Area: 513,115 sq. km. (198,114 sq. mi.);
equivalent to the size of France, or slightly
smaller than Texas.
Cities: Capital--Bangkok
(population 9,668,854); Nakhon Ratchasima (pop.
437,386 for Muang district and 2,565,685 for the
whole province), Chiang Mai (pop. 247,672 for
Muang district and 1,595,855 for the whole
province).
Terrain: Densely populated central plain;
northeastern plateau; mountain range in the
west; southern isthmus joins the land mass with
Malaysia.
Climate: Tropical monsoon.
People
Nationality: Noun
and adjective--Thai.
Population (2006): 65.28 million. (Data based on
Bank of Thailand.)
Labor force (2006): 36.43 million.
Annual population growth rate (2006 est.): 0.3%.
Ethnic groups: Thai 89%, other 11%.
Religions: Buddhist 94-95%, Muslim 4-5%,
Christian, Hindu, Brahmin, other.
Languages: Thai (official language); English is
the second language of the elite; regional
dialects.
Education: Years
compulsory--12. Literacy--94.9%
male, 90.5% female.
Health (2006 est.): Infant
mortality rate--19.5/1,000. Life
expectancy--68 years male, 75 years female.
Government
Type: Constitutional monarchy.
Constitution: Thailand adopted its current
constitution following an August 19, 2007
referendum.
Independence: Never colonized; traditional
founding date 1238.
Branches: Executive--King
(chief of state), Prime Minister (head of
government). Legislative--bicameral,
with a fully-elected House of Representatives
and a partially-elected Senate. Judicial--composed
of the Constitutional Tribunal, the Courts of
Justice, and the Administrative Courts.
Administrative subdivisions: 76 provinces,
including Bangkok municipality, subdivided into
877 districts, 7,255 tambon administration, and
74,944 villages.
Political parties: Multi-party system; Communist
Party is prohibited.
Suffrage: Universal and compulsory at 18 years
of age.
Economy
GDP (2007): $246 billion.
Annual GDP growth rate (2007): 4.8%.
Per capita income (2007): $3,737.
Unemployment rate (2007): 1.5% of total labor
force.
Natural resources: Tin, rubber, natural gas,
tungsten, tantalum, timber, lead, fish, gypsum,
lignite, fluorite.
Agriculture (8.9% of GDP): Products--rice,
tapioca, rubber, corn, sugarcane, coconuts,
soybeans.
Industry: Types--tourism,
textiles, garments, agricultural processing,
cement, integrated circuits, jewelry,
electronics, and auto assembly.
Trade (2007): Merchandise exports--$152.5
billion. Products--automatic
data processing machines and parts, automobiles
and parts, precious stones and jewelry, refined
fuels, rubber, electronic integrated circuits,
polymers of ethylene and propylene, rice, iron
and steel and their products, rubber products,
chemical products. Major
markets--ASEAN, EU, U.S., Japan, China, and
Singapore.Merchandise imports--$140.0
billion. Products--crude
oil, machinery and parts, electrical machinery
and parts, chemicals, iron and steel and their
products, electrical circuits panels, computers
and parts, other metal ores and metal waste
scrap, ships and boats and floating structure,
jewelry including silver and gold. Major
suppliers--Japan, ASEAN, China, EU, U.S. and
Malaysia.
PEOPLE
Thailand's population is relatively homogeneous.
More than 85% speak a dialect of Thai and share
a common culture. This core population includes
the central Thai (33.7% of the population,
including Bangkok), Northeastern Thai (34.2%),
northern Thai (18.8%), and southern Thai
(13.3%).
The language of the central Thai population is
the language taught in schools and used in
government. Several other small Thai-speaking
groups include the Shan, Lue, and Phutai.
Up to 12% of Thai are of significant Chinese
heritage, but the Sino-Thai community is the
best integrated in Southeast Asia.
Malay-speaking Muslims of the south comprise
another significant minority group (2.3%). Other
groups include the Khmer; the Mon, who are
substantially assimilated with the Thai; and the
Vietnamese. Smaller mountain-dwelling tribes,
such as the Hmong and Mein, as well as the
Karen, number about 788,024.
The population is mostly rural, concentrated in
the rice-growing areas of the central,
northeastern, and northern regions. However, as
Thailand continues to industrialize, its urban
population--31.6% of total population,
principally in the Bangkok area--is growing.
Thailand's highly successful
government-sponsored family planning program has
resulted in a dramatic decline in population
growth from 3.1% in 1960 to less than 1% today.
Life expectancy also has risen, a positive
reflection of Thailand's efforts at public
health education. However, the AIDS epidemic has
had a major impact on the Thai population.
Today, over 500,000 Thais live with HIV or
AIDS--approximately 1.4% of the adult
population. Each year, 25-30,000 Thais die from
AIDS-related causes. Ninety percent of them are
aged 20-49, the most productive sector of the
workforce. The situation could have been worse;
an aggressive public education campaign in the
early 1990s reduced the number of new HIV
infections from over 100,000 annually to around
15,000 annually now.
The constitution mandates 12 years of free
education, however, this is not provided
universally. Education accounts for 18.0% of
total government expenditures.
Theravada Buddhism is the major religion of
Thailand and is the religion of about 95% of its
people. The government permits religious
diversity, and other major religions are
represented. Spirit worship and animism are
widely practiced.
HISTORY
Southeast Asia has been inhabited for more than
half a million years. Archaeological studies
suggest that by 4000 BC, communities in what is
now Thailand had emerged as centers of early
bronze metallurgy. This development, along with
the cultivation of wet rice, provided the
impetus for social and political organization.
Research suggests that these innovations may
actually have been transmitted from there to the
rest of Asia, including to China.
The Thai are related linguistically to Tai
groups originating in southern China. Migrations
from southern China to Southeast Asia may have
occurred in the 6th and 7th centuries. Malay,
Mon, and Khmer civilizations flourished in the
region prior to the arrival of the ethnic Tai.
Thais date the founding of their nation to the
13th century. According to tradition, in 1238,
Thai chieftains overthrew their Khmer overlords
at Sukhothai and established a Thai kingdom.
After its decline, a new Thai kingdom emerged in
1350 on the Chao Praya River. At the same time,
there was an equally important Tai kingdom of
Lanna, centered in Chiang Mai, which rivaled
Sukhothai and Ayutthaya for centuries, and which
defines northern Thai identity to this day.
The first ruler of the Kingdom of Ayutthaya,
King Rama Thibodi, made two important
contributions to Thai history: the establishment
and promotion of Theravada Buddhism as the
official religion--to differentiate his kingdom
from the neighboring Hindu kingdom of
Angkor--and the compilation of the Dharmashastra,
a legal code based on Hindu sources and
traditional Thai custom. The Dharmashastra
remained a tool of Thai law until late in the
19th century. Beginning with the Portuguese in
the 16th century, Ayutthaya had some contact
with the West, but until the 1800s, its
relations with neighboring kingdoms and
principalities, as well as with China, were of
primary importance.
After more than 400 years of power, in 1767, the
Kingdom of Ayutthaya was brought down by
invading Burmese armies and its capital burned.
After a single-reign capital established at
Thonburi by Taksin, a new capital city was
founded in 1782, across the Chao Phraya at the
site of present-day Bangkok, by the founder of
the Chakri dynasty. The first Chakri king was
crowned Rama I. Rama I's heirs became
increasingly concerned with the threat of
European colonialism after British victories in
neighboring Burma in 1826.
The first Thai recognition of Western power in
the region was the Treaty of Amity and Commerce
with the United Kingdom in 1826. In 1833, the
United States began diplomatic exchanges with
Siam, as Thailand was called until 1938.
However, it was during the later reigns of Rama
IV (or King Mongkut, 1851-68), and his son Rama
V (King Chulalongkorn (1868-1910), that Thailand
established firm rapprochement with Western
powers. The Thais believe that the diplomatic
skills of these monarchs, combined with the
modernizing reforms of the Thai Government, made
Siam the only country in South and Southeast
Asia to avoid European colonization.
In 1932, a bloodless coup transformed the
Government of Thailand from an absolute to a
constitutional monarchy. King Prajadhipok (Rama
VII) initially accepted this change but later
surrendered the kingship to his 10-year-old
nephew. Upon his abdication, King Prajadhipok
said that the obligation of a ruler was to reign
for the good of the whole people, not for a
select few.
Although nominally a constitutional monarchy
after 1932, Thailand was ruled by a series of
military governments interspersed with brief
periods of democracy. Following the 1932
revolution that imposed constitutional limits on
the monarchy, Thai politics was dominated for a
half-century by a military and bureaucratic
elite. Changes of government were effected
primarily by means of a long series of mostly
bloodless coups. Thailand was occupied by the
Japanese during the Second World War until
Japan's defeat in 1945.
Beginning with a brief experiment in democracy
during the mid-1970s, civilian democratic
political institutions slowly gained greater
authority, culminating in 1988 when Chatichai
Choonavan--leader of the Thai Nation
Party--assumed office as the country's first
democratically elected Prime Minister in more
than a decade. Three years later, yet another
bloodless coup ended his term.
Shortly afterward, the military appointed Anand
Panyarachun, a businessman and former diplomat,
to head a largely civilian interim government
and promised to hold elections in the near
future. However, following inconclusive
elections, former army commander Suchinda
Kraprayoon was appointed Prime Minister. Thais
reacted to the appointment by demanding an end
to military influence in government.
Demonstrations were violently suppressed by the
military; in May 1992, soldiers killed at least
50 protesters.
Domestic and international reaction to the
violence forced Suchinda to resign, and the
nation once again turned to Anand Panyarachun,
who was named interim Prime Minister until new
elections in September 1992. In those elections,
the political parties that had opposed the
military in May 1992 won by a narrow majority,
and Chuan Leekpai, a leader of the Democratic
Party, became Prime Minister. Chuan dissolved
Parliament in May 1995, and the Thai Nation
Party won the largest number of parliamentary
seats in subsequent elections. Party leader
Banharn Silpa-Archa became Prime Minister but
held the office only little more than a year.
Following elections held in November 1996,
Chavalit Youngchaiyudh formed a coalition
government and became Prime Minister. The onset
of the Asian financial crisis caused a loss of
confidence in the Chavalit government and forced
him to hand over power to Chuan Leekpai in
November 1997. Chuan formed a coalition
government based on the themes of prudent
economic management and institution of political
reforms mandated by Thailand's 1997
constitution.
In January 2001, telecommunications
multimillionaire Thaksin Shinawatra and his Thai
Rak Thai (TRT) party won a decisive victory on a
populist platform of economic growth and
development. In the February 2005 elections,
Thaksin was re-elected by an even greater
majority, sweeping 377 out of 500 parliamentary
seats. Soon after Prime Minister Thaksin's
second term began, allegations of corruption
emerged against his government. Peaceful
anti-government mass demonstrations grew, and
thousands marched in the streets to demand
Thaksin's resignation. Prime Minister Thaksin
dissolved the Parliament in February 2006 and
declared snap elections in April. The main
opposition parties boycotted the polls, and the
judiciary subsequently annulled the elections.
Before new elections could be held, on September
19, 2006 in a non-violent coup d'etat, a group
of top military officers overthrew the caretaker
administration of Thaksin Shinawatra, repealed
the constitution, and abolished both houses of
Parliament. Soon thereafter, the coup leaders
promulgated an interim constitution and
appointed Surayud Chulanont as interim Prime
Minister. In a national referendum on August 19,
2007, a majority of Thai voters approved a new
constitution drafted by an assembly appointed by
the coup leaders. The interim government held
multi-party elections under provisions of the
new constitution on December 23, 2007, which
resulted in the People's Power Party (PPP)
winning a plurality of 233 of the 480 seats in
the lower house of Parliament. PPP leader Samak
Sundaravej formed a coalition government and
formally took office as Prime Minister on
February 6, 2008.
Thailand's southern border provinces have long
been host to a secessionist movement. Since
2004, violent ethnic Malay separatists have
conducted an insurgency in the provinces of
Narathiwat, Yala, Pattani, and Songkhla against
symbols and representatives of government
authority, as well as against civilians, which
has resulted in hundreds of deaths.
Since the end of the Second World War in 1945,
Thailand has had very close relations with the
United States. Threatened by communist
revolutions in neighboring countries such as
Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos, Thailand actively
sought U.S. assistance to contain communist
expansion in the region. Thailand also has been
an active member in multilateral organizations
like the Association of Southeast Asian Nations
(ASEAN) and the Asia-Pacific Economic
Cooperation (APEC) forum.
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL CONDITIONS
Thailand is a constitutional monarchy. From 1992
and until the 2006 coup, the country was
considered a functioning democracy with
constitutional changes of government. Generally
free and fair multi-party elections held in
December 2007 subsequently restored democratic
governance. The King has been given little
direct power under Thailand's constitutions but
is a symbol of national identity and unity. King
Bhumibol (Rama IX)--who has been on the throne
since 1946--commands enormous popular respect
and moral authority, which he has used on
occasion to resolve political crises that have
threatened national stability.
Under the 2007 constitution, the National
Assembly consists of two chambers--the Senate
and the House of Representatives. The Senate is
a non-partisan body with 150 members, 76 of whom
are directly elected (one per province). The
remaining 74 are appointed by a panel comprised
of judges and senior independent officials from
a list of candidates compiled by the Election
Commission. The House has 480 members, 400 of
whom are directly elected from constituent
districts and the remainder drawn proportionally
from party lists.
Thailand's legal system blends principles of
traditional Thai and Western laws. Under the
constitution, the Constitutional Court is the
highest court of appeals, though its
jurisdiction is limited to clearly defined
constitutional issues. Its members are nominated
by a committee of judges, leaders in Parliament,
and senior independent officials, whose nominees
are confirmed by the Senate and appointed by the
King. The Courts of Justice have jurisdiction
over criminal and civil cases and are organized
in three tiers: Courts of First Instance, the
Court of Appeals, and the Supreme Court of
Justice. Administrative courts have jurisdiction
over suits between private parties and the
government, and cases in which one government
entity is suing another. In Thailand's southern
border provinces, where Muslims constitute the
majority of the population, Provincial Islamic
Committees have limited jurisdiction over
probate, family, marriage, and divorce cases.
Thailand's 76 provinces include the metropolis
of greater Bangkok. Bangkok's governor is
popularly elected, but those of the remaining
provinces are career civil servants appointed by
the Ministry of Interior.
Principal Government Officials
Chief of State--King Bhumibol Adulyadej
Prime Minister--Samak Sundaravej
Minister of Foreign Affairs--vacant
Ambassador to the U.S.--vacant
Ambassador to the UN--Don Pramudwinai
Thailand maintains an embassy in
the United States at 1024 Wisconsin Ave. NW,
Washington DC 20007 (tel. 202-944-3600).
Consulates are located in New York City,
Chicago, and Los Angeles.
ECONOMY
The Thai economy is export-dependent, with
exports of goods and services accounting for
over 70% of GDP in 2007. Thailand's recovery
from the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis relied
largely on external demand from the United
States and other foreign markets. From
2001-2006, the administration of former Prime
Minister Thaksin embraced a "dual track"
economic policy that combined domestic stimulus
programs with Thailand's traditional promotion
of open markets and foreign investment. Real GDP
growth strengthened sharply from 2.2% in 2001 to
7.1% in 2003 and 6.3% in 2004. In 2005-2007,
economic expansion moderated, averaging 4.5% to
5.0% real GDP growth, due to domestic political
uncertainty, rising violence in Thailand's four
southernmost provinces, and repercussions from
the devastating Indian Ocean tsunami of 2004.
Thailand's economy in 2007 relied heavily on
resilient export growth (at an 18.6% annual
rate), particularly in the automobile,
petrochemicals, and electronics sectors.
Before the 1997 financial crisis, the Thai
economy had years of manufacturing-led economic
growth--averaging 9.4% for the decade up to
1996. Relatively abundant and inexpensive labor
and natural resources, fiscal conservatism, open
foreign investment policies, and encouragement
of the private sector underlay the economic
success in the years up to 1997. The economy is
essentially a free-enterprise system. Certain
services--such as power generation,
transportation, and communications--are
state-owned and operated, but the government is
considering privatizing them in the wake of the
financial crisis. The timetable for
privatization of some state-owned enterprises,
however, has slipped due to resistance from
labor unions and parts of civil society. Despite
the resistance, some firms were successfully
privatized, such as Airports of Thailand
(renamed from Airport Authority of Thailand),
PTT Public Company Limited (renamed from the
Petroleum Authority of Thailand), and MCOT
(renamed from Mass Communication Authority of
Thailand).
The Royal Thai Government welcomes foreign
investment, and investors who are willing to
meet certain requirements can apply for special
investment privileges through the Board of
Investment. To attract additional foreign
investment, the government has modified its
investment regulations. In a reaction to former
Prime Minister Thaksin's 2006 sale of his
telecommunications company to foreign investors,
the interim Thai government introduced
amendments to the Foreign Business Act in 2007
which would have further restricted non-Thais
from owning or controlling businesses operating
in the Thai services sector. The National
Assembly did not complete consideration of the
amendments before its session concluded at the
end of 2007. However, the new government has
stated its intention to liberalize the act
rather than strengthen the restrictions.
The organized labor movement remains weak and
divided in Thailand; less than 2% of the work
force is unionized. In 2000, the State
Enterprise Labor Relations Act (SELRA) was
passed, giving public sector employees similar
rights to those of private sector workers,
including the right to unionize.
Roughly 40% of Thailand's labor force is
employed in agriculture (data based on Bank of
Thailand.) Rice is the country's most important
crop; Thailand is the largest exporter in the
world rice market. Other agricultural
commodities produced in significant amounts
include fish and fishery products, tapioca,
rubber, corn, and sugar. Exports of processed
foods such as canned tuna, canned pineapples,
and frozen shrimp are on the rise.
Thailand's increasingly diversified
manufacturing sector is the largest contributor
to growth. Industries registering rapid
increases in production included computers and
electronics, furniture, wood products, canned
food, toys, plastic products, gems, and jewelry.
High-technology products such as integrated
circuits and parts, hard disc drives, electrical
appliances, vehicles, and vehicle parts are now
leading Thailand's strong growth in exports. The
appreciation of the Thai baht to the U.S. dollar
relative to other regional currencies during the
2006-2007 period has dampened some of Thailand's
exports, and export sector margins have been
affected. To help arrest baht appreciation, the
Bank of Thailand applied controls on the import
of capital into the country in December 2006.
Nevertheless, the baht continued to appreciate.
The United States is Thailand's largest export
market and third-largest supplier after Japan
and China. While Thailand's traditional major
markets have been North America, Japan, and
Europe, economic recovery among Thailand's
regional trading partners has helped Thai export
growth (21.6% in 2004, 15.0% in 2005, 17.4% in
2006, and 18.6% in 2007). Export growth has been
highest in some of Thailand's non-traditional
export markets including India, China, and the
Middle East. Due to domestic political
uncertainty and concern about government's
economic policies, Thai domestic demand and
private investment were flat from early 2006
through late 2007.
Machinery and parts, vehicles, electronic
integrated circuits, chemicals, crude oil and
fuels, and iron and steel are among Thailand's
principal imports. The moderation in import
levels (7.0% increase in 2006 versus 26.0% in
2005) reflects the low confidence of both
consumers and investors.
Thailand is a member of the World Trade
Organization (WTO) and the Cairns Group of
agricultural exporters. Tourism contributes
significantly to the Thai economy (about 6%).
Tourist arrivals, which declined in 2005 due to
the tsunami catastrophe, recovered strongly in
2006.
Bangkok and its environs are the most prosperous
part of Thailand, and the barren northeast is
the poorest. An overriding concern of successive
Thai Governments, and a particularly strong
focus of the Thaksin government, has been to
reduce these regional income differentials,
which have been exacerbated by rapid economic
growth in and around Bangkok and the financial
crisis. The government has tried to stimulate
provincial economic growth with programs such as
the Eastern Seaboard project and the development
of an alternate deep-sea port on Thailand's
southern peninsula. It also is conducting
discussions with Malaysia to focus on economic
development along the Thai-Malaysian border.
Although the economy has demonstrated moderate
positive growth since 1999, future performance
depends on continued reform of the financial
sector, corporate debt restructuring, attracting
foreign investment, and improving domestic
investment and consumption to balance past
reliance on exports. Telecommunications,
transportation networks, and electricity
generation showed increasing strain during the
period of sustained economic growth and may pose
a future challenge. Thailand's growing shortage
of engineers and skilled technical personnel may
limit its future technological creativity and
productivity.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
Thailand's foreign policy emphasizes a close and
longstanding security relationship with the
United States. It also strongly supports ASEAN's
efforts to promote economic development, social
integration, and stability throughout the
region. Thailand will assume the chairmanship of
ASEAN in July 2008 and will host the ASEAN
Summit (heads of government meeting) in late
2008.
Thailand participates fully in international and
regional organizations. It has developed
increasingly close ties with other ASEAN
members--Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines,
Singapore, Brunei, Laos, Cambodia, Burma, and
Vietnam--whose foreign and economic ministers
hold annual meetings. Regional cooperation is
progressing in economic, trade, banking,
political, and cultural matters.
Thailand continues to take an active role on the
international stage. When East Timor gained
independence from Indonesia, Thailand, for the
first time in its history, contributed troops to
the international peacekeeping effort. As part
of its effort to increase international ties,
Thailand has reached out to such regional
organizations as the Organization of American
States (OAS) and the Organization for Security
and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE). Thailand has
contributed troops to reconstruction efforts in
Afghanistan and Iraq.
U.S.-THAI RELATIONS
Since World War II, the United States and
Thailand have developed close relations, as
reflected in several bilateral treaties and by
both countries' participation in UN multilateral
activities and agreements. The principal
bilateral arrangement is the 1966 Treaty of
Amity and Economic Relations, which facilitates
U.S. and Thai companies' economic access to one
another's markets. Other important agreements
address civil uses of atomic energy, sales of
agricultural commodities, investment guarantees,
and military and economic assistance. In June
2004 the United States and Thailand initiated
negotiations on a free trade agreement which,
when concluded, will reduce and eliminate
barriers to trade and investment between the two
countries. These negotiations were placed on
hold following the dissolution of the Thai
Parliament in February 2006 and the subsequent
coup in September.
The United States and Thailand are among the
signatories of the 1954 Manila pact of the
former Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO).
Article IV(1) of this treaty provides that, in
the event of armed attack in the treaty area
(which includes Thailand), each member would
"act to meet the common danger in accordance
with its constitutional processes." Despite the
dissolution of the SEATO in 1977, the Manila
pact remains in force and, together with the
Thanat-Rusk communiqué of 1962, constitutes the
basis of U.S. security commitments to Thailand.
Thailand continues to be a key security ally in
Asia, along with Australia, Japan, the
Philippines, and South Korea. In December 2003,
Thailand was designated a Major Non-NATO Ally.
Thailand's stability and independence are
important to the maintenance of peace in the
region. Economic assistance has been extended in
various fields, including rural development,
health, family planning, education, and science
and technology. The formal U.S. Agency for
International Development (USAID) program ended
in 1995. However, there are a number of targeted
assistance programs which continue in areas of
mutually defined importance, including: health
and HIV/AIDS programming; refugee assistance;
and trafficking in persons. The U.S.
Peace Corps in
Thailand has approximately 100 volunteers,
focused on primary education, with an integrated
program involving teacher training, health
education, and environmental education.
Thailand has received U.S. military equipment,
essential supplies, training, and assistance in
the construction and improvement of facilities
and installations for much of the period since
1950. Over recent decades, U.S. security
assistance included military training programs
carried out in the United States and elsewhere.
A small U.S. military advisory group in Thailand
oversaw the delivery of equipment to the Thai
Armed Forces and the training of Thai military
personnel in its use and maintenance. Funding
for the International Military Education and
Training and the Foreign Military Financing
programs, along with selected other programs
totaling $29 million, was suspended following
the September 19, 2006 coup d'etat in Thailand.
Funding for these programs resumed after a
democratically elected government took office in
February 2008. As part of their mutual defense
cooperation over the last decade, Thailand and
the United States have developed a vigorous
joint military exercise program, which engages
all the services of each nation and averages 40
joint exercises per year.
Thailand remains a trafficking route for
narcotics from the Golden Triangle--the
intersection of Burma, Laos, and Thailand--to
both the domestic Thai and international
markets. The large-scale production and shipment
of opium and heroin shipments from Burma of
previous years have largely been replaced by
widespread smuggling of methamphetamine tablets,
although heroin seizures along the border
continue to take place with some frequency. The
United States and Thailand work closely together
and with the United Nations on a broad range of
programs to halt illicit drug trafficking and
other criminal activity, such as trafficking in
persons. The U.S. supports the International Law
Enforcement Academy (ILEA) in Bangkok, which
provides counter-narcotics and anti-crime
capacity-building programs to law enforcement
and judicial officials from a number of regional
countries.
Trade and Investment
The United States is Thailand's second-largest
trading partner after Japan; in 2007 merchandise
imports from Thailand totaled $22.6 billion, and
merchandise exports totaled $8.4 billion. The
U.S., Japan, Taiwan, Singapore, and the European
Union are among Thailand's largest foreign
investors. U.S. investment, concentrated in the
petroleum and chemicals, finance, consumer
products, and automobile production sectors, is
estimated at $23 billion.
Principal U.S. Embassy Officials
Ambassador--Eric
G. John
Deputy Chief of Mission--James F. Entwistle
Management Counselor--Rosemary Hansen
Political Affairs Counselor--Susan Sutton
Economic Affairs Counselor--Robert Griffiths
Public Affairs Counselor--Anne Casper
Consul General--William Bartlett
The U.S.
Embassy in
Thailand is located at 120/22 Wireless Road,
Bangkok (tel. 66-2-205-4000). There is a Consulate
General in Chiang Mai, 387 Wichayanond Road
(tel. 66-53-252-629).