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Thailand

Facts and stats about Thailand

jaacosta47

Author: jaacosta47

The lingering political crisis in Thailand seems to have increased pressure on an economy that used to be hardy despite turbulence in the past. In fact, national statistics revealed that imports plunged by 15.5 percent at the start of 2014 which is the most significant slip since October of 2009. Exports also went down by nearly two percent following an increase of 1.9 percent by the end of December. Economists assert that although seasonal factors may help explain the excessive drop in imports, political unrest which started last November has adversely affected Southeast Asia's second largest economy. On a positive note, the country’s stock market and foreign exchange currency has been impervious to the turmoil. The benchmark Stock Exchange of Thailand index closed at 1.6 at the start of the current week which is the highest close since December 25 of last year. On the other end, analysts are getting more apprehensive that the nation can lose valuable time in expanding transportation infrastructure and implementing changes that can help attract foreign investments. In view of the present political discord, Thailand should set in motion exports by allowing the currency to slide down. Or, the government of Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra can heighten expenditures that can increase the speed limit of national economy. The Baht has already gone down by roughly 10 percent although the current condition of comparative stagnation cannot justify “shock devaluation.” This can lead to deficit spending. The Thai economy has developed for the last three decades. If not for the political predicament, the growth could have been exceptional. International observers expect the positive performance to be sustained especially if the nation’s internal problems will be resolved right away.

67.45 million

Population. Ranked 20th in 2013.

$5,479.76

GDP per capita. Ranked 86th in 2012.

Borders

Burma 1,800 km, Cambodia 803 km, Laos 1,754 km, Malaysia 506 km
Largest city Bangkok - 5,882,000
Capital city Bangkok - 5,882,000
Major language Thai
Major religion Buddhism
Monetary unit baht
Head of state King Bhumibol Adulyadej
Prime minister Yingluck Shinawatra
Alternative names Kingdom of Thailand, Thailand
Groups Group object, Group object, Group object, Group object

Interesting observations about Thailand

  • Thailand ranked first for migration > net migration amongst Hot countries in 2005.
  • Thailand ranked first for land use > arable land amongst East Asia and Pacific in 2013.
  • Thailand ranked first for migration > net migration > per capita amongst Emerging markets in 2005.
  • Thailand ranked #21 for population globally in 2013.
  • Thailand has had the highest charcoal > consumption by households and other consumers since 1990.
  • Thailand has ranked last for electricity > wind > production since 1998.
  • Thailand has ranked last for electricity > power plant capacity > geothermal per 1000 since 1996.

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The lingering political crisis in Thailand seems to have increased pressure on an economy that used to be hardy despite turbulence in the past. In fact, national statistics revealed that imports plunged by 15.5 percent at the start of 2014 which is the most significant slip since October of 2009. Exports also went down by nearly two percent following an increase of 1.9 percent by the end of December. Economists assert that although seasonal factors may help explain the excessive drop in imports, political unrest which started last November has adversely affected Southeast Asia's second largest economy. On a positive note, the country’s stock market and foreign exchange currency has been impervious to the turmoil. The benchmark Stock Exchange of Thailand index closed at 1.6 at the start of the current week which is the highest close since December 25 of last year. On the other end, analysts are getting more apprehensive that the nation can lose valuable time in expanding transportation infrastructure and implementing changes that can help attract foreign investments. In view of the present political discord, Thailand should set in motion exports by allowing the currency to slide down. Or, the government of Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra can heighten expenditures that can increase the speed limit of national economy. The Baht has already gone down by roughly 10 percent although the current condition of comparative stagnation cannot justify “shock devaluation.” This can lead to deficit spending. The Thai economy has developed for the last three decades. If not for the political predicament, the growth could have been exceptional. International observers expect the positive performance to be sustained especially if the nation’s internal problems will be resolved right away.

Posted on 28 Mar 2014

jaacosta47

jaacosta47

423 Stat enthusiast

0

I cant find any information about thailand.

Posted on 30 Oct 2009

Ashlee

Ashlee

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