Charles F., The Golden Peninsula, Culture and Adaptation in Mainland Southeast, macmillan, 1977. . Charnvit
--
-
Klaus
Bun nag LeMay Jumsai
History
of Anglo Thai Rela
1970, pp. 102-103, 130-165, 175-184. T o j Fanni. pp. 1-39. M.L. Manich Jumsai )p. eit. , gives many examples of the functioning , .in British consular cour is and of tfons, §angRo
us
humi
gerents.
45-
37
|
38 . West
39.
A0
Bangkok q
Sangcha 43
as. 45
PP
William
Gove rnme nt
Walter
Impa ct
46.
Mulde r 47
_
World
Chap ter II § § m p h a s i z e d that this (amo ral) power is an lion s with non- inti mate s outs ider s inti mate pers ons for whic h "mot her
exemplary, and can
which belong rela tive s and, to a lesser mate s and peop le with whom has ,____,__ rela tion , are subject to moral obli gati ons.
clas s
_ _ _ _ .
5 0 . Thin apan Naka ta, Bure aucr atic Corr upti on, Inco 8nit ies Betw een Lega l Code s and Soci al Norm s, Scho ol of P u b l i c Admi
nistration, Bangkok, 1977.
-46
5 1 . Son porn Sangchai, op. cit., p. I. 52. Thinapan Nakata, op. cit., p. 26. 53. Riggs, op. cit., p. 339.
5a. Sulak S i v a r a k s e , S i a m t h r o u g h a Looking Critique, Bangkok, 1973, PD. 34-37. Ibid., P' 35.
Glass,
a
'
Thinapan Nakata, The Problems of Democracy in Thailand A Study of political Culture and S o c i a l i z a t i o n of College Students, Bangkok, 1972. 57. Wyatt, David, The Politics of Reform in Thailand,
Education in the Reign of King Chulalongkorn, Yale University Press, 1969.
58. NESDB, The Four th Five-Year Plan, 1977-1981, p. 188. " 59. Ibid, pp. 197-198. 60. ESCAP, op. cit., p. 58. 61. Ibid, p. 61. 6 2 . Lewis, rev. Paul, Plan of Action, mimeo, NADC, Chiang
Mai, 1975. 63 . C a l a v a n , Michael M., Decisions a g a i n s t Nature: C r o p Choice in a Nor thorn Thai Village, Unp. Ph.D. Thesis, Illinois, 1974, pp. 40-42. 64. Anaemia and Malnutrition Research Centre (MALAN), General Repot t, Chiang Mai, 1977, pp. 1-8. Moerman,
op. eit..
Potter, Jack M., Thai Peasant Social Structure,
University of Chicago Press, 1976. 67
Heirs Potter, Sulamith, Family Life in a N o r f e r n Thai Village, A Study in the Structural Significance of
Women, University of California Press, 1 9 7 7 . , Tur t o n , Andrew, "Nor therm Thai Peasant Society' Twentieth Century Transformations
in Political and Jural
Structures", in Journal of Peasant Studies, 1976 , p p . 263-298; Narnjohn Iddhichiracharas, Bamboo V i l l a g e : A Nor therm Thai Frontier Community, Ph.D. T h e s i s , mimeo 1977; Calavan, op. cit.. Potter, op. cit., Chapter 8. For general descriptions of Thai religion see: Terwiel, B.J., Monks and Magic, A n Analysis of Religious Ceremonies in Cent real Thailand, Scandinavian Institute of Asian Studies Monograph
Series No. 24, 1975, Tambiah, S.J., Buddhism and the Spirit Cults in Nor theast Thailand, Cambridge University Press, 1970. For description of aspects of religion in Nor therm Thailand see' King shill, Konrad, Ku Daeng, The Red Tomb, A Village Study in Nor thorn Thailand, Bangkok, 1960 ; Tur ton, Andrew, "Matrilineal Descent Groups and S p i r i t C u l t s of the Thai Yuan in Nor therm Thailand", Journal o f the Siam Society, 1972, p. 60, pp. 217-256, Heirs P o t t e r , op. cit.. 70. Mulder, op. cit..
_g*7_
CHAPTER III.l.
THE SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC S I T U A T I O N
III. From
Before
Subsistence
1855
to
Thailand
Commodity
was
Production
largely
self-sufficient1.
In
v i l l a g e s a l m o s t e v e r y t h i n g needed f o r l o c a l c o n s u m p t i o n was grown and made by v i l l a g e r s themselves. There was only limited inter-village trade. able movement; of produce
in
capital,
the
form
of
tax
However, t h e r e was a c o n s i d e r from the countryside to the
in
kind.
All
trade
was
subject
t o royal monopolies and r e s t r i c t i o n s by l o c a l r u l e r s . T r a d e with foreign countries consisted mainly of luxury goods. sometimes, B u l k y expo i s of r i c e or o t h e r p r o d u c t s o c c u r r e d apparently in c a s e s of s c a r c i t y e l s e w h e r e , b u t not on a regular basis. In the
the
taxes, to
past
the
surplus the
corvée f
error is used
and
accumulation
formation
for for
or
were
peasants
was
economy from
l a b o r ,
peasants
of
urban
extol red
in
trade
profits.
escape urban
the
productive
form
almost
peasants,
limited,
to
Warf a r e ,
depended
the
as
to
areas.
consumption, of
precious
purposes
was
in
form
"Services"
reflected
remote
entirely
either
provided
in
the
The
temple
on of
many
surplus
building,
at t i f a c t s .
Capital
limited.
The Bowring Treaty B r i t a i n opened the
polies were to fixed ad
of 1855 between Thailand and Great country to foreign t r a d e . T r a d e monot o be a b o l i s h e d and f o r e i g n t r a d e was s u b j e c t valorem t a x a t i o n . This encouraged a p r o c e s s of
eeonomie s p e c i a l i z a t i o n which is still going on. Cheap imper red i n d u s t r i a l products, mainly c l o t h , began to penetrate into the countryside. It appeared p r o f i t a b l e f o r peasants to expand their rice production and t o exchange r i c e s u r p l u s e s f o r c l o t h a n d o t h e r g o o d s . As a f i r s t r e s u l t cotton production and weaving f o r household needs d e c l i n e d . S p e c i a l i z a t i o n in r l c e p r o d u c t i o n and commercialization did not expand at the same pace everywhere. I t depended largely on possibilities and profitability. Cheap transpor ration was a f i r s t r e q u i r e m e n t , and a v a i l a b i l i t y of l a n d r e s o u r c e s
_48._
a
was
Plain
Central
The
second. be
cheap
transpor ration.
and expensive more Railway construction
paddy
where
area
the
land
enabled
canals
and
rivers
and
easily,
expanded
could
was transport r a t i o n In other regions abundant. less were resources land in t h e f i r s t d e c a d e s of the t w e n t i e t h
transporof possibilities additional provided Consequently high. relatively were tariffs but t r a n s p o r t o f r l c e f r o m t h e Nor t h a n d N o r t h e a s t w a s l i m i t e d , and occurred mainly of h i g h p r i c e s in Bangkokz. in periods I n his 1931 r u r a l s u r v e y Zimmerman f o u n d t h a t s e v e r a l a r e a s i n t h e Nor t h a n d N o r t h e a s t w e r e s t i l l l a r g e l y s e l f - s u f f i century ration,
client.
tion
not
were
and
amounts
of
readily
available the
of
was
In
able
not
because
the
an
of
South
of
of
freedom
Thailand
by
bound
was
par t
imper t e n t
profit
to
lack
expansion
for
everywhere
much
of of
mining
tin
the
the
from lack
or
was
not
of
same
suitable
land
paddy
several rural new
within
the
had
fields.
forms
of
population
opp or t u n i t i e s
resources.
developed
immigrants. Chinese for activity i n d u s t r y . Teak the tin joined peasants of the Nor t h . The t e a k b u s i n e s s product tant
also
but
peasants
all
Not;
capital,
and
population
Perhaps
slavery.
peasants. lab our
land,
regions
between
unequal
only
among
regions
Par t
f o r expansion o f r i c e p r o d u c -
the p o s s i b i l i t i e s
Undoubtedly
as
an
impor-
Thai no Almost was an imper t e n t by was o r g a n i z e d
whereas subjects, Asian and English and French Europeans Nor t h , by m i n o r i t y p e o p l e s f r o m t h e lab o u r was provided Burma a n d L a o s , n o t by T h a i p e a s a n t s .
other that products century peasants for specialization. became coconuts and rubber World War, first the Af t e r During and af t e r i m p e r t e n t e x p o r t a t t i c l e s of the S o u t h . t h e s e c o n d W o r l d War a n i m p e r t e n t d i v e r s i f i c a t i o n o f a g r i Production of took place. culture m a i z e , soybeans > rung beans, cassava, and sugar i n c r e a s e d kenaf, fruits tobacco, rapidly. were diversification for reasons Imper tent population growth, d o m e s t i c a n d f o r e i g n demand f o r t h e s e twentieth in the I t was only t h a n r i c e w e r e c h o s e n by T h a i
products,
and
improved
transpor ration
_/+9..
facilities.
Newly
cleared
because low
of
levels,
able
on
rice
and
area
maize,
land.
distinct
and
boom
was
suitable
and
as
of
has
other
and
now,
crops on
was
production
were
kept
more
f avour-
individual from
areas
the
for
f arms
at
was
traditional
sugar,
cassava,
f arms.
production
highly
rice
prices
spar t
separate
rubber
*or
paddy
Diversification
Thailand
fruit
less
water,
production
Non-agrieultural This
was
of
the
this
limited
land
lack
boomed
affected
in
the
1950's
and
1960's
by the second Indo-Chinese T h a i l a n d had become a m a j o r
w a r . Af t e r t h e s e c o n d W o r l d War A s i a n a l l y OE t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s o f A m e r i c a . As a r e s u l t much A m e r i c a n a i d was s p e n t on i n f r a s t r u c t u r a l f a c i l i t i e s
like
building
road
and communication,
on m i l i t a r y
aid,
and
on other a s s i s t a n c e schemes. I n the 19605 l a r g e a m o u n t s of money were spent on the e s t a b l i s h m e n t of A m e r i c a n m i l i t a r y b a s e s . Tens of thousands of American m i l i t a r y and c i v i l personnel
were
stream
of
As
result,
stationed
in
Thailand
and
a
considerable
American G . I . ' s and c i v i l i a n s from Vietnam passed for "rest and recuperation". A l s o many through Thailand Americans came t o Thailand as t o u r i s t s . Spending f o r warf are , r e l a t e d spending on a s s i s t a n c e , a n d p r i v a t e s p e n d i n g generated a s t r o n g demand f o r u r b a n and imper r e d p r o d u c t s . a
showed
a rapid
response by
good
to
and a
iN
the
goods
goods
and
manuf a c t u r i n g
local
Many
opp o r t u n i t i e s .
market.
decline
of
of
same p e r i o d
prosperity
Many
demand.
termination
strong
the
this
market
consumer
constructing, growth.
levels
The
foreign Now
Thai
urban
a sufficient sustain
firms
of
an
services rapidly
extensive
did n o t It
troops lead
seems
T h a i came for
in
attracted
Ameriean
economy.
number
were
has
of
spending
demands
and
expanded
Thailand
withdrawal
war-related
the to
firms
modern
to
to
that
high
luxury
services.
From the seco-nd h a l f of the nineteenth century onwards, capital formation for productive purposes took p l a c e by r e c l a m a t i o n of l a n d , c a n a l d i g g i n g , and g r o w t h of m e r c h a n t
and usury c a p i t a l . I n i t i a l l y t h i s r e s u l t e d in improvements in infrastructure, transpor t , and marketing functions, l a t e r o n a l s o i n i n d u s t r i a l i z a t i o n . At t h i s s t a g e t h e u r b a n economy was s t i l l b o u n d by t h e v o l u m e of t r a d e o f a g r i cultural products. During the postwar period urban
50
g r o w t h has become production. The
boom
dion.
A
based
on
in
urban
growing trade
industrial
as
imper t
of
the
the
the
increasingly
the
that
consumer
and
of
the
Agriculture
is
still
Many
urban
The
reality.
It
is
agricultural, Product
has
went
to
is
incorrect
as
the
that
agriculture
and members
the
flow
the of
the
among
more
to
elite
of the
the
star t
in
growing
number
benefit
from
in
par t l y
this
mark 25
too
par t
weak
Recently
is
many
the
but
Thai
and
others
only
source
not
based
on
economy
still
as
in
Gross
and
percent
CHE
processing
and
the
expor t s .
for
on
in for
several
industrial
agriculture
population
cannot
funds urban
a of
to
of
Domestic
manu
yet
wisdom the
of
of
urban
and
flow
manuf a c t u r e r s
increased
grasp
the
purchasing
side.
5 1-
that
capital
acturing
dependent
urban a
Such
ideas But
economy,
urban
power
the
in are
because have
funds.
businessmen in
of
be
interests
groups
productive
and
people
reverse
could
elites.
some
of
feels
Most
community.
diverge
reverse
still
sense.
from
conventional
diversification
elites
small.
agriculture
of
For
imper lance
traditional
productive
interest
from
wide-spread,
about
urban
a
the
interest
contrary
the in
of
of
to
rapidly.
directly
to
The
goods,
share.
Psychologically, on
share
declined
capital
products,
that
longer
agriculture
major
still
no
products.
demand
so
depend
diversifica~ is
are
engaged
belief
with
agriculture
is
agricultural
wealth,
and
goods
people
of
wanted
agricultural
economy
expanded with
of
of
agricultural
become
capital even
indirectly.
has
much
have
economy.
urban
consumer
links
enterprises
marketing
coincided
the
processing
replacement,
industry
up
of
production
sense
of
economy
par t and
independent
A
would
country-
111.2.
Production Structure
and E c o n o m i c
Growth
In the Appendices D . 1 a n d 13.2 t h e composition Domestic Product in 1 9 7 6 is given for the whole the
major
regions
Agriculture
and
accounts
the
for
seven
about
nor therm-most
50
of
percent
of Gross country, provinces-
total
produc-
t i o n in the Nor t h and Nor t h e a s t , and a b o u t one t h i r d in the in b e t w e e n . Central region. The S o u t h ranks Manuf a c t u r i n g is concentrated in the Bangkok Metropolis and in a d j a c e n t areas in the Central Plain and the Southeast. In these areas there are big firms producing modern industrial products. I n the other areas manu a c t u r i n g i s restricted mainly to processing agricultural products and to c o t t a g e
industries. regions.
W h o l e s a l e and r e t a i l
Typical
urban
trade
sectors
are
is
imper t e n t
banking,
in a l l and
insurance
real estate, services, transpor ration and c o m m u n i c a t i o n , and construction. The incidence of these sectors corresponds with relatively high per capita Gross Regional Product. Agricultural percent
than
of
for
Upper
production total
the
Nor t h
Nor th
Nor t h .
In
are
as
a
more
low
with
are
relatively
has
the
most
lesser
with
a
extent
Nor t h
the
region;
as
Lam pang
concentration also
of
accounts a
urban
and in
37
of
Mae
trade
functions
as
and a
the
Hong of
Son. the
of
the
Lower
is
Forest Chiang Upper
services. trade
46
less
production
percent.
production
for
little
cert res
those
agricultural
imper t e n t crop
the than
percent
extensive
Lam p a n g
Upper
in
whole,
33
products Nor t h
the
imper t e n t
C h i a n g Mai and
relatively Raj
in
production
To
a
centre.
The Upper Nor th has a t y p i c a l a g r i c u l t u r e - b a s e d economy. Other economic s e c t o r s are dependent on the a g r i c u l t u r a l sector. As a r e s u l t t h e s e s e c t o r s a r e more imper t e n t in a r e a s where a g r i c u l t u r e is more commercialized and in the r e g i o n a l c e r t r e s . The d i f f e r e n c e in Gross Regional Product p e r c a p i t a c a n be e x p l a i n e d p a r t l y by t h e s a m e f a c t o r s . I n Mae H o n g S o n w i t h a small total population this is not clear because forestry, mining and trade are relatively more imper t e n t than in o t h e r p r o v i n c e s , and p r o d u c t i o n per capita is much affected. For the other provinces the r e l a t i o n is c l e a r e r . I n t h e m a r k e t e e n t r e s of Chiang Mai a n d Lam p a n g p e r c a p i t a G r o s s R e g i o n a l P r o d u c t is h i g h e s t .
52
In
the
the
typical
level
Gross
of
agricultural
production
Regional
income
per
sistence
Product
capita.
Household Office,
differs
was
Utilization
near
it was
than
36
per
capita
commercialized high
There
is
between
Regional
by
another,
Gross
Product
is
perhaps
may
good
in
ten
transpor t
the household more
Gross
income
village
NEDB R u r a l
conducted
with
biased
In
Regional
in
remote
imper t e n t
against
Product
the
areas
relatively
less
with
higher
a
than
data.
more
Product
the
the
cer t a i fly
is
1962-1963
Statistical
of
In
sub-
Gross
subsistence
the
productions.
that
production
Regional
of
In
36 p e r c e n t of
Consumable
recorded
calculated
1969--1970
home
Nan
with
NESDB
national
cert res
is
production
the
percent
relatively
areas.
subsistence
suggested
from
result
are
26
and
Raj
synonymous of
in
produced.
in
production The
not
area.
the
that
urban
retained
percent.
to
of
was found that
subsistence
is
imper lance
home
Study
Chiang
lowest.
officers
area
was
regional
f acilities,
to
The
estimated
villages
consumption
capita
Survey
consumption
is
underestimated
from
Manpower
data
is
Expenditure
it
household
areas
per
P r o d u c t 3 ` .
production
provinces
capita
According
production
Regional
per
per
income
imper t e n t , caput
and
difference income.
Gross
to
and from o u t s i d e the region because of transfer of rents, interest, profits, wages, etc.. For example, a high forestry production or mining production is less imper tent for the local populotion than one may e x p e c t , since a large par t of the production value is t r a n s f e r r e d t o B a n g k o k i n the f o r m o f t a x e s , r o y a l t i e s and income of r e s i d e n t s o f o t h e r p l a c e s . P a r t of the a g r i c u l t u r a l p r o d u c t i o n may b e t r a n s f e r r e d t o urban residents in the form of land rents and paid interests.
record
I n Table 6 is shown t h a t a g r i c u l t u r e a n d , in l a t e r y e a r s , a l s o m i n i n g and q u a r r y i n g are t h e s l o w l y growing. s e c t o r s . The main g r o w t h s e c t o r s a r e e l e c t r i c i t y and w a t e r s u p p l y , banking, i n s u r a n c e and r e a l e s t a t e , and manus a c t u r i n g . The e f f e of d i f f e r e n t g r o w t h r a t e s on the s e c t o r a l c o m p o s i t i o n of
Gross
Domestic
Product
is
shown
53
in
Table
7.
Table
6.
Overall
and Sectoral Targets
and Actual
Growth
Rates. annual
average
Plan
1961-1966 T* As#
growth
compound
rates
Four to
Third
Second Plan
First
Plan
Plan
1977-1981
1972-1976
1967-1971 T A
T
A
T
7 0 5 1
7 0 5 1
7 0 5 0
6 0
Cross
Domes t i c Product
Agriculture Mining &
quarrying Manuf a c t u r i n g Construction Electricity & w a t e r supply
Transpor t
retail
,
7 5 4 4
8 5
4 3
5 3
15.1
6.6
9 3
11.1
10.9
10 1
3 9
12.8
11.4
. 4
7
6.41
22.3
18.0
6.1
0 7
3 2
8 0 -10 4
9 6
6 5
8 7
3 0
22 . 4
15 . 0
M. 2
11 . 3
11.0
7. 2
6 0
.
7 8
7
8.1
8. 4
9. 1
7•0
6. 8
6. 3
15.8
17.0
15 . 4
15 . 0
8. 7
8.1
3 .1
5_ 0
4.2
2 5
.
3• 4
A 4
5 4 7 9
12 0 9 5
9 5 7 8
6 0 7 0
5 2 8 1
7 8
9. 3
trade
insurance, real
8 1 6 2
5 6
&
communication Wholesale &
Banking
5 5 3 3
&
estate
Ownership of dwellings Public admi-
5.4
defense
Services
2
* T= T a r g e t ** A= A c t u a l l y realized Data f o r F i r s t and Second Plan on 1962 p r i c e T h i r d a n d F o u r t h P l a n on 1 9 7 2 p r i c e b a s i s .
.
basis
6 2
and
for
7;
NESDB, NESDB, Agriculture relative
is
The F o u r t h Five-Year P l a n , 1 9 7 7 , p . 8 8 ; N a t i o n a l Income of T h a i l a n d 9 1977 e d i t i o n . still
decline.
and
volume
production
of
as as
that
retail of
the
Other
wholesale
twice
11
Phi s i t Pakkasem, "Development Planning and Implemeditation in Thailand" , in Baldwin, Lee W., a n d w. D a v i d M a x w e l l , T h e R o l e of F o r e i g n F i n a n c i a l A s s i s t a n c e to Thailand in the 1 9 8 0 ' s , 1975,
p-
big
¢
a
nistration
Sources:
¢
major major
trade of
and
these
agriculture,
sector sectors
despite are
services.
three
but
big.
-51;
sectors
around
the
rapid
manuf a c t u r i n g ,
Only
in
1960
together
1980
it
was
will
the as
be
Table
7.
Change
in
Composition
_
of
Gross
Percent
36.7
l966 k 31 6
1.8 10.A
2 2 12 2
3.9 0.5
5 1 0 8
T r a n s p o r t & communication 7 . 0 Wholesale & r e t a i l trade 1 7 . 8 Banking, insurance &
7 7 18 6
Agriculture
... 1960
Mining a quarrying Manus acturing Construction Electr. & water
real
supply
of
1971 29.4
1.4 18.2
20.3
22.9
4.0
3.3
3.3
1..0 6.9 15.9
6.7
16.5
23.9 0.8
5 3
5 1 1 6
5.1 9.4
5.1
4.3
8.7
9.8
10 • 8
¢1.2 11.2
100.0
100.0
100.0
100. 0
100.0
3 9 1
1
1+1 9
Public administration & defence Services
4.3
1. 4
**
Target. NEDB, The Second National Economic and Social D e v e l o p m e n t P l a n , p. 41; NESDB, The Four th Five-
* E s t i m a t e d on
Sources'
198 l**
4 .
dwellings
Total
1976 26.l» 1.0
2 4 5 0
estate
Ownership
Domestic Product
Year
s e v e n - m o n t h data.
Plan, p.
88.
Data published by Phaichitr Uathavikul show that between 1960 and 1966 the distributive shares of economic sectors changed very little for the Nor th and the Nor theasts. More remarkably, it appears that the data he gave for these regions in 1960 differ only slightly from the data for 1976 presented in Appendix D.l. The main changes in Thailand's economic structure have taken place in Bangkok and surrounding areas. In the Nor th and Nor theast economic growth is still mainly dependent on growth of agricultural production. Table 8 shows that the growth rate of production per
capita is much lower in the outer regions than in the Central Region including
Table
Bangkok.
8. Trend in Cross Regional Product 197 1- 1976
(constant 1962 prices). Regional
Region
Population
N o r th
2.4
Nor theast Centrally) South Whole Kingdom
2.8
1 ) Including
2.6 2.7 2.7
Growth Rate cap(%) Total Per head 4.5 2.1 5.14 2.5 7.1
4.4
4_8
2.0
6.2
3.4
Share
GDP
( )
1971
1976
14.1.
13.2
15.4 57.2
14.8 59.8 12.2 100.0
13.0 100.0
Bangkok.
Sources: NESDB, The Four th Five-Year Plan, pp.l39 5
-55
165
l
ILL. 3.
Distziihuf-
Income
shown c h a t
was
Regional Products d i f f e r s v o n s i d c r a b l y income per capita average difference to
likely
transfers
be
somewhat
of
par t
than p e t
bigger
GRP as
of
income
and Dcl's 0ilal
sectoral
regional,
D in
Appendix
In
on
has
distribution
income
aepecte.
0 1
per
capital
between
regions.
between
regions
caput
CRP b e c a u s e
urban c e r t r e s ,
to
Gross The are of
espe-
cially t o Bangkok. T h e p e r c a p i t a GRP i n B a n g k o k i s s i x t i m e s a s h i g h a s i n the in as high as times four and almost Nor t h e a s t the average excluding Bangkok, Region, In the Central Nor t h . regions. But p e r c a p i t a GRP i s a l s o h i g h e r t h a n i n o t h e r here
the
data
vicinity,
character
of
most
by
affected
are
Bangkok's
which
of
industrial
conceals
Central
activities
typical
the
in
agricultural
Thailand.
income interregional high the for cause underlying The d i s p a r i t i e s i s in t h e f i r s t p l a c e t o be f o u n d i n t h e i n t e r the d i s p a r i t i e s . In Table 9 is shown t h a t s e c t o r a l income income per worker i n a g r i c u l t u r e is a b o u t one s i x t h of the income p e r w o r k e r in i n d u s t r y , one t e n t h of the income p e r
w o r k e r in commerce and l e s s t h a n one f o u r t h of t h e income p e r worker in s e r v i c e s . The high income s e c t o r s a r e mainly and in o t h e r urban c o n c e n t r a t e d in the Bangkok m e t r o p o l i s these sectors considerable d i f f e r but also within areas, e n c e s of income a r e f o u n d . Table
9.
Incomes
Annual Occupation
by
in 1976 Income per Worker ( b a h t ) (GDP p e r p e r s o n e m p l o y e d )
p e r W o r k e r by Main O c c u p a t i o n
Sectors
7 , 113
Agriculture Industry
,
44 2 1 5 70 , 339 32 , 665
Commerce
Service Source:
NESDB,
The
Four th
Five-Year
Plan,
p.143.
is d i s t r i b u t i o n among h o u s e h o l d s income I n T a b l e 10 t h e g i v e n f o r 1 9 7 3 . I t a p p e a r s t h a t m o s t h o u s e h o l d s had incomes N o r t h e a s t lsl In the baht and 30,000 b a h t . 6,000 between p e r c e n t of percent
45
the
had
population
higher
had
lower
incomes. 56
incomes
and
in
Bangkok
Table
Income
10.
Distribution
Different
among Household
Regions,
using
Income
in of
Groups
Categories
1973 Under
Region
6,000
From
000
6,
25.5 41.1
South Central Bangkok
15.2 4.1 0.7
74.3 78.5 54.8
Whole
22.2
64.6
Source:
NESDB,
A common
The
belief
in
baht
49.6
Four th
is
A. 9. 10 17 • 44 13
4 3 5 4 5 2
p.
lash.
u
.
.
Five-Year
Thailand
Percent 30,000 Total
Over
2 9 , 9 9 9 baht 70.1
baht
Nor t o Nor t h e a s t
Kingdom
to
Plan,
that
the
income
100 100 100 100 100 100
0 0 0 0
0 0
distribution
has worsened significantly during the past decades. This b e l i e f i s s u s t a i n e d by n e w s p a p e r s a n d s t a t e m e n t s of s o c i a l a n d p o l i t i c a l s c i e n t i s t s . The a v a i l a b l e s t u d i e s , however, d o n o t s u p p e r t t h i s 7 . T h e d a t a s u g g e s t a s l i g h t i n c r e a s e of indicators of inequality, but because of conceptual and s t a t i s t i c a l problems, and the incomparability of various surveys, the o u t c o m e is not c l e a r . Never t h e l e s s , i t is n o t w i t h o u t s i g n i f i c a n c e t h a t t h e t o t a l n u m b e r of p e o p l e u n d e r the absolute power t y l i n e is d e c r e a s i n g . I t is n o t t r u e f o r Thailand
that
the
r i c h e r as is There
of all
in
is
the
rial,
people
agreement
decades
the
urban
growth
the
general
past
over
poor
has
country.
sectors
and
hand or
subsistence easy
to
it even
rice
find
improved
is
of
of
real
been
the
rich
get
real
On
the
people
laborers
rates
for
to
these
-57..
in
people
e.g.
hand
the the
it
group 1978
On
with
rain fed
is
other
groups
potent
incomes.
Agricultural are
According
agricultural
of
incomes,
other
people
growth
real
groups
growth
of
concentrated
better smaller
stagnating find
economic
groups
heavily
with with
position.
income.
wage
to
poor
economic
unskilled
level
to
declining
lowest
repot t ,
and
strong
several
areas
led
f armers.
agricultural
the
has
areas
easy
groups
their
that
in In
population g r o w t h
stagnating
poorer
bypassed
Growth
possibilities.
one
get
so of t e n s t a t e d .
is
areas and with World
have
also who nonthe Bank
barely
the
and
Bank
World
1978
Upper
the
are
Incomes
introduced
T a b l e 11.
Table
in
combined
report t
with
limited
II.
have
Nor t h e a s t
much
higher
and w h e r e
new
in
that
appears
It
land
lowest
the
areas
These
sub-regions.
in
new
where
could
be
about
information
also
contains
f arms
typical
for
levels
income are
reflect
possibili-ties.
growth
The
the
probably
areas
in
incomes
f armers'
of
stagnation
groups
these
of
rates
Wage
sectors.
rural
risen
in
incomes
capita
per
have
cer mainly
and
1960's
overall
than
rapidly
less
early
the
since
increased
much
income
levels. could
crops
J
baht
Nor theast Upper Middle
Off-f arm
Farm
income
income
Nor t h Upper Upper Lower
(irrigated) (rain fed)
Central
Central
(maize)
East
(cassava)
West
(sugar)
Income
7,500 10,800 8,500
8 , 500 12 , 3 0 0 10 , 0 0 0
3 , 000 1 500 2, 500
12 , 2 0 0 7, 300
15 200 8 , 800
12
14
,
, 000
9 , 200
3 , 000 4 , 000 £4 0 0 0 4 , 000
Plains
East
Total
1 , 000 1 , 500 1 , 500
Lower
, 300 17 , 9 0 0
22
16 ,, 0 0 0
,
, 500
12 , 2 0 0
,
26 3 0 0 21 900 20 , 2 0 0
,
South
Upper
3 000
9,700
Lower
3 000
6 ,400
9 11 600
2 , 100
1 0 , 100
12, 200
)
1
Average
Typical
Source:
Adapted
from'
World
Bank,
_58_
op.
be
occupied.
Income o f T y p i c a l A g r i c u l t u r a l Households
Region
data Nor t h
Upper
the
cit..
12
700
1976
111.4.
Financial
Thailand
has
nancial
was ence.
credited
fi-
was
fixed
to
maintain
exchange
Japanese
in
low
during
and
caused
low
Second
the
forced
colonies
the c o u n t r y ' s
and
external
public
inflation.
The a l l i a n c e
World
the
grain for
hyper-inflation
financial collapse. It and external financial
1950 on
and
and
their
a
internal
rates
circulation
forces
war
independ-
had to be avoided in o r d e r to prevent a casus intervention of colonial powers. Therefore the
policy
allied
1930's
conservative
financial
money
the
its
deemed necessary f o r safeguarding national Any h a r m to f o r e i g n t r a d e and to foreign
the
Before
for
stability
debts,
the
been
financial
interests for
with
of t e n
policies.
belli
of
Stability
War,
deliveries
increase
for
rehabilitation
almost
and
a
the
of t e r
complete
took several years before i n t e r n a l s t a b i l i t y c o u l d be r e g a i n e d . From
administrators
vative financial policies with d i f f e r e n t motives.
as
in
the
followed
again prewar
period,
conseralthough
I n the four development plans since 1961, maintenance of f i n a n c i a l s t a b i l i t y is mentioned as a main o b j e c t i v e . Price s t a b i l i t y and t r u s t in the n a t i o n a l currency were seen as imper tent and
were
aspects
monetary
met.
of
policies
In
the
this
objective.
were
successful
revised
first
Conservative as
it
the
was
fiscal
planned
stated
goals
it w o u l d be a s e r i o u s m i s t a k e t o s e e k a h i g h e r r a t e of e c o n o m i c g r o w t h t h a n 6 p e r c e n t p e r a n n u m a t t h e r i s k of impairing the c o u n t r y ' s c r e d i t and p u r c h a s i n g power o f the bahnlu
.
growth
ty.
Here
in
As
delayed,
mes
a
explicitly
order
result taxation
developed
to
the
choice
the
maintain
profitable was
slowly.
kept
plan
was
desired
made
government
low
and
to
financial
social
that
restrict
stabili-
investments well are
were
program-
,
B e f o r e t h e S e c o n d W o r l d War e x p o r i s u s u a l l y e x c e e d e d imp o r t s 1 1 . As t e r 1 9 5 0 a d e f i c i t d e v e l o p e d i n T h a i l a n d ' s m e r c h a n d i s e t r a d e b a l a n c e . I n m o s t y e a r s t h e d e f i c i t was r e l atively small but af ter 1965 the difference has grown a n d b y 1970 n o t l e s s t h a n 45 p e r c e n t of imper i s were n o t covered by e x p o r i s . Af t e r 1 9 7 0 t h e g a p n a r r o w e d , but in l 9 ? 7 and in 1978 t h e d e f i c i t i n c r e a s e d s h a r p l y a g a i n as a r e s u l t of o i l p r i c e i n c r e a s e s . This means t h a t a f t e r 1965
59-
form of the in imper i s a s s i s t a n c e and borrowing
capital
foreign
in
pay
billion
30
to
1960
of
months
nine
baht;
imper i s
in
1976,
in
1960
7 billion
from
increased
reserve
currency
foreign
the
I n m o s t y e a r s t h e r e was a of payments. imper t and d e s p i t e the t r a d e d e f i c i t s
balance capital
c i a l f o r the considerable
and cru-
investment, foreign became from abroad,
of
months
five
and
baht
large
sufficiently
to im-
increased trade deficits the 1976 Af t e r 1976. in por is Consef u r t h e n and the f i n a n c i a l s i t u a t i o n d e t e r i o r a t e d . the i n f l u e n c e of t h e W o r l d Bank on f i n a n c i a l p o l i quently, increasedlZ.
cies Up
60
than
international
inflation
40
by
rose was
commodity
percent.
the
index
Gross
of
percent 20
percent.
75
percent
internal
and and
are
income
any
was
to
in
most
revenue
external,
considered
to
in
years
is be
increase
total
f aster
increased
1975
applied Benefits
to
and
fill
from
proper tional
years
recent
was
1976
Government
the
18
near about
borrowing,
gap
government
to
and
15
between
in
and
expenditure.
expenditure.
in
index
price
group13.
National P r o d u c t ,
government
the
index
the
increases
consumer
1978
Eood
the
other
Government
of
revenues
ture
for
consumption
Government
1973
From
Remarkably,
percent.
sharp
caused
and
1973
in
markets
How-
low.
inflation
keep
Bangkok
the
1973
to
1962
From
prices.
to
the
in
boom
the
following
able
was
Thailand
1973
to
ever,
income
between expendi-
for
most
gfoupgl,
T h e m a i n s o u r c e s of g o v e r n m e n t r e v e n u e a r e i m p o r t a n d b u s i ness t a x , excises and expor t d u t i e s . Direct taxes are inof c r e a s i n g b u t i n 1 9 7 8 t h e y a c c o u n t e d o n l y f o r 18 p e r c e n t the t a x r e v e n u e s l 5 . The W o r l d Bank d e s c r i b e s the t a x s y s t e m
in s e v e r a l f i e l d s a s i n e q u i t a b l e and i n e f f i c i e n t . Taxes other f i e l d s , whereas in cer r a i n have dis t o r ting e f f e c t s fields
no t a x a t i o n on is There untaxed. remain i n h e r i t a n c e and l i t t l e on g a s o l i n e , and many
capital wealthy can evade t a x e s e a s i l y . The o v e r a l l t a x a t i o n is businessmen s l i g h t l y r e g r e s s i v e or a t best p r o p e r t o n a l t o income 1 6 . gains,
60
Footnotes
1.
Van der Heide, J.H., "The Economic Development of Siam during the Last Half Century", Journal of t h e S i a m Society, Vol. III ,1906, pp. 74-101; Chat tip Nar tsupha and Suthy Prasar tset, The Evolution of the Political Economy of S i a m , 1851-1941, mimeo, Bangkok, 1980 (par tly published earlier by the Social Science
Association, Bangkok, 1979). 2. 3
Zimmerman, Carle C., Siam, Rural Eeonomie Survey 19303 1 , Harvard University, 1931, p. 141. See also Richter, H.V., and C.T. Edwards, "Recent
Economic Developments in Thailand", in' Ho, Rober t, and E.C. Chapman ,eds., Studies of Contemporary Thailand, Australian National University, Canberra,
1973, p. 18.
A
Subsistence production indicates the par t of production that is directly consumed by the f amity which produced it.
5
Fuhs, Friedrich W., and Jan Vingerhoets, Rural Manpower, Rural Institutions
6
7
8.
13.
and Rural Employment in
Thailand, Bangkok, NEDB, 1972, p.3. Phaichitr Uathavikul, " Regional Planning and Development' The Case of Thailand", in: Viehitvong Na 'Pombhe jars, ed., Readings in Thailand's Political Economy, Bangkok, 1978, p. 41. Oey Astra Meesook, A Study of Disparities in Income and Social Services across Provinces in Thailand, Thammasat University, Faculty of Economies, Research Repot t Series No. 7, 1978; Oey Astra Meesook, Income Distribution in Thailand, Thammasat University, Faculty of Economics, Research Repot t No. 10, 1978; Somluckrat Wattanavitukul, "Income Distribution of Thailand", in: Oshima, Harry T., and Toshiyuki Mizoguchi, Income Distribution by Sectors and OverTime in East and South Asian Countries, 1977; United Nations, Intraregional Trade Pro jections, Effective Protection and Income Distribution, Vol. Ill' Income Distribution, Bangkok, 1972. World Bank, Thailand: Toward a Development Strategy of full Par ticipation, unpublished, 1978, p Ingram, op. cit., pp. 170-174, 309-313. NEDB, The National Economic Development Plan 19611966, Second Phase: 1964-1966, p. 11. Ingram, op. cit., pp. 331-335.
. .
Far Eastern Economic Review , Vol. 106, No. 50 2 December 14, 1979, pp. 94-99, and Vol. 107, No. 8 s February 22, 1980, pp. 40-41. National Statistical Office, Bulletin of Statistics, 1978, Vol. 25-26 No.h, p. 100; Far Eastern Economic Review, vol. 109, No. 28, July 4, 1980, p.108.
..61_
l 1+
I
World
Bank, op
cit.,
pp
l
23-27,
Med hi K r o n g k a e w , The
Income Redistribution al E f f e c t s of Taxes and Public Expenditure i n Thailand' A n I n t e r temporal S t u d y ,
n.p., m i m e o .
15
National Statistical
16.
1 9 7 8 , Vol 2 5 - 6 2 , p. W o r l d Bank, op.cit.,
Bulletin o f
Z pp.
Statistics
18-22; Med hi Krongkaew,
op.cit..
62-
)
are
agriculture
Thai
of
E.1.
Appendix
in
shown
is
diversification
Its
featured.
characteristics
some
chapter
this
In
AGRICULTURE
IV.
CHAPTER
I n 1962 74 p e r c e n t o f the c r o p a r e a was p l a n t e d w i t h r i c e , i n 1 9 7 7 6 0 p e r c e n t . The a r e a p l a n t e d w i t h u p l a n d f o o d c r o p s i n c r e a s e d b y a l m o s t 5 0 0 p e r c e n t . M a i z e i s c o n c e n t r a t e d in the
Nor t h and in and
sugar
remained
almost
the
tive
decrease
sava
replaced
of
1962
to
this
vegetables.
and
60
percent
at
of
percent 12
about
The
rapid
foreign
In
total
1976.
in
one
by
caused
is
demand.
of
production
domestic
but
of
The
value
800
percent.
growth.
Probably
group
the
counted has
fruits
still
decreased
it
livestock
agricultural
produc-
12.
in
production
production,
share
in
soybeans
than
f astest
products
crop of
The
a few rice
of
growth
or
Upper
elsewhere
than
Table
1962 The
percent
the
show
crops
miscellaneous
The
cas-
that the
groundnuts,
more
by
increased
In
agricultural
of
in
shown
is
1976 has
a rela-
crops.
composition
the
Eooderops
upland
maize,
the main c a s h
are
Nor t h e a s t .
imper t e n t
E.2),
Appendix
is
this
for
reason the
more
relatively
transition
from
tion
in
beans
and rung
The
The
kenaf
(see
country
the
1972.
much
oilseeds
of
showed
crops
fibro
whereas
same
share
The
West.
the
af t e r
is
rice
Nor th
in
Lower
the
the E a s t and the
cassava in
the Upper Nor t h ,
Nor theast
in
beans
rung
East,
the
in
and
Nor t h
Lower
been
to
for
40
constant
production.
was
demand
mainly
for
generated
kenaf,
by
cassava,
product i o n . The m a j o r e x p o r i s a r e l i s t e d in T a b l e 13. S i n c e t h e has been Thailand the nineteenth century par t of second known as a m a j o r r i c e e x p o r t e r and i t s t o t a l e x p o r t s w e r e o n c e d o m i n a t e d by r i c e . By 1 9 6 2 r i c e e x p o r i s h a d d e c r e a s e d o n e t h i r d o f t o t a l e x p o r i s a n d b y 1 9 7 6 t o o n l y 14 to about In 1978, cassava expor t s exceeded r i c e expor i s . percent. but The main reason is i n c r e a s e d domestic r i c e consumption, r i c e p r i c e p o l i c y has c e r t a i f l y h a r m e d i t s e x p a n s i o n . The maize
and
sugar
is
only
a
small
._63_.
par
t;
of
the
total
Table 12. Composition of Total Agricultural Production* index
value
(1962=100)
(billion baht)
Total
crops
Rice
1967 1972 1976
1962
1967
1972
1976
17.5
20. 9 1 1. 1
36. 7 16. 3
73. 1 29 . 2
120
106
2 10 155
278
3. 7
5.0
29.2
171.
273
940
1 8
1 3 1 8
3 0 1 4 2 3 19 9 11 7 1. 2 8 Z 97 1
133 195 77 147
100 2 2 7 169 2 16 140 97 8 0 8 1510
123 202
370 220
185 129
305
10.5
418
Upland food-
1 8
crops O i l seeds and coconuts Fibro crops Rubber Misc. c r o p s Livestock
c
Forestry Fishery
Total
* Crop
years
are
1 3 0 8 1 7 1 3 2 8
1 9 3 4
10 6 10 3
1 2
2 4
2 6
1 6 23 6
3 0
5 0
29 8
54 6
1 7 1 3
from April
1 6
the year
of
indicated
236
to April
o f the next y e a r . S o u r c e : D i v i s i o n o f Agricultural E o n o m i c s , S e l e c t e d nomie I n d i c a t o r s R e l a t i n g t o A g r i c u l t u r e , Bangkok, 1 9 7 7 a .
Table
I
13. M a j o r
Expos t s
420 350 497 420
Eco-
1962-1970
million baht Agricultural E x p o r t o f which • Rice Rubber P r o d u c t s Maize Sugar Cassava Products Kenaf and J u t e Other A g r . Expor t s * T o t a l E x p o r t Value o f w h i c h Air. E x p o r t s ( Z ) Total
1962
1967
1972
1976
8 s 280
1 1 7 096
15 s 897
az s 809
3,240 2, 111
4,653
4,437
1,574 1,355 75
1,862 1,980 1,265
8,603 5,297
502 61 I»23
726
1,547
5,598 6,856 7,5z6
579 1,365
866 1,8a6
9,529
lls,166 78
1,087 3,719 22,1191 71
579 8,350 60,198 71
87
* Includes f o r e s t r y , f i s h e r y and l i v e s t o c k S o u r c e ' Same as f o r Table 1 2 .
share of non-agricultural expor is has increased to almost 30 percent.
64-
What was cultural area,
the main r e a s o n f o r the s t r o n g increase of agricomponents: There a r e three r e l e v a n t production?
yield,
and
Appendix
prices.
shows
E.1
that
the
crop
1 9 6 2 and 1 9 7 6 .
area increased about 60 p e r c e n t b e t w e e n
With the exception of sugar cane, yields have been constant or declining (see Table 14). The reason for this is that only limited amounts of modern inputs such as fer tilizers and pesticides are used. The application of these inputs is almost limited to a few crops and areas, whereas for most crops and in most areas hardly any are applied. Many observers believe that the price of fer tilizer is too high or conversely the prices of products too low and unpredict-
able.
On
the
continuously
other which
hand
implies
areas
planted
the that
land
are
expanded
quality
lesser
of
is
taken in use. Yields in this relatively poor land are lower than on the oldest occupied areas, with the effect that
overall yields show a declining tendency.
Table
14.
Year* Paddy
Yields of Major Crops Maize
Mung
Cassava
cane
beans
1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970*e! 19'/1**
1972*k 1973
1974 1975
1976 1977
267
325
173
2729
281 278 268
328
184 174 166
2426
257 231 229 283 290
271 283
275
292 270
262 279 380 374 361 211
276 260 265 269 231
326 323 349 333 223
155 148 147
13 1 101 156 144 13 l 11,5 1 18
90
76
Sugar
2381 2334 2347
2294 2463 2609 2451 2263
1940 2080
1,900 5300
7400 5800 7000 5300 6800 6900 7600 6000
8400 8253
(kg/rai) Ground Soy beans nuts 207 217 2 19 210 224 196
2 13 193 192 187 206 189
2080
75£+0
198
2180 23 18 2062
8148
193 199 165
8367 5349
172 157 147 163 133 132 136 16 1 137 15 1 138 136 13-Q 154 179
go,
* Crop years are from April of the year indicated to April of the next year. ** Second crop not included. Source: Division of Agricultural Economics, Agricultural Statistics of Thailand, Crop year 1976/1977,
Bangkok, MOAC, 1977, and Ibid., Crop Year 1977/1978, 1978.
-65-
The (see
Table
were
in c o n s i d e r a b l y . Over the f o r the Bangkok m e t r o -
in
boom
prices
f arm
1968-1971
the
of
because
but
depressed,
considerably
increased
have
products years the
most of In 15).
prices
1973 and 1974 f arm p r i c e s increased index period 1968-1976 the consumer
markets
world
the
S O prices f arm real percent, 64 by increased polis most f arm is, that increased, inflation) for (corrected
has
agricultural
1973, was there though and y e a r s , but in 1976 t h e r e was percent as compared to 19621.
20
15.
Table
Year*
Farm
Paddy
Mung
Maize
cane**
0.76 0.86 0.70 0.86 1.35 2.06 1.85 1.67 1.61»
2;32
1.98 1.87*** 2.37
Index
Same
Thus
appears
it
planted,
to
the
that
the
to
inflation,
real
4.70
5.64
22 1
100
258
18 1
22-4,
ton;
increases the
to
index
the
for
of
increased
by
120
in
both
Over crop
same
the by
88
percent.
-66
crop
period
percent.
production, The
not
was
crops.
of
in
From
of the
1962
production the
Bangkok
This
implies
corrected
total
area
value
real
the
individual
value
and
prices
of
increase
This
current
Alb.
indicated to April Farm p r i c e , from
k g *
increase
increased
value
year
the
of
yields
100
price
2.32 2 . 52 2.51 3. 41 3.99 z.. 16
4 . 63
production. of
.
l+. 2 9
14.
index
from
increased consumer
crop
2.36 2.211
284,
table
that
2.1.11
.
286
per
increased
of
1976
for
2 . 18 2 32 2 . 22 2 06 2 . 28 2 . 56 3 . 00 3 . 58 3 . 75
4.98 5.67
Baht
contributed
agricultural result
as
0.30
109 1 15 108 1 10 11 1 131 177 252
0 41 0.46 0.47
April
*Crop years are from o f t h e n e x t y e a r ; ** January-July. Source'
0.47 0.52 0.47 0.34
3.74
(1972-73=100) 191 181
1977
0.40 0.33 0.54
2.63 2.73 1.81 2.30 2.2£+ 2.57 2.68 3.54
0.97 0.71
1.14 0.97 0.86 0.63 0.80 1. .31 1.96
(bah:/kg) Ground Soy beans nuts
Sugar
Cassava
beans
1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977
in of
Products
Major
of
Prices
the
decline net gain
s 1ow a still a
1972 in following
Amman
for
significantly
increased
have
whole
a
as
sector
prices.
trade
of
terms
the
that
shown
consumer
Bangkok
than
Easter
increased
prices
Siam-walla
area
for
planted
urban
with
crops
However,
buff alo
the
tractor.
There
replaced and
better,
animals.
Status
more
become
by
may
play
may
f arms,
still
a
of
change
trend
animals, than
the
animals
may
f aster
jobs
maintenance
widespread
well
as
labourers.
hired
the
and
as
role
the
do
Buff alo
of
many
cultivation.
draught
why
can
for
used
imper t e n t
more
shot t a g s
land
independent
increases
animals
with
fat
cheaper.
even
and
lowland
in
draught
replacing
Tractors
tractors.
consumption.
wet-rice
in
reasons
several
perhaps
areas
in
burden
by
are
now
still
is
in
and
production
been
have
bullocks
animals
are
tractors
although
are
data
f arms.
and
draught
as
of
bulk
the
but
rapid-
show
the
specialized
are
there
Now
areas,
buff aloes
Thailand
price
production
slaughtering
integrated
have been
always
non-specialized
from
centuries
be
12
subsistence
unregistered
agriculture.
near
mainly
In
poultry
and hill
comes
Table
however,
illegal
much
is
There much
areas
rural in
by
observers,
some
to
According
reliable.
Pigs
higher
replaced in
production
livestock
for
data
growth. not
percent
value).
higher
The
been
have
value
low
with
(crops
40
first, of
intensification
second,
and
prices,
f arm
real
planted
raj
This
causes,
two
This
percent.
per
percent.
40
of
result
the
be
can
nearly
by
increased
crops
with
increase
60
by
period
production
of
value
real
the
that
this
over
increased
crops
with means
the The
is
they t
desire recent
replacing
or a of
to oil
draught
tractors.
I n areas w i t h s u f f i c i e n t l a n d , s p e c i a l i z a t i o n in b u f f a l o animals are raised in these Draught r a i s i n g has d e v e l o p e d . f o r use during the a n d s o l d in t h e l o w l a n d a r e a s areas s e a s o n . Af t e r u s e , t h e a n i m a l s may b e r e s o l d t o cropping developed has exchange of type This areas. former the t h e Nor t h e a s t and the C e n t r a l P l a i n s and between between t h e h i l l s and the v a l l e y s in the Nor t h . More imper t e n t is the in production meat for raising buff alo and cattle uplands and done Nor t h t h i s is Upper In the highlands. mainly and to minority groups, belonging by r i c h f a r m e r s ,
b y r i c h f a r m e r s i n t h e l o w l a n d s , who g r a z e t h e i r a n i m a l s i n a d j a c e n t f o r e s t a r e a s and on swidden f a l l o w s . has fields paddy and ponds streams, canals, in Fishing always been an imper t e n t s i d e l i n e a c t i v i t y of the lowland ._67_
Traditionally,
population.
the
were
fish
and
rice
two main
d i e t . O v e r - f i s h i n g in some g r e a s e c o m p o n e n t s of the p o p u l a r of i n c r e a s i n g p o p u l a t i o n and e s p e is a d i r e c t consequence
in of
c i a l l y of the i n c r e a s e of the number of poor people. i s of t e n an a c t i v i t y fishing of u n d e r e m p l o y m e n t periods l a s t resor t f o r poor people.
by Nor
and
province
to
basic
significant
beans,
some
in
scale
Upper
the
in
area
different
consequently
imper t e n t
cash
of
Upper
the
in
the average f arm s i z e is s m a l l e r than that and y i e l d s a r e of t e n h i g h e r of the c o u n t r y , T a b l e 16 s h o w s t h a t a v e r a g e i n the c o u n t r y . o n l y h a l f of f a r m s i z e s in o t h e r a r e a s .
16.
Region
with
Average
Size
of
Landholding
Provnces
raj
are
Nor t h
in o t h e r par t s than elsewhere f arm sizes are
Farm Family,1975
per
Upper
in
beans,
longman f r u i t .
and
agriculture
soy
maize,
are
crops
garlic
tobaeeo,
peanuts,
Two c h a r a c t e r i s t i c s
Table
Nor t h ,
Upper
the
in
areas
of r u b b e r , k e n a f , c a s s a v a and c o c o n u t s . R i c e more imper tent than elsewhere (see Appendix
most
The
E.2).
rung
available
readily
not
to
area
differ,
characteristics
exception relatively
is
are
chapter
From
region.
the s t r o n g l y . Most of a r e grown o r y i e l d s d i f f e r a r e grown a l s o on a in the c o u n t r y grown elsewhere
crops crops the
this
in
provided
data
The
Nor t h
tai
10 17 7
Nor t h e a s t
23 29
Chiang Chiang
Central
31.
Mae
South
23
Lamp f u n
Country
28
Nan
15
Phrae Lam p a n g
12
Nor th
Source
Division
of
Distribution
In is
lowland of ten
areas
only
6
of
Agricultural
1975,
these
ra1.
Son
Hong
8
8
MOAC,
provinces paddy
-68
Raj
Economics,
Bangkok,
Average
Mai
the
Landholding
1977
( I n Thai)
average
yields
are
f arm
size
almost
75
than higher 17). (Table average national the the U p p e r Nor t h more m u l t i p l e in is cropping p r a c t i s e d than in other areas of the c o u n t r y . This means
percent
Moreover,
f arms in a v a l l e y in
6 raj
that
than
more income country. Vegetable
growing
Thailand.
In
closed this are
production of
Vegetables such
Chinese
lettuce,
as
and
green
Western
beans,
the two
Nor th par t l y for
blame
vegetables
rice.
especially
is
has
most
areas
lowland
the
af t e r
crop
second
a
as
grown
Garlic
In
management.
poor
on
put
in ago
Upper
these
of
One
increasing
the
in
Insiders
losses.
high
of
an
years
few
established
market.
expor t
the
for
because
were
plants
processing
individual
cert res
urban A
abroad.
from
and
is
there
from
demand
of
and
by
scale
small
but
holds,
still
a
on
vegetables
many
economy
Nor thorn
in
imper stance
increasing
gathered
or
Bangkok
from
working
of
because
specialization food
is
t h e U p p e r Nor t h may p r o v i d e i n many o t h e r p a r i s of t h e
f arms
subsistence
This
households.
area,
raj
the
grown
were
herbs
12
imper t e n t .
Gradually
origin
being
are
Chinese
and
cabbage
peas,
also
grown,
cabbage.
The tage
lowland
during than
in
in dry
conditions
the
consumer
vegetable
the U p p e r N o r t h
Central
cool
the
climatic
big
areas
the
over
Plain,
season.
Moreover,
the
mountains
in
l o w l a n d s . B e c a u s e the 700 over m a r k e t , is
growing
is
have
because
slow.
69
of
a climatic
throughout are
distance
more
to
kilometers,
advan-
temperature
lower
the
year
f avourable
Bangkok, expansion
the of
Table 17.
Average
Region
Y i e l d of P a d d y
kg/tai
per
planted,
1976/77
Provinces in Upper Nor th
kg/rai
Raj
Nor th
377
Chiang Mai
Nor theast
197
Chiang Raj
Central Plain
358
East; West South
270 270 29 1
Kingdom
269
May Hong Son Lamp fun Nan Phrae Lam pang
448 500 434 398 £405 £467 379
Upper Nor th
462
Source' Division o f Agricultural Economics, Agricultural S t a t i s t i c a l R e p o t t , Nr. 6 6 , , Bangkok, M O A C , l 9 7 7 .
Footnote
1. Amman Siamwalla, I n f l a t i o n i n Thailand in the 1 9 7 0 ' S : I t s Causes and C o n s e q u e n c e s , Thammasat U n i v e r s i t y , Faculty o f Economics, Discussion Paper S e r i e s , No. 6 1 ,
1978.
_70_
lc
l"-1
lm
lc IH lr-r
DQ
il-»IO
|:»>
l"1
lm
IOI
199 lrt
pg
U0
||-'-
»
IH IH
G
,_.
T r a d i t i o n a l l y t h e Nor t h e n T h a i l i v e d i n t h e v a l l e y s w h e r e t h e y p r a c t i s e d w e t - r i c e a g r i c u l t u r e a s t h e i r m a i n s o u r c e of l i v e l i h o o d . In a d d i t i o n a v a r i e t y of v e g e t a b l e s and o t h e r useful Many subsistence. for mainly grown was crops on higher forests adjacent from gathered were products swamps and paddy f i e l d s t e r r a c e s and in t h e h i l l s . S t r e a m s ,
were the three and population
and vegetables fish, Rice, fish. provided the rural the d i e t of of main components s t i l l are.
and
fer tilization
available,
no
f allow
for
contribute
the
water
the
crucial
known
were
supplied
with
were
dug
there
and
irrigation
provinces. traditional
Royal
Flood
Irrigation
normally
control
techniques
more
was and
with
the
a
have
system
in
Mai' fields
Canals
water.
Mai
in
Many
other to
the
Lamp fun
and
schemes
irrigation
difficult
now
is
these Nor t h
of
Upper achieve
responsibility
of
with the
control are flood for large scale s t a t e operated
Dams
Depar t r e n t .
combined
irrigation
exist
also
schemes
people
and p a d d y
people".
local
by
sur-
constructed
peoples
called
so
maintained
is
Not
Chiang
the
in
Chiang
of
in
control
irrigation
ago,
were
weirs
provinces
2,000
over
are
organized small
the
in
Now
means,
An
irrigation
supplemental
diversion
and
years
hundred
six
over
rivers.
developed
been
have
to
valley
Lamp fun
control.
water
good
simple
with
possible
where
achieve
to
algae
crops.
reliable
and
good
Water
fixation.
nitrogen
to
contain
water
especially
and
fer tilization
necessary.
are
years
water
necessary,
is
irrigation
and
soils
for
f actor
prisingly,
tried
No
optimal,
not
minerals
enough
is
is
water
if
Although
sufficient
on
season.
growing
the
dependent
is
agriculture
Wet~rice
during
new
schemes.
B e f o r e the s t a r t of the r a i n season w e i r s , c a n a l s , d i t c h e s a n d d i k e s a r e r e c o n s t r u c t e d , c l e a n e d and r e p a i r e d . irrigation or rain by soaked are fields rice When t h e t o p u d d l e the and harrowed are ploughed, w a t e r , the f i e l d s are s o i l and to l e v e l the f i e l d s . Ploughing and harrowing the r i c e is sown t r a d i t i o n a l l y done w i t h b u f f a l o . Meanwhile and the prepared s e e d b e d s . When t h e f i e l d s h a v e b e e n in seedlings are the a month old, rice seedlings are about
72
transplanted. In years may become too large
alternatively, flooding.
but
is
In
not
with long d r y p e r i o d s the seedlings t o 'be t r a n s p l a n t e d s u c c e s s f u l l y or,
transplanted both
cases
always
Transplanting
new
easily
has
may
rice
planting
drown
because
material
is
carried
out
of
required,
available.
traditionally
been
by
large
g r o u p s f o r m e d by r e l a t i v e s , n e i g h b o r s and other v i l l a g e r s , p r i m a r i l y on a lab our exchange b a s i s , but a l s o in exchange for payment in rice at harvest time. In recent years
p a y m e n t h a s c o m e t o b e i n c r e a s i n g l y i n c a s h . Af t e r t r a n s p l a n t i n g , maintenance of dikes and d i t c h e s is necessary.
Needing sable
may f a c i l i t a t e
and
a
The
two
are
not
are
burden,
a good
of t e n
harvest
but
neglected.
If
is
major a
formed
water and
because
lab our
serious
for
these
be
cannot
some
peaks,
bottleneck
periods.
supplied
fields
are
to
transplant
earlier
harvest
times
At
vary.
transplanting
individual that
f arms
over
household
base
for
example.
of
209
kg
kingdoms
rice
average
land
consumption per
fodder
and
of
exceed
Yields
same
others.
and
level
is
lab o u r
the
total
ex-change in
case
time,
So
some
consequently
much l o n g e r
performed
in
year
period
than
for
groups of
an
ensure
illness
1200 the
of
can
be
is
able
the
way
in
heads. for
This
is
Nor th
to
a
of
equivalent on
73
good
of
to
1800
paddy
an 8-15
Farmer's
seeds
wine,
five
the
by
cultivate
for
the
in
report r e d
is
rice
f amity
region
above5.
Nor t h
Allowing
production
was
illustrated
described
the
surplus
surplus
Asian
surplus
rice
Upper
S.E.
household
required
kg.
considerable
This
the
in
of
per
a
needs.
in
(illegal)
rise
provide
consumption
paten-tial
The
amount
not
are
easily
could
powerful
The
past. r a j
Moreover,
tasks
others
village
the
at
than
groups
irrigation
members.
Wet-rice
direct
the
and h a r v e s t i n g
f armer.
mandatory
f amity
than
harvesting,
exchange
mental
fields
earlier
weeding
paddy f i e l d s to a lesser groups are
and
lab our
Supple-
all
planted
f armers for
transplanting because
indispen-
not
practised,
the water in the keeps the weeds down. For harvesting, and threshing 9 extent for lab our exchange organized.
is
not
therefore
to
be
animal
1
the
total
persons
would
kg land
of
paddy. without
v a r y b e t w e e n 3 0 0 a n d 5 0 0 kg o f p a d d y p e r r a j . S o , a f a m i t y between 4 and 6 t a i of paddy land f o r s u b s i s t e n c e needs w h e r e a s t h e a r e a t h a t c a n be c u l t i v a t e d is rice production, the organization traditional With this. twice at .least Buff alas small. household cash e x p e n d i t u r e s is of amount many y e a r s and they over a r e expensive but are amer t i z e d c a n y i e l d a d d i t i o n a l i n c o m e in t h e f o r m of c a l v e s a n d m e a t . ample time is Aper t f r o m t i m e s p e n t on w e t - r i e e g r o w i n g ,
for
available
fishing
and
to
household has time less urgent tasks.
other
of
production
gathering.
the
During
repair
the
house
subsistence and
to
crops,
the
season
dry
long
per form
other
household that a typical appears it foregoing the From c o u l d p r o d u c e a n d a n n u a l s u r p l u s of b e t w e e n 1200 and 3 2 0 0 kg of paddy. H o w e v e r , i t is u n l i k e l y t h a t many p e a s a n t s d i d SO place. took agriculture of commercialization before P r o b a b l y most: p e a s a n t s than ten r a j as had f arms smaller had they was n e i t h e r lab our o b l i g a t i o n s and there corvée
need n o r i n c e n t i v e t o c u l t i v a t e m o r e land than n e c e s s a r y Only l o r d s and p e t t y c h i e f s had f o r household consumption. more
land
was
which
cultivated
by
corvée
.and
labourers
s l a v e s . C o m m e r c i a l a g r i c u l t u r e in t h e U p p e r N o r t h may h a v e t o s p e c i a l i z a t i o n $n t h e t e a k t i m b e r star red in~response But t h i s p r o c e s s was the nineteenth century. business in in t h e e a r l y 1920s n o r in 1930 was not extensive. Neither there s i g n i f i c a n t s a l e of a g r i c u l t u r a l products from the Af t e r t h e S e e o n d W o r l d War regions. U p p e r Nor t h t o o t h e r f o r peasants in the Upper Nor t h t o i n c e n t i v e s developed p r o d u c e r i c e and o t h e r c r o p s f o r the m a r k e t and t o i n c r e a s e areas many in however, Then, area. agricultural their l i m i t e d amounts of unused land were l e t t , which p r e v e n t e d
an
increase
in
average
size
f arm
to
levels
comparable
to
peasant mean t h a t a l l not does Plain. This Central the Earms remained s m a l l . In some a r e a s more land was a v a i l a b l e funds to accumulate could or had funds and some people petty of Descendents estates. lord's from land obtain through land much relatively obtained have may chiefs i n h e r i t a n c e . Conversely, former slaves and t h e i r descend-
ants
star red
landless
with
people
and
nothing share
and
perhaps
croppers.
-74
they
were
the
first
to give i t is n e c e s s a r y situation the present of c o m m e r c i a l i z a t i o n , emergence t o the only
To u n d e r s t a n d not
attention
I t should a l s o t o the consequence of p o p u l a t i o n g r o w t h . Nor t h Upper the in population the that recalled i n c r e a s e d d r a m a t i c a l l y f r o m 1 . 3 m i l l i o n i n 1 9 1 9 t o o v e r 1, is low, the density m i l l i o n n o w . As l o n g a s t h e p o p u l a t i o n land i n t o s u f f i c i e n t paddy a v e r a g e household can t r a n s f o r m of good q u a l i t y land If dry seasons. the during fields land in swamps and somewhat h i g h e r s c a r c e , lower becomes but
be
Risks
be c l e a r e d .
can
land
are
land
this
on
cultivation
of
and Low a r e a s m a y h a v e c r o p d a m a g e f r o m f l o o d i n g higher. of both reduce y i e l d s . Conversion high a r e a s from drought;
land i n t o paddy f i e l d s is s t i l l p o s s i b l e , b u t a t h i g h c o s t . control and water Large investments in i r r i g a t i o n systems which involve complicated indispensable, are of ten works new c r e a t i o n of r a t e of the p l a n n i n g . As a c o n s e q u e n c e population paddy f i e l d s in the p a s t has been slower than increased considerably, and p r e s s u r e on land has growth
stances
whether
Because
of
and
double
consequence
a
As
the
as
high
inputs
modern
areas a
five
tion source
raj
needs. of
much
higher
f arm
may
income crops.
second
crops
medium
f arm p r o d u c e s
just
enough
O f f - f arm
additional
necessary In
to
rice meet
is
the cases
as of
In
living
yield
some
employment income.
obtainable.
adequate
provide
be use
may the
By
crop.
of
is
for
control
water while
crop
income
the
intensive
rise
one
of
opp o r t u n i t i e s
feasible,
is
income
income.
l a b our
main
the
from
raj
of
from
income
the
enough
good
with
be
may
cultivation
income
only
If
additional
and
is
3-5
a
f amity.
cropping
by
circum-
valleys
the
f avourable soils
better
On
multiple
increased
be
can
provide
can
the
on
depends
characteristics,
are
there
landholdings
It
raj.
relatively
offer
f arming.
intensive
6
f arms
such
physical
Nor t h
Upper
than
less
of
f arms
of
size
decreasing
of
Because
many
landholdings.
of
size
decreasing
to
leading
for
is
most
for
a
possible,
f amity
other
such
needs
consump-
imper t e n t
additional
land
rented.
The p r o c e s s of d e c r e a s i n g a v e r a g e s i z e of f a r m s is a c c e l children In Thailand all by inheritance customs. erated a If proper ty. parental the of par t equal an receive s m a l l e r f a r m i s s p l i t a m o n g s e v e r a l h e i r s , t h e r e s u l t may 75-
be s u b - m a r g i n a l f a r m s b e c a u s e of s i z e . Some o w n e r s of sub~ to e n l a r g e t h e i r f a r m by hard f a r m s may be a b l e marginal w o r k , low c o n s u m p t i o n and good l u c k , but many w i l l f a i l . I f obtain to not: a b l e is land insufficient with a f amity enough a d d i t i o n a l income f r o m d a i l y l a b o u r , by r e n t i n g some additional
they
ways,
other
in
or
land,
may
become
If t h i s h a p p e n s s e v e r a l y e a r s in s u c c e s s i o n t h e y indebted. to turn may h a v e no c h o i c e t h a n t h e i r land t o the over money l e n d e r and s e a r c h f o r b e t t e r opp or t u n i t i e s e l s e w h e r e . is process a Thus the which in on going continuously people a r e being pushed o u t of a g r i c u l t u r e in the poorest l o w l a n d a r e a s . Two p o s s i b i l i t i e s a r e t h e n o p e n : g o t o t o w n o r go to the u p l a n d s . A f a r m e r w i t h 15 r a j o f g o o d i r r i g a t e d l a n d c a n h a v e a h i g h In the holding. income compared w i t h f a r m e r s on a small C h i a n g M a i v a l l e y t h e f a r m e r w i t h 15 r a j o f i r r i g a t e d l a n d o f t e n h a s many longman f r u i t t r e e s , t h e r e s u l t o f p r e v i o u s l y a c c u m u l a t e d s u r p l u s i n c o m e . Lon g a r s y i e l d a n i n c o m e p e r r a j many times -that of paddy f i e l d s . In a d d i t i o n the w e l l - t o - d o f a r m e r may own a r i c e m i l l o r he may b e a t r a d e r i n a g r i c u l t u r a l p r o d u c t s . H i s i n c o m e m a y b e 5 t o 10 t i m e s a s h i g h s m a l l h o l d e r s . He m a y c o n s u m e of marginal income the as t h e r e s t . B e c a u s e of o n l y p a r t of h i s income and a c c u m u l a t e with i n s u f f i c i e n t land p o s i t i o n many p e r s o n s his economic w i l l be d e p e n d e n t o n h i m f o r w a g e l a b o u r , r e n t i n g h i s l a n d parallels advantage and borrowing his money. S u c h e c o n o m i c him is with conflict because advantage, political a f o r t h o s e who a r e d e p e n d e n t o n h i m . By i n h e r dangerous i t a n c e t h e s e p r o p e r t i e s a r e a l s o s p l i t , b u t e a c h h e i r may receive a f arm large enough o v e r c o n s u m p t i o n . P e o p l e in
s u r p l u s e s to buy indebted people.
land
from
to provide this group
money
a s u r p l u s of income may have s u f f i c i e n t
lenders
obtain
who
it
from
However, w e l l - t o - d o f armers a r e not .the only group which officers, I n many a r e a s p e t t y l o c a l g o v e r n m e n t buys land. buy much such as d i s t r i c t c l e r k s , t e a c h e r s and policemen, o f the l a n d l o s t by s m a l l h o l d e r s . c u l t i v a t e p a r t of the l a n d t h e m Sometimes these o f f i c e r s selves,
out
to
children
more
of ten
f armers. of
they
Petty
well-to-do
become f armers
-76
and
the land usually buy l a n d in
and
rent
officers
are
landlords
government
prefer
to
villages
where
their
the
for
strong
base
a
and g o v e r n m e n t V.1.2.
officials,
living.
between
This
well-to-do
can
form
f armers
which fur then c o n c e n t r a t e s p o w e r .
of
is
the
par t i c u l a r
self-regenerating
classification
generally
followed
the
fr:
la)
lr'f IP* IO ID
general
fields
and
following
of
name
for
vegetation
Conklin's guishes
ll*-
lm lwIH1
IP-'
lm
lr)
agriculture
cropping
am
1p; ic:
IDI
IC
IF?
IH lm I
12
lm
r_
Swidden
II
are
relation
S w i d d e n _Agricult§r§
.
F'
H-'-
Regular
II-h
VI. l. 3.
lm
and techniques seem to be needed.
channeled
through the Local Administration Depar trent of thelMinistry of Interiors. Local administration consists of three levels' the central level in Bangkok, the provincial level and
the district level. Decision making and financing are high1y centralized.
But here, just as elsewhere, high centrali-
-135-
itself
makes
zation
are
officers
consequently respects
and
ineffective
district
and
governors
many
in
the
very
powerful.
At
level,
medium
the
of
representatives
and lion,
Forestry,
Land,
Commerce,
administratively
are
actives
headed
of f i c e ,
co-ordinating
role
by
the
over
the The a s s i s t a n t s , an a d m i n i s t r a t i v e u n i t , depar tments, various like Irriga-
by
assisted
is
governor
and
the
administration,
of
level
lowest
provincial
the
a supervising
has
governor,
district
Extension.
off ices.
represent-
These
the
under
the of authority g o v e r n o r , but p r o f e s s i o n a l l y under t h e i r d e p a r T r e n t . Their c a r e e r d e p e n d s on the D i r e c t o r - G e n e r a l o f t h e i r d e p a r t t e n t the therefore and to possibilities limited governor has s u p e r v i s e a n d c o - o r d i n a t e t h e work of d e p a r t m e n t a l o f f i c e r s effectively.
offices, district the of organization and The s t r u c t u r e by t h e d i s t r i c t o f f i c e r ( f a i amp f u r ) ) is s i m i l a r t o headed the p r o v i n c i a l o f f i c e s . Here too are s t a t i o n e d r e p r e s e n t a -
the They a r e a d m i n i s t r a t i v e l y under depar tments. of the d i s t r i c t o f f i c e r w i t h s i m i l a r problems of
of
tives
authority
A a s on t h e p r o v i n c i a l l e v e l . co-ordination communes or sub-districts 3-10 of consists (tambol) a n d e a c h of t h e s e c o n s i s t s of 4 - 1 0 v i l l a g e s . E a c h v i l l a g e has a headman e l e c t e d by the v i l l a g e r s , w i t h approv al T h e h e a d m e n o f a commune of the d i s t r i c t o f f i c e r . elect one among t h e m s e l v e s , w i t h a p p r o v a l of t h e d i s t r i c t as t h e commune h e a d m a n ( k a m n a n ) . officer,
and
loyalty
district
,
the
Since
reforms
administrative
headmen
(1893-1910)
are
government and the v i l l a g yet they have the e r s . They a r e not g o v e r n m e n t o f f i c e r s , laws and r e g u t a s k of m a i n t a i n i n g l a w a n d o r d e r , e n f o r c i n g policies, repot ting statistil a t i o n s , executing government
intermediaries
the
eal tO
briefed where
on
e.g-
data, join
a
by
meeting
the
bit ths at
district
receive
they
the
between
and
the
deaths.
district
officer
instructions
on for
Once
a
to
have
they
are
policies
and
where
government tasks
they
month
office,
be
performed.
no have They excessiveg. headmen are the of tasks The they cert res and no c o m m u n i t y administrative assistance, On t h e commune l e v e l t h e r e receive only a small honorarium. is
mostly
a
tambol-council
consisting
136-
of
the
headmen
and
people.
This
council,
with
no a u t h o r i t y
over
budgets,
it
influential
other
has
chairman,
rarely
is
there
and
assistance
trative
kamnan
the
has
as
no a d m i n i s -
a community
centre.
the headmen a r i s e not f r o m of The most d i f f i c u l t problems t h e i r l a c k o f m e a n s , b u t f r o m t h e e x p e c t a t i o n s of t h e p o p them protect to headmen expect villagers The ulation. o f f i c e r s , and to against o u t s i d e r s , especially government t o l e r a t e t h e i r t r a d i t i o n a l f r e e d o m s . T h i s m e a n s t h a t he has
cords
and
the
with
matters
of
kind
distilling.
and
for
information
He the
to
and
officials
benefit
of
bargain
all
manipulate
re-
to
able
be
must
lumbering,
gambling,
like
activities
illegal
conceal
to
butchering
the
v i l l a g e r s 1O.
T h e y w i l l be m o r e e f f e c t i v e i n p r o t e c t i n g t h e v i l l a g e r s i f This r e q u i r e s t h e y have s u p p e r t of t h e d i s t r i c t o f f i c e r s . a t l e a s t t h a t t h e y have t o s a t i s f y demands f r o m t h e s e o f f i c e r s . T h e m o s t s u c c e s s f u l h e a d m a n s e e m s t o be a g o o d p o l i ofthe among both impression, the who c r e a t e s tician them. serving is he that villagers, his and ficials many in conflicting are interests these Traditionally aspects. In
the
Upper
more
Nor t h ,
in
than
Central
head-
Thailand,
in t h e i r v i l t o be t h e m o s t p o w e r f u l p e o p l e men a p p e a r pawns, and t h e r e i s a l s o more f a c t i o n a l lages or their are entourages Perhaps villages. Thai Nor t h o r n in ism in more dominant Central Thailand,
more group
all
the and
personal.
dominating bridges
which
in than Nor th the of country-side are patrons, the phoo l i a n g , the
the
gap
It
between
is
especially
the
majority
this of
the
v i l l a g e r s and the o f f i c i a l s . They p l a y an imper t e n t r o l e and in the implementabudgets development procuring in p o l i c i e s l Z . Neher r e p o t t s a s t r i k i n g t i o n of development
similarity
in
the
official-village elite village wealthy more
patron-client elite
aspects
relationship
as
of
the
compared
district to
the
the elite, the is It c1ients13. their and associations irrigation join who villagers
Because of t h e i r i n f l u e n c e , development and f a r m e r g r o u p s . budgets a r e used f o r these a c t i v i t i e s . T r a d i t i o n a l l e a d e r s o f t h e v i l l a g e no l o n g e r p l a y t h e t r a d i t i o n a l r o l e . new f u n c t i o n a l the joins which "The stratum political i t s e l f and the widening the gap between a s s o c i a t i o n s is of stability the Thus, villagers. of majority great
137
Thailand jeopardincreasingly is of areas rural the i z e d a s the " c o n s t a n t f l u x " of p a t r o n - c l i e n t g r o u p s r a d i cally changes"1". as t e r N e h e r d i d h i s r e s e a r c h i n N o r t h e r m years Three F e d e r a t i o n of T h a i l a n d ( F F T ) emerged Thailand, the Farmers a n d s t a r T e d t o d e f e n d t h e i n t e r e s t of t h e l o w e r s t r a t u m of the
this
Given
till
population
rural
structural
with
harmful
violently.
repressed
possi-
limited
are
there
background
reaching the of bilities only or not, is system p o l i c i e s that are not in
Policies
was
it
poor. The a c t u a l a d m i n i s t r a t i v e able t o implement incidentally, the i n t e r e s t of the l o c a l e l i t e .
for
aspects
can
elite
the
only
be
i m p l e m e n t e d w i t h s t r o n g p o l i t i c a l s u p p e r t f r o m t h e t o p , and f r o m o u t s i d e . This makes i t d i f f i c u l t t o plan with force on income a positive effect policies with and implement distribution. policies results indicate that rural development i n Nor the .rn T h a i l a n d have c o n t r i b u t e d t o i n c r e a s e d v i l l a g e s t r a t i f i c a t i o n . R u b i n c o n c l u d e s t h a t t h e r e is a p o l i c y of this quota" b e t t i n g o n t h e s t r o n g " 1 5 . He e x p l i c i t l y u s e s t i o n o f Wer t h e i r , r e f e r r i n g t o a n y p o l i c y t h a t d e l i b e r a t e l y about bring to order in stratification rural increases increased t o t a l incomed 6 . I n g l e , mainly w r i t i n g from the a n d u s i n g US c o u n t e r - i n s u r g e n c y p o i n t of view of s e c u r i t y
Research
that
eon e l u d e s
studies,
terms
in
income
of
distribution,
development rural a negative had services provided the was f o u n d t h a t s e r v i c e s led In the shot t - r u n i t impact17. which only r e s u l t e d in to increased individual investments income no i n c r e a s e of average and disparity, increased
From a s e c u r i t y
observed.
be
could
of
point
this
view
way
shot t-run18. the in strategy risk a high marked as is that a t least in the shot t - r u n T h e s e examples i l l u s t r a t e p o l i c i e s have been r a t h e r i n e f f e c t i v e the rural development p r o d u c t i v e in reducing income d i s p a r i t i e s and even c o u n t e r and
in
maintaining
security.
Long
effects
term
are
less
clear. The
total
erable.
these
annual
However,
budgets,
or
budgets a
basic
how
for
rural
question
efficient
are
-138-
development is
how
rural
are
consid-
effective
development
are
ser-
number
population.
With
not
much
travel,
and
can
The problem
not
is
and
in
lack
the
lack
of
budgets
for
such
a
situation
the
on
the
rely
to
and
government
of
officers,
country.
the
over
officers
rural
assist
to
infrastructure
of
administrative
mainly
task
and
an absolute
spread
unequal
or
only
main
done,
provide
to
res
except:
military.
have
be
112,000
55
of f i c e r s ,
government
of
districts
and
and
49
goals
and two
38,000
of
only
is
personnel
few
e a s i e s t way i s local elites.
the
all
their
as
have
few
tasks,
but
a population officials
officers
government
Most
the
of
schoolteachers,
police,
means
example
includes
This
pectivelylg.
between
For
have
Rubin
by
total
the
relation weak.
is
development
described and
the
of ten
Quite
vices. rural
Ac-
W o r l d Bank, over two t h i r d s of a l l c i v i l i a n employees of t h e government are s t a t i o n e d i n Bangkok20. The Royal F o r e s t r y Depar t r e n t forms a t y p i c a l example. Two T h a i foresters
and
many
in
f ails
the
to
cording
an
that
FAO f o r e s t e r
respects
repot red to adequately
do
the d e p a r t r e n t the job in its
o v e r c e n t r a l i z a t i o n z l . Their of because adequately, field OE t h e overall staffing c o n c l u s i o n on the is depar Trent t h a t t h e t o t a l n u m b e r of o f f i c e r s a n d t h e i r q u a l i f i c a t i o n s to perform the depar t r e n t ' s tasks. are sufficient This, a mass t r a n s f e r of p e r s o n n e l to the however, would r e q u i r e f i e l d and to p r o v i n c i a l o f f i c e s .
In not ment
its
low
stand
the
efficiency
alone.
budgets,
whether
tration
Depar t e n t
through
the
charnel led
and
technical
the
Forestry
Royal
A considerable
par t
of
through
district
depar t e n t s ,
do
Depar t r e n t
does
the
rural
develop-
the
Local
Adminis-
offices, not
or
solve
directly the
prob-
lems to which they a r e a l l o c a t e d . I t is not enough to conand maintain government b u i l d i n g s , to s t a t i o n o f f i struct in the f i e l d and t o p r o v i d e o p e r a t i n g e x p e n s e s . I f the no e f f e c t i v e p r o g r a m m e r s a t t r a c a g e n c i e s have development t i v e t o t h e l o c a l p o p u l a t i o n , t h e o n l y e f f e c t of the b u d low A t y p i c a l example of building. institution is gets cers
b u d g e t s i s f o u n d i n t h e c r e a t i o n of e f f e c t i v e development t h e H i l l - T r i b e W e l l a r e D i v i s i o n of t h e D e p a r t r e n t of P u b l i c we1 f a r e 2 2 . D u r i n g 125 million about
the Division spent period 1960-1974 the to limited almost was The e f f e c t baht.
139-
b u i l d i n g up and maintenance of government presence m o u n t a i n s . E x p e n d i t u r e r e a c h i n g t h e p o p u l a t i o n was small f r a c t i o n of the total budgets. The e f f e c t
in the only a on the most v i l -
w e l l a r e of the m i n o r i t y g r o u p s was s m a l l a n d in lages non-existent. Major s t r u c t u r a l changes, which were t h e m a i n o b j e c t i v e s of the b u d g e t s , have not been a c h i e v e d . The e x t e n s i o n s e r v i c e s , almost l o w l a n d s , have been i n e f f e c t i v e
e x c l u s i v e l y o p e r a t i n g in the too. Most e x t e n s i o n workers
are unsuited for their tasks23. They of t e n have a n b a c k g r o u n d and lack knowledge of f a r m l i f e and f a r m
urban
pract i c e s . Their education is mostly t h e o r e t i c a l and too s p e cialized. Their training includes neither i r r i g a t e d agric u l t u r e nor m o d e r n d r y l a n d f a r m i n g p r a c t i c e s . M o s t of them h a v e n o e d u c a t i o n a n d t r a i n i n g in f a r m m a n a g e m e n t , rural i n s t i t u t i o n s and working w i t h g r o u p s . P r o b a b l y most of them
l a c k t h e a b i l i t y t o s u r v i v e on a s m a l l f a r m . Consequently, o n e s h o u l d n o t e x p e c t t h e i r a d v i c e t o be s e r i o u s l y c o n s i d e r e d by p o o r the f a r m e r s '
f a r m e r s . They confidence.
lack
the
basic
qualities
to
gain
In the recent past the number of a g r i c u l t u r a l e x t e n s i o n workers h a s b e e n i n c r e a s e d c o n s i d e r a b l y . I n 1 9 7 1 t h e r e was one e x t e n s i o n w o r k e r f o r 8 , 0 0 0 f a r m f a m i t i e s and i n 1976 one t o 1 , 1 5 0 . Unfold l u n a t e l y i m p r o v e m e n t of t h e i r q u a l i t y h a s n o t r e c e i v e d much a t t e n t i o n . F o r e f f e c t i v e assistance o f p o o r f a r m e r s , a t l e a s t o n e e x t e n s i o n w o r k e r w o u l d be required f o r 500 f a r m f a m i t i e s . The e x t e n s i o n w o r k e r s , at present stationed at the district offices, have t o spend
almost
half
gathering
of
their
statistics
time
and
on
administrative
repot ting.
So,
in
tasks
like
as
quantity
well
a s in q u a l i t y t h e e x t e n s i o n s e r v i c e is f a t from e f f e c t i v e . It
is
not
government
cultural
correct
to
put
services
on
abstract
f actors.
organizations and ity.
pace
of
During
examples
of
and
work
of
individuals
in
many
cases
individuals
low
individual
observed
operations
and
had
for
work
repot red.
to
be
for
one
-140-
make
decisive
this
carried
structural
and
creativeness,
are
study
productivity In
inefficiency
impersonal,
f act
field
cal
blame
In
the
were
all
with
1ow
the
motivation productive
several
and
pro j e c t
out
for
form
of
and
striking
dedication
cer rain
expensive
techni-
equip-
less
Thailand.
in
Thailand
like
to
wanted and
pro j e c t ,
the
expand
to
Although
productivity.
been
abroad
the
same
capacity,
the
pro ject
could
seen
had
and
had
the not
for
willingness
Thai
off icers
more
manpower
responsible was
was
with and
increased
not
to
of ficers
achieved
be
could
productivity
problems
alternative
The
the
what
the
but
ef-
worked
technical
Leading
than
day
per
productivity
is
daily
asked
and
refused.
was
which
equipment,
increase
low
nor
f actors
effectively.
work
done
bottleneck,
the
were
to
and
was very
hours
few
a
climatic
maintenance,
organize
only
that
was
Neither
fectively.
the
for
same with
but
circumstances,
much w o r k
reason
main
The
as
times
six
manpower,
in
the
with
country
donor
a
natural
similar
under
equipment
in
that
appeared
It
rent.
expand.
workers I n research s t a t i o n s t a r g e t s a r e low too. Foreign c l a i m t h a t w e l l - s t a f f e d r e s e a r c h s t a t i o n s in T h a i l a n d of t e n o n e f o u r t h of t h e e x p e r i m e n t s t h a t r e do only annually s t a t i o n s in w e s t e r n c o u n t r i e s do. Not only is prosearch t h e q u a l i t y of good e d u c a t i o n
d u c t i v i t y l o w , d e d i c a t i o n a l s o is low, and w o r k of p r o f e s s i o n a l s a n d t e c h n i c i a n s , w i t h a n d s u f f i c i e n t e x p e r i e n c e , is of t e n p o o r . In
stations
field
appear
to
be
bureaucratic
and
day
idle
offices
in
organizations
people non-working is Idleness high.
the
in
in
out.
day
in,
Thailand but
world,
seems to in Thai o f f i c e s restricted not cer tai fly
also employees; lower workers and technicians
among much o f
many
occurs
This
well-educated t i m e is i d l e .
the
persons
in
most
share
of
be r e l a t i v e l y to unskilled
professional
C H . l I . 4 t e c h n i c a l and p r o f e s s i o n a l s k i l l s The prestigious. not are achievements m o t i v a t i o n in T h a i l a n d is p r i m a r i l y o r i e n t e d to framework with i t s The i n s t i t u t i o n a l powers'.
As e x p l a i n e d i n productivity and achievement and status rules,
regulations
and
organizational
patterns
has
basic t h i s background and r e f l e c t s the developed against persono r i e n t a t i o n t o w a r d s s t a t u s and power. Both f a c t o r s ,
m o t i v a t i o n , and i n s t i t u t i o n a l o r g a n i z a t i o n , c o n t r i b u t e al t o t h e l o w e f f i c i e n c y . I t i s w r o n g t o e x p e c t , as many f o r eign advisors do, that i n s t i t u t i o n a l reform will automatic a l l y r e s u l t in h i g h e r e f f i c i e n c y . O n l y c a r e f u l l y p r e p a r e d reforms
that
take
cultural
f actors
-141
into
account
can
con-
to wrong is Similarly i t efficiency. higher to tribute even c o n s i d e r low d e d i c a t i o n as a phenomenon as such o r , offi~w o r s e , a s a n e x p r e s s i o n o f l a z y n e s s . Many g o v e r n m e n t c e r s a r e w i l l i n g t o do a good j o b . Q u i t e of t e n t h e e n v i r o n and lack of the b o s s , r e g u l a t i o n s , l a c k of b u d g e t s , ment not o r does provide incentives, not c o - o p e r a t i o n .- d o e s a l l o w them to do t h e job e f f i c i e n t l y .
-
-142-
market
free
forces.
In
of
a rate
percent
production
ated
with
1.8
percent,
Despite
high
sectors
suitable
agriculture
for
increased
barely
have
the
For
near and
becoming
scarce.
the
past
twenty
force
will
Table
22
grow
it
years
Pro jected
-
the
of
3.0
of
was
SO
workers
for
production agriculture
growth
that
expected
the
are is
in
l a b our
annually.
percent
Growth
land
population
rapid
be
can
of
rates
suitable
land
Because 2.5
growth
lower
future
unoccupied
expected
non-
in
1960$26.
the
since
the
unoccupied
non-agrieultural
unskilled
by
area.
crop
employment
of
increase
the
for
wages
real
that
low
of
availability
and
the
production
of
rates
growth
real
agricultural
of
expansion
of
because
mainly
0.5l+
of
annually
increased
employment
agriculture
In
associ-
employment
non-agricultural
of
growth
a
P€tC8Ht25-
22).
Table was
sectors
these
in
growth
(see
annually
percent
4.2
i n c r e a s e d at Each
employment
services
in
and
industry
from
r e s u l t e d mainly
employment
of
growth
decades
recent
In
Employment
Productive
of
Creation
VI.2.
Employment
Actual
Pro jected
1960-70
1970-76
1976-80
1980-85
1985-90
Lab o u r F o r c e
2. 3
2.6
2.9
2. 9
2.6
Non-Agricultural employment
a.2
n.a
4. A
3. 9
3 g
1• 8
n.a.
2 1
.
2. 4
1 9
.
Agricultural
employment
required maintain
co full
employment
Source:
World
Bank,
op.
cit.,
p.
.
76
g r o w t h o f t h e l a b o u r f o r c e may d r o p b e l o w y e a r a s a r e s u l t of t h e r e c e n t s l o w - d o w n of the I n 1970 s t i l l 78 p e r c e n t of growth. population the in a g r i c u l t u r e . The i n d u s t r i e s and l a b our f o r c e was engaged
Only
2.5
of t e r
1990
percent
per
-1£,3-
s e r v i c e s a r e n o t y e t a b l e b y f a t t o a b s o r b the i n c r e a s e o f B a n k e s t i m a t e d t h a t in The World force. labor the the periods 1980-2000, even w i t h an increased n o n - a g r i c u l t u r a l growth lab our more using and the techniques, intensive a g r i c u l t u r a l s e c t o r has t o a b s o r b q u i t e a l o t of a d d i t i o n a l lab o u r .
Table
23
Growth Targets World Bank
by
the
Pro jected
_
Proposed
Employment
for
Actual
1976-80 1980-85
1960-70 1970-76
1985-90
percent
Lab our f o r c e E m p l o y m e n t in
2. 3
2 6
2. 9
2. 9
2. 6
industries E m p l o y m e n t in
3.8
n. a
7. 6
6 8
.
6. 6
Services Agricultural
4. 3
n.a
3 6 u
5. 0
5 7
1.8
n.a
1.7
1. 6
0. 7
.
employment
required
to full
maintain
employment
World
Source:
cit.
op.
Bank,
,
113
p.
the a g r i c u l t u r a l i n c r e a s e of the the period 1970-80 or in about 2 percent per year, l a b our f o r c e w a s p r o b a b l y t o t a l 2 2 p e r c e n t . On t h e b a s e o f c u r r e n t trends (Table 22)
Over
may be 1980-1990 period the increase over a t 24 p e r c e n t . The i n c r e a s e over 1990-2000
the
higher
mated
15 p e r c e n t .
at
estimated
increase
is
the
Over
whole and
percent
75
period in
the
slightly a
1970-2000
the
2000
the
year
f o r c e w i l l be a l m o s t 4 5 p e r c e n t agricultural l a b o r t h a n i n 1 9 8 0 . I f the W o r l d Bank t a r g e t s a r e r e a l i z e d 23)
increase
the
1980Is
will
be
of
12
the
agricultural
percent
and
over
lab our the
esti-
is
force
period
higher (Table
over
the
1990-2000
perhaps 5 p e r c e n t . In t o t a l t h i s w i l l r e s u l t in an i n c r e a s e over o f 18 p e r c e n t o v e r the p e r i o d 1 9 8 0 - 2 0 0 0 a n d 4 0 p e r c e n t 1970-2000. I n t h i s s t r a t e g y , by t h e y e a r the whole period
2000, sorbed
growth in
of
the
lab our
non-agricultural
force sectors.
144
would
be
completely
ab-
is
It
not
limited
other
in
and
ests,
24
Table
of
Pro jected
Number
Index
1970
1550
100
in
implemented
in
Lab our F o r c e
Percent Change
_
vested the
in of
1890
122
1980
2265
146
2000
2£.95
16 1
inter-
will
have
implemenproposed
the
result.
the
Upper Nor t h
(thousands) Non-Agricultural* Percent Index Number Change
285
100
5 15
18 1
890
3 12
1450
509
81
22
1990
expected
be
policies
realization a good
proposals.
Bank
of
to
signifi-
no
cannot
inefficiencies
considered
government
1980
World
opposition
of
Agricultural Year
and
policies
percent
f i f ty
A
can be
improvements
cases
because
success
agencies.
ting
because
implemented
be
to
the
real-
be
will
targets for
implement
proposed
the
of
par t
to
made
been
had
star t
cant
Moreover,
policies,
new
implement
and
prepare
Bank
years
many
takes
it
World
the
that
likely
Usually
ized.
73
20
10
63
Total Year
Number
Index
1970
1835
100
19 80
2405
13 1
1990
3 155
17 2
2000
3945
2 15
Percent Change
32
31 25
*
Includes
Source
net
Data
out-migration. for
author's
1970
are
census
estimates.
-145-
data
9
other
data
are
i t is presumed f o r t h i s s t u d y that the a g r i c u l Therefore t u r a l l a b o r f o r c e i n t h e U p p e r N o r t h w i l l g r o w b y 20 p e r 10 p e r c e n t c e n t over the p e r i o d 1980-1990 and by a n o t h e r ( s e e Table 2 4 ) . The i n c r e a s e of 1990-2000 over the period estimated
is
Nor t h
in
the
Upper
p e r c e n t per year over p e r c e n t f o r the 1 9 9 0 ' s .
the
period
5.5
percent
non-agricultural
sector,
including
increase
of
force
lab our
total
the
2.75
A
the
in
for
will
force
unless
effective
change
the
out-
incomes
capita
disparity,
income
that
implemented
are
policies
government
net
agricultural
the
per
increased
and
employ-
of
year
per
stagnating
in
result
population
rural
the
The
seems p o s s i b l e .
migration, lab our
-
5
of
growth
resulting
ment
at
2.25
and a t
1970-1990
trend.
in T h a i l a n d began some l e a d i n g persons I n the l a t e 1960s, t o r e a l i z e t h a t r a p i d e x p a n s i o n of the c u l t i v a t e d a r e a had i t s l i m i t s , a n d t h a t in the f u t u r e t h e a g r i c u l t u r a l s e c t o r a u t o m a t i c a l l y a b s o r b the increased l a b our no l o n g e r could f o r c e . T h e NEDB a n d t h e L a b o u r D e p a r t r e n t s t a r r e d t o s t u d y Third the In problems. employment and population growth was d e v o t e d t o much a t t e n t i o n (1972-1976) Plan National problems. Family p l a n n i n g s t a r red in t h i s period employment expected long term problems. the of result a direct as Q u a l i t a t i v e and q u a n t i t a t i v e a s p e c t s of e d u c a t i o n , f o r m e d f o r which p o l i c i e s were p r o p o s e d . a n o t h e r f i e l d of concern
As s a i d
before,
spar t
ernment
'has
been
not
infrastructural
from
effective
very
opment p o l i c i e s . I n the ease p l a n s . At was not a l a c k of
Vingerhoets
almost
they may
(western) ment.
Most acts
ment by
and
that
at
contained
p o l i c i e s . E s p e c i a l l y t h e w o r k o f Fuhs v a l u a b l e and became well-known¢'. Y e t
opposition strong Other interests.
would have met proposals harmed vested have might
some
policies
was
there
promotion
Depar t e n t
out
gov-
devel-
was d o n e .
nothing
Perhaps because
or
useful
for
proposals and
Lab our
carried
the
works,
implementing
employment
the
were
studies
several
NEDB
the
of
in
conflicted
have
technology likely, only
powerful
if
is
the
however, it
is
with
only the
pressed
interests.
Such
1 Z»6-
the
means reason by a
an
that
belief
to
achieve
is
that
the
emergency
situation
does
modern
developgovern-
situation not
yet
press to impleseem a t p r e s e n t
depart aments and none of the powerful the p r o p o s e d p o l i c i e s . The d e p a r t e n t s p o l i c i e s . Most b a r e l y i n t e r e s t e d in these
exist;
ment
proposed
the
of
budget
annual
small
and
investments
small
require
policies
revised legislarequire only Some m e a s u r e s allocations. t i o n , e . g . in t h e f i e l d s o f t a x a t i o n a n d imper t r e g u l a t i o n . Depar tments a r e p r i m a r i l y i n t e r e s t e d in pro j e c t s t h a t reis u n l i k e l y it allocation. Therefore budget a high quire t h a t c o m p r e h e n s i v e p o l i c i e s w i l l be i m p l e m e n t e d as l o n g as the government does n o t g i v e high p r i o r i t y to t h i s problem. As t i m e p a s s e s t h e u r g e n c y f o r e m p l o y m e n t p r o m o t i n g p o l i c i e s w i l l become more c l e a r f o r t h e government and r e c e i v e more a t t e n t i o n . Several
policies
prevent
growing
sufficient
and
as
most
just
to
potential
in-
growth
agricultural
promote
co
A policy
production.
employment
Nor t h ,
Upper
The
has
Thailand,
of
areas
other crease
create
to
helpful
be
can
inequality.
help to create a c o n s i d e r a b l e a m o u n t o f emcer t a i fly p l o y r e n t . D i s t r i b u t i v e p o l i c i e s can be h e l p f u l t o achieve high growth c r e a t e p r o d u c t i v e emto r a t e s . Main p o l i c i e s p l o y r e n t in a g r i c u l t u r e a r e p r o v i d i n g a c c e s s t o l a n d , p r o intensified noting using l a b our promoting agriculture,
can
technologies
conducting
and
of
policies
Thai
employment
rural
have
f ar
so
governments
pro j e c t s .
The
implicitly
and
e x p l i c i t l y f a v o u r e d imper r e d w e s t e r n t e c h n o l o g y . F o r examp l e , n o w a d a y s the i n d u s t r i a l s e c t o r is c a p a b l e o f p r o d u c i n g a large variety capital domestic but goods, capital of g o o d s p r o d u c e r s h a v e r e c e i v e d h a r d l y any p r o t e c t i o n a g a i n s t i m p e r i s . A c c o r d i n g t o t h e W o r l d B a n k , d o m e s t i c p r o d u c e r s in goods capital than f o r e i g n suited this sector are better t o d e s i g n and p r o d u c e c a p i t a l g o o d s s u i t e d f o r producers
Producers
ery29.
household
and
This
percent. to
these
is
This growth have of
a
means
sectors
that
instead
considered and
tractors
and
error t
the
imper t
Low
employment.
twofold
to
of
on
related
capital
and
skills
significant
a
capital
handicap tariffs
agricultural equipment
-»
11*7-
12h
were
on
other
percent,
TV
par t s
85
motor vehicle
percent,
830
appliances
the
on
goods,
furniture
metal
assembly
tractor
on
n o n - e l e c t r i c a l machin-
for
consumer
luxury
of
high p r o t e c t i o n :
get
hand,
3 percent
and
5 percent,
only
protection
Effective
conditionszg.
Thai
is
are
attracted
goods
for
sectors.
longterm
capital
development. encouraged,
goods
Imports and
the
built-up ture
of
was
about
some
sufficient
expand let t ,
the the
lab our
use
income
and
a
and
There
land
idle
is
situation
employment
a
completely
is
for
harrow
as
may
help
to
no
land
is
When
Then
diff erent.
agriculture
of
only
provide
can
a growing p o p u l a t i o n .
f armers
wet-rice mud
rapidly.
long
as
labor,
worry
to
reason
Mechanization
more
intensification
and
for
agricul-
for
industry
little
is
let t .
area
cultivated
goods
capital
of
substitution
Traditionally, plough
capital
domestic
discouraged.
to
had
prepare
drawn
animal
only
an
rice
fields
and
some
hand t o o l s . N o w a d a y s a n i n c r e a s i n g n u m b e r of f a r m e r s , m a i n l y f o r f i e l d p r e p a r a t i o n . The the big f armers, hire tractors hardly preparation is for field of hiring t r a c t o r s cost t h a n t h e c o s t of t r a d i t i o n a l even higher lower or perhaps to use a prestigious is it However, preparation. field lab our. hire to have not do f armers the and tractor A v a i l a b l e d a t a show t h a t t h e d i r e c t of t r a c t o r s in r i c e c u l t i v a t i o n is t i o n of l a b our r e q u i r e m e n t s 3 0 .
of t h e u s e consequence a 25-33 percent reduc-
the in agriculture swidden was only there past the In f o r w h i c h no s o i l t i l l a g e was p r a c t i s e d , and t h e r e uplands I n c r e a s i n g p r e s s u r e on l a n d w a s no n e e d f o r m e c h a n i z a t i o n . a g r i c u l t u r e . This a s k s f o r more i n t e n s i v e t y p e s of upland and since weeding, intensive and tillage soil requires t h e r e i s of t e n l a c k of l a b o u r , some f o r m o f m e c h a n i z a t i o n I n upland a r e a s in o t h e r c o u n t r i e s w i t h has t o be a d o p t e d . p r e s s u r e i n t h e p a s t , i n a p r o c e s s of increasing population t r i a l and e r r o r , more i n t e n s i v e upland c u l t i v a t i o n systems drawn animal on based were which developed, gradually
mechan1zat1on3 l .
Since
population
pressure
in
the
uplands
T h a i l a n d e m e r g e d o n l y r e c e n t l y , no s u c h i n d i g e n o u s s y s nowadays in u p l a n d a g r i consequently, tems have d e v e l o p e d . c u l t u r e the choice is mainly between land p r e p a r a t i o n with in
a play tractors Hence f o r t h , hand t o o l s . tractors or with emerging permanent preparation for land r o l e in dominant u p l a n d c r o p p i n g s y s t e m s . As w i l l b e a r g u e d i n o t h e r s e e on r e l a t i v e l y p o o r a n d s l o p i n g l a n d t r a c t o r s have tions, been l i t t l e has Never theless very various disadvantages. upland for mechanization drawn animal develop to done areas.
-148-
According
the
the
Even
worse
that
such
already
f armers'
of
creation
can
groups
f armers'
the
promotes
tractor.
a
to
buy
it
cannot
be
expected
the
as
efficiently
as
operate
contractors33.
private
from
services
available
Rijk,
to
according
that
is
want
intro"
the
Never t h e - l e s s ,
Depar trent
that
groups
about
are
account
justified.
be
Promotion
Co-operative
the
rarely
can
tractors
of
duction
into
drawn
animal
yields
crop
or for
necessity
cases
most
and
taken
are
costs
social
If
same.
In
expensive
less
be
would
tractors.
of
introduction
equipment
Technical cropping
multiple
absolute
an
form
rarely
soils,
of
for
requirements
like
considerations, hardness
Nor t h
Upper
the
in
justified32.
be
can
tractorization
cases
few
are
there
Rijk
to
which
for
developed and in use d e a l of a n i m a l d r a w n e q u i p m e n t i n o t h e r d e v e l o p i n g c o u n t r i e s , e s p e c i a l l y I n d i a , has cons i d e r a b l e p o t e n t i a l in T h a i l a n d . R i j k has d e s c r i b e d a v a r i as a plow, such implements, animal-drawn simple of ety for equipment threshing cultivator, toolbar, disk farrow, c r o p s , and w a t e r l i f t i n g d e v i c e s , and improved hand various t o o l s t h a t c a n be p r o d u c e d a t low c o s t i n T h a i l a n d , of t e n the working with such equipment by local blacksmiths'*. c a p a c i t y of u p l a n d f a r m e r s c o u l d i n c r e a s e s i g n i f i c a n t l y and be r e p l a c e d p r o f i t a b l y b y could tractors most cases in draught animals. A good
The
could
animals grammes
in
in
less
the
lowlands.
side-line
activity.
than
tional
cost
to
use
equipment,
able
paddy
plough
foregoing
Many
and w i t h
should
self-made
lead
do
what
pro-
f avourable
meet
land
sufficient is
animals
Despite
draught
government
raise
requires
it
animals.
is
f armers
upland
f armers
not
there
draught
Therefore
these
many
for
care
likely
most;
uplands
the
In
Good
energy.
will
fields
these and
local
of
imper r e d
of
use
the
to
of
prices
the
in
attention
official
source
a
grazing
for
The
draw
response.
f armer
a
as
increase
fur then
of
prospect;
fuel
the they
required
buff alo
as
little
addi-
of
suit-
lack can
with
the
harrows.
to
the
misunderstanding
that
o n l y d i f f e r e n t f o r m s of m e c h a n i z a t i o n a r e of imper l a n c e f o r of replacement the not is problem The main employment. t r a c t o r s by d r a u g h t a n i m a l s . I n some e a s e s the i n t r o d u c t i o n
.. 1 a 9 -
of
non-irrigated
for
especially
systems,
f arming
intensive
of
l a b our
of
development
the
may
creation
the
Therefore
requires
employment
productive
and v a r i e inputs
non-mechanical
employment.
and
income
increase
mech-
for
crops
other
growing of
variety
a
Moreover,
ties.
by
reduced
be
can
anization,
in
peaks
and
reason
a major
as
seen
of ten
requirements,
lab our
mini-
situations
some
results,
good
give
may
techniques
tillage
In
employment 3 5 .
create
and
problems
mum
employment.
mechanization
solve
may
practices
cultivation
in
and i n c r e a s e
bottlenecks
remove
may
tractors
Changes
areas.
is
there
season
dry
the
During
much
Many
under-employment.
additional people earn i n s u f f i c i e n t f a r m income and seek i n c o m e f r o m e l s e w h e r e . I n some a r e a s a c o n s i d e r a b l e p a r t of espeseasonally to other areas, the lab our f o r c e migrates socially a miserable Seasonal migration is towns. cially employp h e n o m e n o n a n d t h e r e f o r e t h e c r e a t i o n of o f f - s e a s o n ment deserves high p r i o r i t y . In
inputs
removed.
with
limited
cropping
rural
work
programmers
principle
maintenance
national
such
of
and
point by
increases,
view
or
using
a
is
advantage
the
that
provides
that
method
From
infrastructure.
local
a
income
total
income
the
for
used
is
which
for
lab o u r ,
employment, of
improvement
that
is
programmers
alternative
little
is
there
introduced
be
can
dry
for
possibilities
areas
the
principle
in
can
bottlenecks
For
main
channels
market
deficient
and
These
outputs.
and
for
The
returns,
economic
low
the
are
dry
for
possibilities
under-utilized.
highly
land,
of
distribution
be
season
still
this
for
given
reasons unequal
The
are
cropping
season
direct
provide
cropping the
Yet
season.
dry
the
in
multiple
and
double
ways
many
employment
poor
to
people.
In
the
members
be
gramme the
of
the
carried
for
i's
observers programme
tambol
out.
alleged and
introduced
Pramo j . g o v e r n m e n t
p r o g r a m m e , k n o w n a s the a s p e c t o f t h a t programme
would Most:
the ' K u k r i t
1975
work able
council,
inefficiency that
decided
have
Opponents
researchers
believe
a
rural
t a m b o l f u n d . The m o s t r e m a r k w a s t h a t l o c a l p e o p l e , mainly
who
the
150-
which
criticized
and
local
studied benefits
the
pro jects
the
pro-
corruption. effects
outweighed
of the
of t h e p r o g r a m m e was t h e the local level t h a t was government pushed the programme
d i s a d v a n t a g e s . The main weakness B u t i t was n o t poor' p r e p a r a t i o n .
r e s p o n s i b l e f o r t h i s . The h u r r y a n d i n s u f f i c i e n t time was l e t t f o r t h e in a great l o c a l l e v e l t o p r e p a r e good p r o j e c t s . The most i n t e r e s t i n g t h e p r o v e n a b i l i t y of l o c a l l e a d e r s e x p e r i e n c e is perhaps l a c k of programmers, d e s p i t e useful t o plan and implement technical and administrative insufficient preparation, objections real The experience. of lack and supper t , and i n e f a g a i n s t the programme were p o l i t i c a l . C o r r u p t i o n
in T h a i l a n d . The d e c e n t r a l i a r e normal phenomena of t h e b u r e a u c r a c y , was a t h r e a t t o z a t i o n and by-passing t r a d i t i o n a l b u r e a u c r a t i c i n t e r e s t s , and c o n f l i c t e d w i t h the the guidance the v i l l a g e r s need that conservative belief The r u r a l work officers. government of and supervision af t e r 1 9 7 5 , but p r o g r a m m e was not c o n t i n u e d by g o v e r n m e n t s that a revised announced i n 1979 the Kriangsak government r u r a l w o r k s p r o g r a m m e w o u l d be i m p l e m e n t e d . ficiency
1 5 1-
Policy
Land-Usp
VI.3.
U n t i l now t h e T h a i g o v e r n m e n t h a s n o t h a d a c o n s i s t e n t l a n d increasingly is pattern land-use The a c t u a l policy. use incompatible with the e x i s t i n g l e g i s l a t i o n . P o l i t i c a l l y it i s impossible to e n f o r c e the e x i s t i n g laws c o n c e r n i n g l a n d u s e a n d f o r e s t p r o t e c t i o n , a n d i t w o u l d b e i n h u m a n t o do s o a s w e l l . To b r i n g a b o u t c o n f o r m i t y b e t w e e n l e g i s l a t i o n a n d task. I t not only r e q u i r e s a c t u a l l a n d - u s e is a c o m p l i c a t e d
revision vant
of
cies.
also
but
legislation,
reorganization
of
rele-
of
new
poli-
implementation
and
agencies,
government
i n c r e a s e in p o p u l a t i o n the problems the l o n g e r the government w a i t s the be t o s o l v e them. P r e s e n t l a n d - u s e i n c r e a s i n g l y a main o b s t a c l e f o r development
the
of
Because
become more u r g e n t , and more d i f f i c u l t i t will
are
problems in
the
uplands
highlands.
and
There is an u r g e n t need f o r a c l e a r and e f f e c t i v e land-use p o l i c y b a s e d on s o c i a l c o n s i d e r a t i o n s , on p h y s i c a l c a p a b i l i t i e s o f land a n d o n e c o n o m i c a n a l y s i s . V a r i o u s a g e n c i e s own its Each has these fields. in have r e s p o n s i b i l i t i e s p o i n t of v i e w , and p o l i c i e s , which a r e biased to a s p e c i f i c n e i t h e r t h e i n t e r e s t s of t h e l o c a l p o p u l a t i o n , n o r g e n e r a l I t is e s p e c i a l l y i n t e r e s t a r e a p p r o p r i a t e l y looked af t e r . t h a t the Royal F o r e s t r y Depar t r e n t plays a an anachronism dominating role with regard to land a l l o c a t i o n . I n h e r e n t l y such an o r g a n i z a t i o n serves f o r e s t r y i n t e r e s t s , and nowadays forestry between an i n c r e a s i n g d i f f e r e n c e is there interests policies Forestry interest. and the national s h o u l d be s u b o r d i n a t e t o g e n e r a l l a n d - u s e p o l i c i e s , a n d t h e Royal
forest clear
management and f o r e s t
to
be
to
An e f f i c i e n t and
protection.
unlikely
is
policy
land-use
limited
be
should
tasks
Depar t e n t ' s
Forestry
achieved
under
the
their where v a r i o u s a g e n c i e s have circumstances, present own l e g a l r e s p o n s i b i l i t i e s and p o l i c i e s , and w h e r e c e n t r a l inefficient. nation
of
authority ous
have
committees
policy
For
land-use
seems
government
to
setting a
matters,
needed
be
agencies
to
proven
planning,
in
be
central
to
these
powerless
rather
and
policies,
which fields
land
legal can
bureau,
tasks be
coor
of
and ordiland
vari-
transferred.
is g e n e r a l l y r e c o g n i z e d t h a t r e o r g a n i z a t i o n of g o v e r n It m e n t a g e n c i e s w o r k i n g in t h i s f i e l d , and r e v i s i o n of the existing
legislation
is
required.
-152
It
i s l e s s c l e a r h o w t h i s c a n be a c h i e v e d , a s i t w i l l h a r m i n t e r e s t s . The Than i n g o v e r n m e n t t r i e d i n 1977 t o vested t o g e t h e r i n a new o r g a n i z a t i o n t h e L a n d D e p a r t r e n t , bring Land D e v e l o p m e n t D e p a r t r e n t , D e p a r t r e n t of Land C o - o p e r a Land
Of f i c e ,
Wolf a r e ,
Public
of
Depar t r e n t
the
of
Division
Consolidation
Land
Office,
Reform
Land
lives,
Settlement
D i v i s i o n of the Royal F o r e s t r y succeeded i t , which government
Forest Settlement the and The K r i a n c s a k Depar t r e n t .
p r o b a b l y b e c a u s e of s e r i o u s from a l l agencies concerned. may s e r i o u s l y w e a k e n t h e p o w e r
not take over these p l a n s , o p p o s i t i o n against these plans
did
b u r e a u c r a t i c opposition of a g o v e r n m e n t .
Such
base Three
main a s p e c t s
of
allocation
of
first,
legal
as
distri-
rules
govern-
by
needed
than
the
land
less
much
allocated
agencies
purposes
agricultural
third,
and
such
the
second,
use;
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