International Security Bulletin

Thailand

Kingdom of Thailand

Capital: Bangkok

The Thailand Bulletin

Weekly Brief: April 6, 2015

Top Story Parties negotiating limits on Iran’s nuclear program announced a framework agreement on Thursday, which they intend to finalize by the end of June. The talks had intensified ahead of a March 31 soft deadline for a deal. By Monday, three primary sticking points remained: the process of lifting restrictions on Iran’s nuclear program after 10 years, […]

History

A unified Thai kingdom was established in the mid-14th century. Known as Siam until 1939, Thailand is the only Southeast Asian country never to have been taken over by a European power. A bloodless revolution in 1932 led to a constitutional monarchy. In alliance with Japan during World War II, Thailand became a US treaty ally in 1954 after sending troops to Korea and later fighting alongside the United States in Vietnam. Thailand since 2005 has experienced several rounds of political turmoil including a military coup in 2006 that ousted then Prime Minister THAKSIN Chinnawat, followed by large-scale street protests by competing political factions in 2008, 2009, and 2010. Demonstrations in 2010 culminated with clashes between security forces and pro-THAKSIN protesters, elements of which were armed, and resulted in at least 92 deaths and an estimated $1.5 billion in arson-related property losses. THAKSIN's youngest sister, YINGLAK Chinnawat, in 2011 led the Puea Thai Party to an electoral win and assumed control of the government. YINGLAK's leadership was almost immediately challenged by historic flooding in late 2011 that had large swathes of the country underwater and threatened to inundate Bangkok itself. Throughout 2012 the Puea Thai-led government struggled with the opposition Democrat Party to fulfill some of its main election promises, including constitutional reform and political reconciliation. Since January 2004, thousands have been killed and wounded in violence associated with the ethno-nationalist insurgency in Thailand's southern Malay-Muslim majority provinces.

Geography

Metric Units

Total Area 513,120 sq km
Land Boundaries 4,863 km
Border Countries Burma 1,800 km, Cambodia 803 km, Laos 1,754 km, Malaysia 506 km
Coastline 3,219 km
Terrain central plain; Khorat Plateau in the east; mountains elsewhere
Minimum Elevation 0 m
Maximum Elevation 2,576 m
Climate tropical; rainy, warm, cloudy southwest monsoon (mid-May to September); dry, cool northeast monsoon (November to mid-March); southern isthmus always hot and humid
Natural Resources tin, rubber, natural gas, tungsten, tantalum, timber, lead, fish, gypsum, lignite, fluorite, arable land
Arable Land 30.71%
Permanent Crops 8.77%

Economy

Gross Domestic Product $645.7 billion
GDP (per capita) $10,000
GDP Growth 5.5%
Unemployment Rate 0.6%
Population in Poverty 7.8%
GINI Index 53.6

Budget & Debt

Expenditures $76.6 billion
Revenue $63.7 billion
Current Account Balance $-2.73 billion
External Debt $126.4 billion

Trade

Exports $226.2 billion
Export Items electronics, computer parts, automobiles and parts, electrical appliances, machinery and equipment, textiles and footwear, fishery products, rice, rubber
Export Partners China 12%, Japan 10.5%, US 9.6%, Hong Kong 7.2%, Malaysia 5.4%, Singapore 5%, Indonesia 4.4% (2011)
Imports $213.7 billion
Import Items capital goods, intermediate goods and raw materials, consumer goods, fuels
Import Partners Japan 18.4%, China 13.4%, UAE 6.3%, US 5.9%, Malaysia 5.4%, South Korea 4% (2011)

People

Population 67,448,120
Population Growth 0.52%
Ethnic Groups Thai 75%, Chinese 14%, other 11%
Religion Buddhist (official) 94.6%, Muslim 4.6%, Christian 0.7%, other 0.1% (2000 census)
Life Expectancy 74.05 years
Infant Mortality 0.98 deaths/1,000 live births
Maternal Mortality 1.8 deaths/100,000 live births

Energy

Electricity Production 173.3 billion kWh
Electricity Consumption 169.4 billion kWh
From Fossil Fuels 89%
From Nuclear 0%
From Hydroelectric 10.9%
From Renewable Sources 0.2%