SYP Paper

My Country is Thailand

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Paper One: Analyzing a World Bank Report Through the Lens of Dependency or Post-Development Theory

This assignment is designed with two aims in mind. First, it aims to familiarize you with the conventional development narrative as it pertains to your country of study. Second, it offers you the chance to evaluate this narrative through the lens of dependency OR post-development theory and to formulate an alternative plan for addressing social inequalities in your country of study.  

Instructions: For this assignment, you will read the Executive Summary of a World Bank report on your research country and analyze it in up to 500 words with reference to the concepts presented in the first three weeks of the course. (See the Module “Countries” under the Module section of canvas to download the report that you should use for this assignment. The page numbers of the executive summary are indicated on the Module page).

Please Note:

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  • You are only required to read the Executive Summary of the World Bank report, however, you may find it necessary to refer to other sections of the report for information about economic activity or social inequality. This is particularly true of the two countries with brief executive summaries (Tunisia and Bangladesh).
  • Your essay should be divided into three sections. Create a section title for each section.
  • When you cite evidence from the World Bank report please include the page number from which you derived this evidence in parentheses.
  • Remember to put any exact quotes in quotations and cite the page number.
  • *Please reference the rubric. Relatively more weight is assigned to

    Section Three

    of the report as this assignment is designed to develop your understanding of dependency theory/post-development theory.*

  • For Section Three, please ensure that you are analyzing the report from the standpoint of a dependency theorist OR a post-development theorist BUT not both.
  • Section One

    Development is conventionally understood as the realization of human improvement through economic growth.  According to the authors of your report, what human improvements have already been achieved in your country and to what forms of economic activity are these improvements attributed? Cite supporting evidence and examples from the report.

    Section Two 

    According to the report’s authors, what social inequalities exist in your country? How do the report’s authors propose rectifying these social inequalities through economic growth? Cite supporting evidence and examples from the report.

    Section Three

    Explain how either a dependency theorist OR a post-development theorist would respond to the report. First, briefly define dependency theory or post-development theory. Then, explain what aspects of the report that the dependency theorist or post-development theorist would find commendable or objectionable and the reasons why this would be so. Finally, briefly describe how a dependency theorist or post-development theorist may propose to rectify the social inequalities highlighted in the report.

    Rubric

    Accurately identifies how authors’ report relates human improvements to economic activity (with supporting examples or evidence)

    10

    Accurately relates information that authors present on social inequality

    10

    Accurately identifies how authors’ propose rectifying social inequality through economic growth  (with evidence and examples)

    10

    Accurately defines dependency or post-development theory

    10

    Accurately identifies elements of report dependency or post-development theorist would find agreeable or objectionable and explains reasoning behind this

    20

    Proposes an alternative plan for addressing social inequalities consistent with outlook of dependency/postdevelopment theory

    20

    Quality of writing (Uses correct grammar, spelling; is clear and concise).

    REVIVING GROWTH
    AND SECURING
    PROSPERITY FOR ALL
    THAILAND SYSTEMATIC COUNTRY
    DIAGNOSTIC
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    GETTING BACK ON TRACK:
    REVIVING GROWTH
    AND SECURING
    PROSPERITY FOR ALL

    IV Getting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All
    TABLE OF CONTENTS
    EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
    1.INTRODUCTION
    3.GROWTH : STELLAR PAST
    PERFORMANCE BUT RECENT
    SLOWDOWN. CAN GROWTH
    BE REVIVED?
    2.COUNTRY CONTEXT
    4.INCLUSION AND POVERTY :
    IMPRESSIVE PROGRESS BUT
    CHALLENGES REMAIN
    Pathway 1: Creating more and better jobs
    Pathway 2: Providing more support to the
    bottom 40 percent
    Pathway 3: Making growth greener and more
    resilient
    Cross-cutting priority: Strengthen the
    institutional capability of the public sector
    to implement reform priorities
    Opportunities to get back on track
    Children’s dreams for Thailand
    Distinctive country features affecting
    development
    A. WHAT ARE THE TRENDS IN POVERTY?
    Poverty has fallen precipitously over the past
    three decades, but major challenges remain
    in reducing poverty and inequality
    Poverty in Thailand can also be seen in
    non-income dimensions
    Who are the poor and bottom 40 percent in
    Thailand?
    B. HOW INCLUSIVE IS GROWTH, AND WHAT
    FACTORS AFFECT SHARED GROWTH IN
    THAILAND?
    The bottom 40 percent have been sharing
    in economic growth, although progress has
    been uneven
    Economic growth has been the main force
    behind poverty reduction and shared prosperity,
    although redistribution is playing a greater role
    The drivers of shared growth changed after
    the 1997 Asian crisis but not necessarily
    all for the better
    A more “healthy” and sustainable change
    that has taken place is the increased role
    of private transfers in poverty reduction
    The labor market has played a critical role
    in creating shared prosperity, although
    challenges remain
    Government programs have also likely
    contributed to shared prosperity, although
    they still leave a significant share of the
    population poor or vulnerable to poverty
    Historically, growth performance has been
    strong
    Growth has slowed significantly in recent
    years, raising concerns about structural
    weaknesses
    Faltering export growth has also played
    an important role in the slowdown
    The economy’s weaknesses can also
    be attributed to a slump in investment
    Missed opportunities: The decade when
    Thailand struggled to reform and lost its
    competitive edge
    Thailand’s lagging regions have fallen
    further behind and represent another
    untapped potential
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    VThailand Systematic Country Diagnostic
    6.POLICY PRIORITIES FOR
    STRONG, INCLUSIVE, AND
    SUSTAINABLE GROWTH
    7.IDENTIFIED DATA
    AND KNOWLEDGE GAPS
    5.HOW SUSTAINABLE IS
    THAILAND’S “ECONOMIC
    MODEL” AND WHAT ARE
    THE RISKS ON THE HORIZON?
    Restarting the “structural transformation”
    engine will be key for productivity growth and
    further poverty reduction
    Thailand will likely grow old before it becomes
    rich
    Lagging regions falling further behind, and a
    dated safety net represents growing risks to
    social cohesion (and political stability)
    Environmental and natural resource
    degradation and vulnerability to natural
    disasters and climate change may make
    growth unsustainable
    C. Make Growth Greener and More Resilient
    Manage Thailand’s Natural Resources and
    Environment
    Reduce Vulnerability to Natural Disasters and
    Climate Change by Focusing on Better Land
    Zoning and Management to Reduce the
    Flood-Drought Prone Areas
    Promote Energy Efficiency and Clean Energy
    by Focusing on Implementing Thailand’s Plans
    and Commitments for Energy Efficiency and
    Alternative Energy
    Strengthen the Institutional Capability of the
    Public Sector to Implement Reform Priorities
    Strengthening the Institutional Capability to:
    Create More and Better Jobs
    Strengthening the Institutional Capability to:
    Provide More Support to the bottom 40 percent
    and to Make Growth Greener and More Resilient
    A. CREATING MORE AND BETTER JOBS
    Boost Investments in Infrastructure
    Increase Competition Through Free Trade
    Agreements and Deregulation
    Improve Firm-Level Competitiveness and
    Innovation through Greater Technology
    Absorption and Innovation
    B. PROVIDE MORE TARGETED SUPPORT FOR
    THE BOTTOM 40 PERCENT
    Improve the Education and Skills of the
    Workforce
    Implement Effective Policies to Boost
    Agricultural Productivity
    Build Smarter Social Protection Systems,
    Focusing on Providing a Safety Net for Poor
    People
    REFERENCES
    Challenges remain in terms of social
    inclusion
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    ANNEXES
    Annex 1: Deep South
    Annex 2: Inclusiveness of growth
    Annex 3: Example of pathways out of poverty:
    a locally led development approach
    Annex 4: Details on the labor market
    Annex 5: Questionnaire used for consultations
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    VI Getting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All
    LIST OF TABLES
    LIST OF FIGURES
    Table 1: Development priorities for ensuring strong, shared,
    and sustainable growth
    Table 2: Rapid accumulation of capital inputs was the key
    driver of growth, with total factor productivity growth playing a
    smaller role
    Table 3: Other countries in the region are achieving more rapid
    GDP growth than Thailand
    Table 4: The recent slowdown in GDP growth can be attributed
    mainly to a slowdown in the industry and service sectors
    Table 5: Average FDI inflows in selected economies (% of GDP)
    Table 6: Poverty in Thailand remains predominantly a rural
    phenomenon and is concentrated in certain regions (poverty
    headcount by region, %)
    Table 7: Proportion of vulnerable groups
    Table 8: Years of schooling for heads of households
    Table 9: Decomposition of poverty changes into growth and
    redistribution components
    Table 10: Employment by sector
    Table 11: Top five priorities emerging from individual
    questionnaires and group discussions: opportunities for
    ending poverty and creating more shared prosperity
    Table 12: Development priorities for ensuring strong, shared,
    and sustainable growth
    Table 13: Fiscal situation 2009-2014 (% of fiscal year GDP)
    Table 14: Pre-primary adjusted net enrolment rates in 2014
    (4-5 years old)
    Table 15: Pre-primary attendance for 15 year-old students
    (pisa 2012 sample)
    Figure 8: Thailand has a higher percentage of migrants than
    the average of its structural peers but less than Malaysia and
    Singapore
    Figure 9: Tourism is an important source of revenue for
    Thailand
    Figure 10: Labor productivity per full-time equivalent worker
    (measured in constant 2002 THB) has been much higher in
    industry and services compared to agriculture
    Figure 11: Even in terms of labor productivity per full-time
    equivalent paid worker
    Figure 12: Labor reallocation was a driver of labor productivity
    growth in Thailand and the rest of East Asia
    Figure 13: Investment never fully recovered after the 1997
    crisis
    Figure 14: With both private and public investment behind the
    decline
    Figure 15: Agricultural prices boomed between 2001 and
    2012
    Figure 16: The hourly wage premium of a primary and
    secondary-educated graduate to work in the offfarm
    sector has decreased significantl
    Figure 17: The share of medium- and high-tech manufactures
    has remained unchanged (Lall’s Classification
    of Tech Exports, 2007-14)
    Figure 18: Capacity utilization
    Figure 19: Gross corporate profits
    Figure 20: Foreign Investment Dedicated to Exports
    Figure 21: The quality of Thailand’s infrastructure is perceived
    to have declined vis-à-vis its peers
    Figure 22: Thailand’s peers have caught up in terms of the
    quality of their roads, ports and airports
    Figure 23: Thailand’s state-owned enterprise are not
    performing as well as their domestic and international peers
    Figure 24: Other countries have been catching up to
    Thailand on multiple dimensions (Global Competitiveness,
    Score (7=best)
    Figure 25: World Governance Indicators in 2015, Thailand
    and peers
    Figure 26: Regional value-added per capita; and labor
    productivity
    Figure 27: By all measures of poverty, Thailand has made
    impressive progress in poverty reduction
    Figure 28: Gini coefficients have been on a downward trend in
    Thailand (1986-2013)
    Figure 29: Thailand’s gini coefficient declined but remains
    relatively unequal compared to many other countries
    Figure 30: Pockets of high poverty are concentrated in the
    North, Northeast, and Deep South (2013)
    Figure 31: Poorer provinces lag in multiple dimensions
    (UNDP’s Regional Human Achievement Index 2014)
    Figure 32: Distribution of Thailand’s 15-year-olds on the 2012
    PISA reading assessment
    Figure 33: Enrolment increased rapidly in the 1990s (and gaps
    were narrowed) but have since stagnated; the gaps between
    the poor and non-poor remain wide for post-secondary gross
    enrolment
    Figure 1: Global competitiveness, score (7=best)
    Figure 2: The differences between labor productivity in
    agricultural and non-agricultural sectors are much bigger in
    Thailand than elsewhere
    Figure 3: Thai labor productivity is comparable to ASEAN-5
    countries but only half of the level in Malaysia and Turkey
    (USD ’000/worker)
    Figure 4: Governance indicators, percentile rank, 0 to 100
    Figure 5: Bureaucratic quality
    Figure 6: While agriculture’s share of total value-added has
    declined, the movement of Thai workers out of agriculture has
    slowed in recent years
    Figure 7: Most of Thailand’s international migrants are from
    neighboring countries
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    VI
    IThailand Systematic Country Diagnostic
    LIST OF BOXES
    CURRENCY
    EQUIVALENTS
    Figure 34: Building material for walls
    Figure 35: Access to the internet
    Figure 36: Heads of poor households are more likely to be
    own account workers than employees in the
    public or private sectors
    Figure 37: Poverty rates are significantly higher amongst the
    elderly and children
    Figure 38: Poorer households are more likely to report they are
    unhappy with their lives
    Figure 39: Shared prosperity in Thailand and select other
    countries (annualized growth rate of consumption
    for the poorest 40 percent and the overall population)
    Figure 40: Annual consumption and poverty changes (%)
    Figure 41: Decomposing the factors that explained the decline
    in poverty during 1988-1996
    Figure 42: Net Job Creation by education level (million)
    Figure 43: Shares of Thai labor force by level of education
    Figure 44: The contribution of income and household
    composition to poverty reduction
    Figure 45: Share of households having a member migrating for
    work purposes, by decile and geographic region (2006, 2013)
    Figure 46: Real hourly wages in 1986 and 2011 with
    annualized growth rate, by location, education, gender and
    wage quintiles
    Figure 47: The actual/estimated number of households who
    were/would have been impoverished from health care
    costs-related expenditures fell after the introduction of UHC in
    2001
    Figure 48: While progress has been made in some gender
    dimensions, Thailand has exceptionally few women in politics
    and leadership positions
    Figure 49: Agricultural prices have dropped by 22 percent
    since their peak and are not expected to increase much in the
    future
    Figure 50: Poverty rates in the Deep South dropped as rubber
    prices boomed
    Figure 51: Projected total population by age groups (0-14,
    15-64 and 65+)
    Figure 52: Composition of total wealth per capita in 2005
    (2005USD)
    Figure 53: Natural resource depletion in Thailand and select
    other countries
    Figure 54: At current growth rates, Thailand will need at least
    another two decades to achieve high income
    status
    Figure 55: The differences between labor productivity in the
    agricultural and non-agricultural sectors are much bigger in
    Thailand than elsewhere
    Figure 56: Thai labor productivity is comparable to ASEAN-5
    countries but only half of the level in Malaysia and Turkey
    (USD ’000/worker)
    Figure 57: Results from Wall of Hope postcards
    Figure 58: The government’s 12th National Economic and
    Social Development Plan
    Figure 59: International reserves
    Figure 60: Public debt as a share of GDP
    Figure 61: Share of Current and Capital Expenditures in Total
    Expenditur
    Figure 62: Ease of doing business (score, 100=best)
    Figure 63: Top 10 obstacles to doing business
    Figure 64: Business and public research and development
    intensity
    Figure 65: The quality of Thailand’s education system is
    perceived to have worsened relative to its peers 110
    Figure 66: Main obstacle to doing business (% of firms
    pointing to particular constraint as one of top three
    constraints)
    Figure 67: Average PISA 2012 scores vs. GDP per capita
    (constant 2005 USD)
    Figure 68: Thailand PISA scores have improved but mainly in
    urban schools and among the better students
    Exchange Rate Effective as of October 31, 2016
    Currency Unit = THB (Thai baht)
    THB35.0 = USD 1.00
    Fiscal Year = October to September
    Box 1: Benchmarking with peer countries
    Box 2: An example of migrants’ vulnerability: the fishery sector
    Box 3: How large are the productivity differences across
    Thailand’s sectors?
    Box 4: How is poverty measured for Thailand?
    Box 5: The evolution of minimum wage policies in Thailand
    Box 6: Inclusion of LGBTI people in Thailand’s development:
    progress, challenges, and steps ahead
    Box 7: An Example of Thailand’s vulnerability to climate risks:
    the 2011 flood
    Box 8: Major government initiatives launched in 2015 to revive
    growth and restore competitiveness
    Box 9: Applying the World Development Report 2017
    Framework to Thailand
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    Getting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All
    ABBREVIATIONS
    ADB Asian Development Bank
    AEC ASEAN Economic Community
    AIDS Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome
    AOT Airports of Thailand Public Company Limited
    APO Asian Productivity Organization
    ASEAN Association of Southeast Asian Nations
    BE Buddhist Era
    BOI Board of Investment
    BOT Bank of Thailand
    BRN Barisan Revolusi Nasional
    CAT CAT Telecom Public Company Limited
    COP-21 Twenty-First Session of the Conference of the Parties
    CPF Country Partnership Framework
    DSR Debt-servicing ratio
    EF Education First
    EGAT Electricity Generating Authority of Thailand
    ETS Educational Testing Service
    FDI Foreign Direct Investment
    GDP Gross Domestic Product
    GMS Greater Mekong Sub region
    GNI Gross National Income
    GOT Government of Thailand
    GVC Global value Chains
    HIV Human Immunodeficiency Virus
    iBT Internet – Based Testing
    ICRG International Country Risk Guide
    IDA International Development Association
    IFC International Finance Corporation
    IMF International Monetary Fund
    IPCC Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
    ISN Interim strategy note
    Lao PDR Lao People’s Democratic Republic
    LGBTI Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Intersex
    MCOT Listed SOE; Mass Communication Organization of
    Thailand
    MDG+ Millennium Development Goals Plus
    MIGA Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency
    VI
    II
    MRTA Mass Rapid Transit Authority of Thailand
    MSM Men who have sex with men
    MWA Metropolitan Waterworks Authority
    NESDB National Economic and Social Development Board
    OECD Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
    OEM Original equipment manufacturer
    PEFA Public Expenditure and Financial Accountability
    PIM Public Investment Management
    PDP Power Development Plan
    PISA Programme for International Student Assessment
    PPP Purchasing Power Parity
    PPPs Public-Private Partnerships
    PTT Public Company Limited
    PWA Provincial Waterworks Authority
    R&D Research and Development
    RCA Revealed Comparative Advantage
    ROC Overseas Office Republic of China
    SCD Systematic Country Diagnostic
    SEPO State Enterprise Policy Office
    SFIs Specialized Financial Institutions
    SIC State Investment Corporation
    SOE State-Owned Enterprise
    SRT State Railway of Thailand
    STEP Skills Toward Employment and Productivity
    TFP Total Factor Productivity
    THAI Thai Airways International Public Company Limited
    THB Thai Baht
    TOEFL Educational Testing Service
    TOT Listed SOE; TOT Public Company Limited
    TPP Trans-Pacific Partnership
    UNDP United Nations Development Programme
    UNESCO United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
    Organization
    UNFCCC United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
    USD United States Dollars
    WBG World Bank Group
    WDI World Development Indicators
    WDR World Development Report
    WEO World Economic Outlook

    NOVEMBER 7, 2016
    EACTF | EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC
    STANDARD DISCLAIMER
    This volume is a product of the staff of the International Bank for Reconstruction and
    Development/ The World Bank. The findings, interpretations, and conclusions expressed
    in this paper do not necessarily reflect the views of the Executive Directors of
    The World Bank or the governments they represent. The World Bank does not guarantee
    the accuracy of the data included in this work. The boundaries, colors, denominations,
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    Thailand Systematic Country Diagnostic IX

    X Getting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All
    ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
    This report was prepared by a World Bank Group team led by Lars Sondergaard (Program Leader), Helen Han (IFC) and Daniel Street
    (IFC) with the much appreciated contribution of Minna Hahn Tong (Consultant) in drafting and editing. The team comprised:

    XIThailand Systematic Country Diagnostic
    The report relied on three main “building blocks”: analytical
    work on poverty and inclusiveness of growth (prepared by
    a team lead by Xubei Luo and consisting of Reena Badiani-
    Magnusson; Theepakorn Jithitikulchai; Cecilia Poggi and Dilaka
    Lathapipat); analytical work on growth and trade (prepared by a
    team consisting of Smita Kuriakose; Miguel Eduardo Sanchez
    Martin; Kazi Matin, Dilaka Lathapipat, Thanapat Reungsri and
    Shabih Ali Mohib); and analytical work on the environment and
    energy (prepared by a team consisting of Rome Chavapricha,
    Tijen Arin and Pajnapa Peamsilpakulchorn).
    Consultations were organized with much guidance and support
    from our communications team consisting of Leonora Aquino
    Gonzales; Ben Alex Manser; Yanawit Dechpanyawat; Buntarika
    Sangarun; and Kanitha Kongrukgreatiyos.
    Excellent administrative and report production assistance was
    provided by Noppakwan Inthapan and Pimon Iamsripong.
    Overall guidance was provided by Ulrich Zachau (Country
    Director), Salman Zaidi (Practice Manager, Poverty), Catherine
    Martin (Advisor, IFC), Daniel Street (IFC), Constantine Chikosi
    (Operations Manager), Lou Scura (Program Leader) and Shabih
    Ali Mohib (Program Leader).The team is grateful for their
    ongoing support and guidance provided.
    Peer reviewers for the report were: Ejaz Ghani (Lead Economist)
    and Somchai Jitsuchon (TDRI).
    Useful inputs and comments were provided along the way by
    several people, including Elise Vanormelingen, Ricardo Alfredo
    Habalian Fattal, Christina Popivanova (from UNICEF) on the
    child grant and Hugh Delaney (from UNICEF) on early child
    development.
    The team also received valuable feedback on preliminary
    findings and messages at seven meetings (held in Bangkok,
    in Pattani; Udon Thani and Chiang Mai). Many thanks to the
    more than 400 people who participated in these meetings and
    provided their thoughts and suggestions on the storyline, and
    proposed priorities.
    Finally, the team benefitted from the guidance and insights of
    a technical government counterpart working group established
    to guide this work. The group was chaired by Boonchai
    Charassangsomboon and was comprised of members from
    the Bureau of the Budget, Fiscal Policy Office, NESDB, Bank
    of Thailand, Public Debt Management Office, and the National
    Statistical Office.

    12 Getting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All
    EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
    O V E R T H E PA S T F E W D E C A D E S , T H A I L A N D H A S M A D E
    T R E M E N D O U S P R O G R E S S T O WA R D T H E T W I N G O A L S
    O F E L I M I N AT I N G E X T R E M E P O V E R T Y A N D B O O S T I N G
    S H A R E D P R O S P E R I T Y .
    For more than a quarter century prior to the 1997 Asian
    financial crisis, Thailand’s economy grew at an average
    annual rate of 7.5 percent, creating millions of jobs that
    helped pull millions of people out of poverty. Extreme
    poverty as measured by the international extreme poverty
    line (USD 1.90 per day, 2011 PPP) is no longer a concern
    for Thailand as a whole, falling from a rate of 14.3 percent
    in 1988 to less than 0.1 percent in 2013. Gains along
    multiple dimensions of welfare have been impressive:
    per capita income has risen by 4.2 percent per year on
    average in 2000 -2013, many more children are now getting
    many more years of education, and virtually everyone is
    now covered by health insurance while other forms of
    social security have expanded. Access to safe water and
    basic sanitation is almost universal, and mobility and
    connectivity have increased remarkably (UNDP, 2014b).
    T H A I L A N D H A S A C H I E V E D T H E S E G A I N S D E S P I T E H I G H
    POLITICAL INSTABILITY.
    Since becoming a constitutional monarchy in 1932,
    Thailand has experienced 18 coups (the most recent on
    May 22, 2014, as well as a few additional attempted
    coups), with 18 different constitutions and 35 different
    prime ministers (Malesky and Samphantharak, 2011).
    Nonetheless, Thailand maintained high growth rates and
    continued to attract sizeable amounts of FDI, thanks
    in large part to a strong bureaucracy that served as a
    buffer against political turmoil and to factors such as
    its hub location in Southeast Asia that made it relatively
    attractive to foreign investors compared to its neighbors
    in earlier years.
    GROWTH HAS BEEN SLOWING, AND CONTINUED INSTABILITY
    COULD AFFECT FUTURE GROWTH AND PROSPECTS FOR
    SHARED INCOME GAINS.
    There are now indications that continued political
    instabilitymay start hurting Thailand’s growth prospects.
    First, while Thailand’s governance indicators—most
    notably, voice and accountability and political stability—
    have worsened in the past decade, they have improved
    among many of its neighbors. Second, the quality of
    the bureaucracy has worsened, while it has improved
    in neighboring countries. The “shock absorber” against
    political shocks is no longer as effective as it was.

    13Thailand Systematic Country Diagnostic
    shared prosperity, despite low agricultural productivity
    growth, is unlikely to be sustainable because agricultural
    prices have declined in 2015 and 2016 and are projected
    to remain subdued in the years ahead. At the same time,
    the manufacturing sector has stopped creating new jobs.
    Services have experienced the fastest pace of job growth,
    but have failed to show rapid productivity growth.
    ANALYSIS UNDERTAKEN FOR THIS SCD SUGGESTS THAT THE
    SIGNIFICANT SLOWDOWN IN THAILAND’S EXPORT GROWTH IN
    RECENT YEARS IS DUE IN PART TO A LOSS OF MARKET SHARE IN
    LABOR INTENSIVE MANUFACTURING.
    Many labor-intensive and resource-based manufactured
    exports (20 percent of total exports) have become less
    competitive, a trend that accelerated in 2010-14. In the
    face of rising wage rates, export items like textiles, footwear,
    leather products, and wood products have been losing export
    markets. This is also reflected in manufacturing value added
    where laborintensive and resource-based subsectors have
    declined, contributing in part to stagnating manufacturing
    employment in recent years.
    THAILAND HAS LOST THE COMPETITIVE EDGE IT ONCE ENJOYED
    OVER ITS PEERS AND OTHER COUNTRIES IN THE REGION.
    Comparing Thailand’s Global Competitiveness Score
    (compiled by the World Economic Forum) in 2006/07 and
    2016/17 is telling (Figure 1). Ten years ago, Thailand looked
    strong and healthy on all the dimensions tracked by the
    World Economic Forum. It stood out relative to ASEAN, upper-
    middle-income countries, as well as its structural peers, and
    it even looked impressive relative to high-income countries.2
    Today, however, Thailand no longer stands out—the pack
    of other countries has caught up with it on virtually all
    dimensions. Over the past decade, mega projects that could
    have relieved infrastructure constraints and made Thailand
    the hub of ASEAN did not get off the ground. Thailand also
    did not seize its “head start” to invest in its institutions and
    in innovation to make its universities the envy of the region
    and its businesses world-class.
    1 Official aggregate poverty numbers for 2014 are available but not the
    household level poverty numbers which the World Bank team behind this
    report uses to analyze trends, and regional variations. As such, this report
    has only been able to analyze trends through 2013.
    2 The structural peers selected for this report are: Bulgaria, China, Colombia,
    Malaysia and Mexico.
    MOREOVER, POVERTY AND INEQUALITY CONTINUE TO POSE
    SIGNIFICANT CHALLENGES.
    As of 2014, 7.1 million Thais were still living in poverty (based
    on the current national poverty line, or about USD 6.20 in
    2011 PPP). Moreover, in 2013, an additional 6.7 million
    were living within 20 percent above the national poverty
    line and remained vulnerable to falling back into poverty.1
    Both household data and provincial-level data also paint
    a picture of non-income gaps between the poor and non-
    poor, often persisting over time despite the rapid economic
    growth. Inequality has declined over the past three decades,
    but remains high compared with many countries in East
    Asia. Significant spatial disparities in household income
    and consumption can be seen across and within regions of
    Thailand. Pockets of poverty remain concentrated in lagging
    regions such as the Northeast, North, and Deep South.
    SLOWER GROWTH THAN IN THE PAST, IF IT CONTINUES, WILL
    CONSTRAIN FURTHER PROGRESS IN REDUCING POVERTY AND
    PROMOTING INCLUSION.
    Historically, economic growth has been the key driver of
    poverty reduction in Thailand. More recently, growth has
    fallen from an average annual rate of more than 9 percent in
    the boom years of 1986-96 to less than 3 percent a year in
    the last two years. Looking ahead, the World Bank forecasts
    growth of 3.2 percent for 2016-18, and the IMF projects
    that growth will dip to 3.0 percent by the year 2021 (WEO,
    October 2016)—well below the projected growth rates of
    other upper middle income countries in ASEAN as well as
    China and India.
    THE KEY ENGINES THAT DROVE PAST GROWTH HAVE LOST
    STEAM OR ARE UNSUSTAINABLE.
    The engine that delivered most of the productivity gains in
    the past—the movement of people from the low-productivity
    agricultural sector into higher-productivity jobs, particularly
    in the manufacturing sector—lost steam almost a decade
    ago. Furthermore, recent progress in creating shared
    prosperity is largely related to temporarily record-high
    agricultural prices, caused by both a global commodity
    price boom and domestic policies, which have helped raise
    farm wages but without the corresponding productivity
    growth. The contribution of rising farm incomes to boosting

    14 Getting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All
    FIGURE
    1 :
    Global Competitiveness, score (7=best)
    3 www.weforum.org/gcr, accessed on October 7, 2016.
    2006/07 2016/17
    TOGETHER, ANALYTICAL WORK FOR THIS SYSTEMATIC COUNTRY
    DIAGNOSTIC (SCD), A LITERATURE REVIEW, AND FEEDBACK
    FROM CONSULTATIONS INFORMED THE PRIORITIZATION OF TEN
    “DEVELOPMENT PRIORITIES” FOR ENSURING STRONG, SHARED,
    AND SUSTAINABLE GROWTH IN THAILAND.
    One of these priorities is cross-cutting while the remaining 9 are
    grouped into three “pathways”. As the table below shows, four of
    these priorities have been singled out for their likely high impact
    on improving the lives of the bottom 40 percent. All of the priorities
    aim to address some of Thailand’s most pressing challenges and
    make the most of its opportunities, while mitigating some of the
    identified risks that could undermine future progress.
    I N M O R E D E TA I L , T H E T H R E E PAT H WAY S A R E :
    (i) Creating more and better jobs through improved infrastructure,
    more competition, and increased firm-level competitiveness.
    (ii) Providing more targeted support to the bottom 40 percent
    of the population by improving the education and skills of the
    workforce; implementing effective policies to boost productivity
    in the agricultural sector, where approximately half of the
    bottom 40 percent of the population and the poor continue to
    be employed; and providing a smarter social protection system
    focused providing a safety net for poor people.
    (iii) Making growth greener and more sustainable, which
    includes efforts to manage Thailand’s natural resources and
    environment; reduce vulnerability to natural disasters and
    climate change; and promote energy efficiency and renewable
    energy.
    FINALLY, THESE THREE PATHWAYS COULD BE SUPPORTED BY
    CROSS-CUTTING EFFORTS TO STRENGTHEN THE INSTITUTIONAL
    CAPABILITY OF THE PUBLIC SECTOR. WITHIN EACH PATHWAY,
    P O L I C Y P R I O R I T I E S A N D S P E C I F I C I N T E RV E N T I O N S A R E
    PROPOSED, AS LAID OUT BELOW.
    Source: World Economic Forum’s Global Competitiveness database.3

    15Thailand Systematic Country Diagnostic
    TABLE
    1 :
    Development priorities for ensuring strong, shared, and sustainable growth

    A NEW AND IMPROVED ENGINE IS NEEDED TO GENERATE NEW
    SOURCES OF GROWTH AND CREATE MORE AND BETTER JOBS.
    Thailand needs to find a new engine that can deliver results like
    the locomotive that drove the boom in 1986-1996—an engine
    that sustainably and consistently creates opportunities for
    millions to improve their livelihoods. This will involve restoring the
    competitive edge Thailand has lost, through better infrastructure,
    more competition, and an emphasis on 15 boosting firm-level
    competitiveness. Creating lots of low-skilled jobs is no longer
    an option (nor would it be a desirable option for Thailand); those
    jobs will increasingly be created in places such as Cambodia,
    Vietnam or Myanmar. Instead, Thailand needs to upgrade its
    industries and service sector and create high value-added jobs
    that require more skills. This will be challenging and require
    substantial investments in terms of physical capital as well as
    investments in improving the business and institutional climate.
    PATHWAY 1 :
    CREATING MORE AND
    BETTER JOBS
    IN PARTICULAR, MORE AND BETTER INFRASTRUCTURE IS NEEDED
    TO PROVIDE ADEQUATE INPUTS AND CONNECTIVITY TO THE
    PRODUCTIVE SECTOR.
    Thailand has had difficulty preparing and implementing major
    infrastructure investment programs, and improving the capacity
    to foster both public and private investment in infrastructure will
    be important. The Government could focus on its infrastructure
    development plans to attract private sector investments in
    a more concerted manner. As discussed in the 11th and 12th
    National Economic and Social Development Plan, Thailand’s
    new infrastructure and logistics development plans could cover
    the following: encouraging the development of multimodal
    transportation, facilitating cross-border trade, enhancing the
    efficiency of logistics and transport management systems,
    improving railways, modernizing the public transportation
    network, and introducing high-speed communication and
    egovernment services. The Government has recognized that
    Public Private Partnerships should play a more important role
    in infrastructure delivery going forward. The introduction of the
    2013 Private Investment in State Undertaking Act B.E. 2556
    (PISU Act) has improved the regulatory environment to foster
    infrastructure investment through Public Private Partnerships,
    though progress in project implementation has been slow. A five
    year Strategic Plan for Public Private Partnerships was approved
    in 2015 4, with 66 projects in the pipeline worth THB 1.41 trillion,
    the majority in the transport sector, five of which have been
    approved for fast track implementation.
    4 http://www.unescap.org/sites/default/files/PPP%20Thailand-sent
    16 Getting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All

    GREATER TECHNOLOGY ABSORPTION AND INNOVATION TO
    BOOST FIRM-LEVEL COMPETITIVENESS IS ALSO KEY.
    In particular, Thai enterprises could leverage greater spillovers
    from FDI to help them upgrade and innovate. Building the
    capabilities to enable Thai firms to upgrade and innovate is now a
    priority, which calls for a strengthening of the national innovation
    system, greater emphasis on developing a skilled workforce,
    and increased investment in research capital and institutions
    that would promote the deepening of the knowledge economy.
    Thai firms also need to build their competencies in higher-
    value-adding niche sectors, taking advantage of their existing
    capabilities. Moving up the value chain will entail undertaking
    more complex functions such as design, research and
    development, and branding. It requires moving from the export
    of low-value parts and components to higher-value products
    and services and also to final manufactures. This would be
    particularly relevant for Thai SMEs which, while dominating
    the landscape of firms, have seen a continuous decrease in
    their contribution to GDP during the past 12 years from 41.3
    percent of GDP in 2002 to 37.4 percent in 2013. Moreover, the
    productivity gap between SMEs and larger firms has widened.
    As the gap in productivity between small and large firms is
    significant, improving productivity in smaller firms will take
    extra effort because their turnover rates are high (70 percent
    fold up after a few years).
    POLICIES AIMED AT INCREASING THE LEVEL OF COMPETITION
    WILL ALSO BE IMPORTANT FOR ENSURING STRONG AND
    SUSTAINED ECONOMIC GROWTH.
    Although Thailand has a relatively open economy overall,
    some subsectors—particularly in services—are more
    protected from import and domestic competition. Deeper
    trade integration will be critical for fostering competition,
    facilitating innovation and technology spillovers, and
    opening up new opportunities, such as through the ASEAN
    Economic Community (AEC) or the new mega agreements
    currently being introduced in Asia (such as EU-FTAs, TPP,
    RCEP, and FTAAP). Ensuring more access to finance
    will also help increase competition—if firms face fewer
    obstacles in getting credit and capital, and if there are
    good mechanisms for resolving financial distress, firms
    are better placed to improve productivity and maintain
    sustained levels of private investment. Introducing
    competitive neutrality in Thailand’s SOEs will also be
    important for providing a level playing field, avoiding
    crowding out of private firms, and improving the efficiency
    of the SOE sector.
    17Thailand Systematic Country Diagnostic

    PATHWAY 2:
    PROVIDING MORE SUPPORT
    TO THE BOTTOM 40 PERCENT
    THAILAND’S LAGGING REGIONS PRESENT RISKS TO SOCIAL
    COHESION AND POLITICAL STABILITY.
    The tensions in Thai society – that culminated with the coups
    in 2006 and again in 2014 – reflect a deeply divided society.
    These divisions, in part, reflect growing regional disparities.
    The lagging regions are falling further behind. Empowered
    by more education, by broader horizons gained from labor
    migration, and supported by a strong and vocal network of
    civil society organizations, people from these lagging regions
    have become a far more potent force in Thailand than in the
    past. They can point to their regions falling further behind;
    and to a system of government that is Bangkok-centric – in
    terms of both the centralization of decision-making power; as
    well as the distribution of budgetary resources. Unless more
    efforts and resources are directed to narrowing Thailand’s
    regional gaps, the underlying tensions will likely persist or
    worsen, fuelling discontent and political divisiveness.
    MORE TARGETED SUPPORT WILL BE CRITICAL TO IMPROVE THE
    LIVELIHOODS OF THE BOTTOM 40 PERCENT OF HOUSEHOLDS,
    AND IT CAN ALSO TO HELP FOSTER SOCIAL COHESION AND
    STABILITY MORE GENERALLY.
    International evidence shows how inequality and social
    tensions can lead to political conflict and unrest. Likely, the
    current sharp political divisions and tensions in Thailand have
    their roots in a growing sense that economic prosperity has
    not been widely shared and/or everyone does not have equal
    opportunities in society. More targeted support for the bottom
    40 percent—namely, through improved education; better
    agricultural policies; and building a smarter social protection
    system which focuses on providing a safety for poor people —
    is thus an important priority in terms of having a large impact
    on the bottom 40 percent as well as helping to strengthen
    social cohesion and maintain greater political stability.
    IMPROVING ACCESS TO HIGH-QUALITY EDUCATION IS A TOP
    PRIORITY FOR ENABLING THE POOR AND BOTTOM 40 PERCENT
    TO BENEFIT FULLY FROM GROWTH, AS WELL AS IMPROVING
    THAILAND’S ECONOMIC GROWTH PROSPECTS.
    For individuals, having the necessary skills and competencies
    to obtain productive employment can help them secure
    a better future and, for those who are poor, help them
    break out of the cycle of poverty. A better-educated and
    skilled workforce is also critical to Thailand’s economic
    growth prospects, as the strong growth Thailand needs in
    competitive skillintensive exports will depend on having a
    stronger human capital base. A recent firm survey shows
    that manufacturing firms are considering the lack of skilled
    workers a top constraint for further growth. Worrisomely,
    according to the Global Competitiveness Indicators, the
    quality of Thailand’s education system is perceived to have
    worsened relative to its upper middle income peers (and
    ASEAN neighbors). Given its poor performance, virtually all
    dimensions of Thailand’s education system need further
    attention and reforms. Still, three reforms areas seem of
    critical importance in the immediate future: first, investing
    more in the early years of children’s lives with an effort to
    dramatically improving access to quality ECD services for
    the poor. Second, addressing Thailand’s problems with
    small schools where approximately 1 million (mainly poor)
    children, on average, are currently getting an inferior quality
    education. Three, broader and sustained education reforms
    along multiple dimensions are also needed to improve
    outcomes, including: increasing school autonomy and
    strengthening the use of information to hold teachers and
    schools accountable for performance.
    18 Getting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All

    RAISING LABOR PRODUCTIVITY IN THE AGRICULTURAL
    SECTOR REMAINS OF CRITICAL IMPORTANCE, NOT ONLY FROM
    THE PERSPECTIVE OF BOOSTING INCOMES OF THE BOTTOM 40
    PERCENT BUT ALSO FROM A GROWTH PERSPECTIVE, GIVEN
    THAT AGRICULTURE STILL ACCOUNTS FOR ABOUT 11 PERCENT
    OF GDP.
    Higher agricultural growth would not only increase GDP directly,
    but it would also provide positive spillovers to agribusinesses and
    the food processing industry and stimulate regional development.
    Agricultural growth can also help reduce rural poverty, often
    more than any other sector, would appropriate policies and
    programs be put in place. Higher pro-poor agricultural growth
    depends on improvements in agricultural policy, including: (i)
    the development of a better-functioning land rental market, (ii)
    increased efficiency and sustainability of irrigation investments,
    and (iii) more and better funding of agricultural research and
    extension programs, and (iv) the move away from commodity
    support programs such as for rice and rubber toward broad-
    based agricultural and food policy. More effort is also merited
    in the hotspots of rural poverty, especially in northeast of the
    country, where agricultural programs need to be better designed
    (including around strong partnerships with civil society) to lift a
    large number of smallholders farmers out of poverty.
    A KEY PRIORITY IS TO BUILD A SMART SOCIAL PROTECTION
    SYSTEM THAT MEETS THE NEEDS OF THE POOR AND THE MOST
    VULNERABLE, WHILE ENSURING FISCAL SUSTAINABILITY.
    Thailand stands out in contrast to many upper middle income
    countries by not having a generalized safety net program for the
    poor.5 Developing a backbone national social safety program
    for the poor – incorporating design lessons from international
    experience – would go a long way in terms of providing support
    to vulnerable groups and, likely, help reduce social tension. In
    more detail, such a program would be based on a number of
    principles: first, a targeting method would be needed to identify
    who are poor (and near poor) households using their key income
    and non-income characteristics. Second, the information
    collected from households could be consolidated into a social
    registry which would be the basis for identifying beneficiaries
    for any safety net benefit and other targeted programs. Third,
    design of a national safety net program for poor households
    would be important, including “graduation pathways” to promote
    program exit and sustainable livelihoods where possible. Finally,
    to ensure that any safety net programs is fiscally sustainable,
    it will be important to re-examine the broader social protection
    system, including revisiting the generosity of existing contributory
    pensions, matching pension schemes and social pensions
    in order to see how fiscal space might be created for such a
    program.
    5 E.g. all of the “structural peers” selected for comparison purposes throughout
    this report have such generalized social safety nets targeted at poor people.
    19Thailand Systematic Country Diagnostic

    PATHWAY 3:
    MAKING GROWTH GREENER
    AND MORE RESILIENT
    6 For more details, please see Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s
    fifth assessment (available at http://www.ipcc.ch/report/ar5/wg2/).
    ENSURING THE SUSTAINABILITY OF GROWTH AND THE
    LIVELIHOODS OF THE BOTTOM 40 PERCENT WILL DEPEND TO A
    LARGE EXTENT ON THAILAND’S ABILITY TO IMPROVE ENERGY
    EFFICIENCY, AND MAKE GROWTH GREENER AND MORE RESILIENT.
    Green growth decouples growth from heavy dependence on
    resource use, carbon emissions, and environmental damage.
    It also promotes growth through the creation of new green
    product markets, technologies, investments, and changes in
    consumption and conservation behavior. Green growth will
    be critical for ensuring the availability of resources to power
    future growth while protecting Thailand’s wealth of natural
    resources for future generations. For instance, Thailand’s
    ability to attract nearly 30 million visitors annually (providing
    12 percent of annual GDP) hinges on its ability to conserve its
    beautiful coastal areas and coral reefs.
    IMPLEMENTING EXISTING OR PROPOSED PLANS CAN GO A LONG
    WAY TOWARD PRESERVING THAILAND’S NATURAL RESOURCES
    AND ENVIRONMENT.
    Forest and fishery depletion is continuing, water shortages on the
    one hand and floods on the other hand are increasing concerns.
    To manage “brown” environment (air, water, waste) problems,
    Thailand can draw on the plans and regulations it has already
    in place. Pushing forward with the implementation of the plans
    is now key. Importantly, flood and drought risk management
    could be strengthened by being less reactive. In addition,
    understanding and mitigating the potential environmental
    and health impacts arising from necessary large-scale public
    investments in an inclusive manner will be important to ensure
    the viability and sustainability of such investments.
    REDUCING VULNERABILITY TO NATURAL DISASTERS AND
    CLIMATE CHANGE WILL BE IMPORTANT FOR CONTINUED GROWTH
    AND SHARED PROSPERITY.
    The 2011 flood clearly showed the extent of damage natural
    disasters can inflict on Thailand’s economy and the bottom
    40 percent. As a low-lying country, Thailand is expected to
    suffer from more frequent coastal flooding—with the impact
    area including central Thailand and Bangkok—as well as
    more pronounced droughts around the agriculturally important
    Mekong region and saline intrusion as a result of climate
    change.6 Thailand recently took a number of steps to identify
    a policy agenda for enhancing climate resilience, including a
    National Adaptation Plan under development. Further work in a
    number of areas will be important: first, better land zoning and
    management is needed to reduce the flood-drought prone areas.
    Specifically, deforestation in the upper reaches increases the
    risk of flash floods and sediment loads in rivers, while reducing
    storage and drainage capacity. Lack of careful planning for public
    infrastructure (roads, floodways, etc.) and urban/industrial
    areas exacerbate the risk of flooding. Second, to achieve its
    commitments to reduce carbon emissions, timely and effective
    policies, market-based instruments, and cooperation with the
    private sector will all be important.
    20 Getting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All

    7 Thailand made the commitment at the twenty-first session of the Conference
    of the Parties (COP-21) as part of the United Nations Framework Convention on
    Climate Change Conference (UNFCCC).
    MAKING GROWTH GREENER WILL INVOLVE IMPROVING ENERGY
    EFFICIENCY AND RELYING ONCLEANER SOURCES OF ENERGY.
    The best fuel for improving green growth is energy efficiency.
    Thailand is growing on an energy-intensive path, and high
    energy demand growth is expected to continue in the
    future. Making the economy more energy-efficient will be
    important for coping with energy supply constraints. It has
    been estimated that in 2012, 73 percent of Thailand’s
    emissions came from the energy sector. In 2015, Thailand
    pledged to reduce its carbon emissions by 20-25 percent
    from their 2005 levels7, while the Power Development Plan
    (PDP) for 2015-2036 pledges to increase renewable energy
    so it comprises up to 20 percent of overall power supplies.
    Nevertheless, the PDP also proposed to build 7,390 MW
    of coal-fired power plants and 2,000 MW of nuclear, which
    raised strong environmental and social concerns.
    SEVERAL CONCRETE EFFORTS COULD ACCELERATE THE SHIFT
    TOWARD MORE ENERGY EFFICIENCY AND CLEANER ENERGY
    First, targeted efforts in the major energy-consuming sectors,
    i.e. manufacturing and transport, could contribute significantly
    to the government’s goal. In the transport sector, key measures
    will involve improving vehicle fuel efficiency and expanding
    infrastructure investment to promote greater use of rail
    transport. Other efforts will include more stringent regulations
    of large factories and buildings, strengthening the capacity of
    the industry to adopt low global warming and energy efficient
    technologies, improving energy efficiency standards for buildings
    and appliances and their enforcement, and greater use of
    demand side management measures. Moreover, adopting new
    and innovative measures – such as energy efficiency resource
    standards among power producers, performance-based EE
    incentives – will also help induce new investment and adoption
    of new and more efficient technology. Second, avoiding energy
    price and demand distortion by maintaining the current pricing/
    subsidies policies. By March 2016, subsidies for most petroleum
    products have been lifted, excise taxes have been largely
    reinstated for petroleum products, subsidies for electricity are
    limited to very small “life line” consumption for households.
    Third, given that Thailand will increasingly have to import its
    electricity, Thailand could take a leading role in power grid code
    harmonization and take a leading initiative in the design of power
    market rules to facilitate commercialization of power trade both
    bilaterally and multilaterally in the Greater Mekong Subregion
    and ASEAN. Similarly, for natural gas, Thailand energy authorities
    could take an active role in optimizing and collaborating on
    natural gas procurement among the current regional gas trading
    countries such as China, Malaysia, Myanmar, Singapore and
    Thailand. Thailand can also help bring global good practice in
    developing power infrastructure projects in countries with less
    experience than Thailand.
    21Thailand Systematic Country Diagnostic

    CROSS-CUTTING PRIORITY:
    STRENGTHEN THE INSTITUTIONAL CAPABILITY
    OF THE PUBLIC SECTOR TO IMPLEMENT REFORM
    PRIORITIES
    FINALLY, STRONGER INSTITUTIONAL CAPABILITY OF THE PUBLIC
    SECTOR TO IMPLEMENT REFORMS WILL BE ESSENTIAL TO
    MAKING PROGRESS ON THE THREE PATHWAYS DESCRIBED
    Thailand will need to ensure that it has the institutions
    (and people) to help provide an environment in which
    more and better jobs are created. It will also need strong
    institutions that can deliver the new programs to improve
    Thailand’s infrastructure, provide more targeted support
    for the bottom 40 percent, and implement politics and
    programs for cleaner growth.
    THE THAI AUTHORITIES HAVE LAUNCHED SEVERAL PROMISING
    INITIATIVES TO REVIVE ECONOMIC GROWTH. THE IMPACT OF THESE
    INITIATIVES WILL DEPEND ON SUCCESSFUL IMPLEMENTATION.
    Successful implementation, in turn, will not only take
    political will; it will also require improving the institutional
    capacity of the public sector to formulate and implement
    multiyear infrastructure programs. A few examples
    include: the government may consider comprehensively
    revamping and modernizing the Public Investment
    Management (PIM) system. Further strengthening of the
    procurement system would also help ensure efficient
    implementation of public projects and the achievement
    of savings for public finances. In light of the planned
    mega projects that could resuscitate growth, reviewing
    public procurement systems and allowing for innovative
    approaches such as turnkey contracting would be useful.
    Stronger capacity to deliver new programs will also be
    needed for successful delivery of more targeted support
    for the bottom 40 percent and for the implementation of
    environmental policies and programs.
    GETTING THAILAND BACK ON TRACK WILL ALSO INVOLVE
    OVERCOMING THE GOVERNANCE CHALLENGES THAT LED TO
    THE POLICY AND IMPLEMENTATION STALEMATE OVER THE PAST
    DECADE.
    The gridlock among political groups in Thailand has its
    roots in the widening gaps in Thai society; a perception
    that a ruling elite has benefitted from significant levels
    of corruption, an unfair judicial system has favoured
    those with money, and government regulations (and
    concessions) that have protected vested interests at
    the expense of encouraging growth and job creation.
    This gridlock has impeded decision-making, prevented
    the effective implementation of public investment, and
    blocked efforts to liberalize key sectors, especially the
    service sector.
    22 Getting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All

    OPPORTUNITIES TO GET BACK ON TRACK
    THAILAND IS WELL-POSITIONED TO REVIVE GROWTH AND
    ENSURE PROSPERITY FOR ALL.
    The country is strategically well-located, surrounded by
    countries with rapidly growing economies and an ample
    supply of labor. The ASEAN Economic Community (starting on
    Jan 1, 2016) is strengthening trade and other linkages. As the
    second-largest economy in ASEAN (after Indonesia), Thailand
    has a strong starting position in terms of an agile business
    sector, a historically strong civil service, and a large cohort of
    young people in their 20s and 30s with a tertiary education.
    Importantly, analysis shows that Thailand has considerable
    potential to increase productivity in the future: the differences
    in labor productivity across sectors and subsectors in
    manufacturing and services (see Klyuev, 2015 and Figure 2)
    are higher than for many countries in the region, indicating
    significant potential for increasing aggregate productivity.
    Similarly, high differences in productivity levels across
    manufacturing and across service subsectors (Klyuev, 2015;
    Dheera-aumpon, 2014) indicate considerable scope for
    increasing within-sector productivity through intra-sector
    reallocation of capital and labor.
    A NUMBER OF RECENT POLICY INITIATIVES GIVE RISE TO
    SOME OPTIMISM.
    These include a focus on 10 industries as “new engines of
    growth” (so-called “S-curve industries”); the creation of an
    Eastern Economic Corridor; and the launch of a major push for
    the creation of an electronic payment system. Thailand also
    introduced a child grant for poor families with newborns in
    2015. There has also been a major push to bring more SMEs
    into formal economy by providing them with incentives to move
    towards a single financial account. Moreover, the Government
    has transferred responsibility of supervision and regulation of
    State Financial Institutions to Bank of Thailand. And, finally, a
    number of large-scale infrastructure investments – many of
    which have been on the drawing boards since the early 2000s
    – have gotten underway.
    THESE INITIATIVES ARE PROMISING SIGNALS THAT THAILAND IS
    EDGING BACK ON TRACK, BUT THEIR IMPACT WILL DEPEND ON
    THE QUALITY OF IMPLEMENTATION.
    Launching good policy initiatives is a first important
    step; successfully implementing the initiatives is what is
    required to transform Thailand’s economy. Only time will
    tell whether Thailand will seize the opportunity to revive
    growth and secure prosperity for all.
    23Thailand Systematic Country Diagnostic

    24 Getting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All
    FIGURE
    2 :
    FIGURE
    3 :
    The differences between labor productivity
    in agricultural and nonagricultural sectors
    are much bigger in Thailand than elsewhere
    Thai labor productivity is comparable to
    ASEAN-5 countries but only half of the level
    in Malaysia and Turkey (USD’000/worker)
    Note: GDP at constant basic prices per worker, using 2011 PPP, reference
    year 2013.
    1/ Calculated using total number of workers
    2/ Calculated using World Bank calculations of fulltime equivalent
    workers
    Source: APO Productivity Database 2015 and Labor Force Survey (for
    calculation of “Thailand 2/”).
    Note: GDP at constant basic prices per worker, using 2011 PPP, reference
    year 2013.
    Source: APO Productivity Database 2015.

    25Thailand Systematic Country Diagnostic
    CHILDREN’S DREAMS FOR THAILAND
    As part of the government’s consultations for their 12th National Economic and Social Development Plan, it organized a drawing
    competition for school children from across the country. The children were asked to draw under the title “Your Dream for Thailand”.
    Some of the common themes in the drawings were the wish for Thailand to be united and peaceful though there are differences in
    nationality, culture and religion; to take better care of the environment; and for children to be educated for a brighter future. Below are
    two of the winning drawings and the comments from the artists who drew them.
    RAKPLOY MAMUI AGE: 10 I GRADE: 4
    “Children are reading books eagerly and going to the library,
    which is a source of knowledge. They will help drive Thailand’s
    development in the future.”
    JUTHAMANI KAMDAM AGE: 10 I GRADE: 6
    “The Thai way of life is close to nature, culture, and tradition.
    Though we are diverse in religion and culture, everyone still lives
    together in harmony and peace. These values will unite all Thais
    together to cooperate for a prosperous and developed Thailand.”

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    OVER THE PAST FEW DECADES, THAILAND HAS MADE
    TREMENDOUS PROGRESS TOWARD THE TWIN GOALS OF
    ELIMINATING EXTREME POVERTY AND BOOSTING SHARED
    PROSPERITY.
    For more than a quarter century prior to the 1997 Asian
    financial crisis, Thailand’s economy grew at an average annual
    rate of 7.5 percent, creating millions of jobs that helped pull
    millions of people out of poverty and accommodated the
    country’s rapidly growing population. Extreme poverty as
    measured by the international extreme poverty line (USD
    1.90 per day, 2011 PPP) is no longer a concern for Thailand
    as a whole, falling from a rate of 14.3 percent in 1988 to less
    than 0.1 percent in 2013. Gains along multiple dimensions
    of welfare have been impressive: average per capita income
    has risen by 4.2 percent in 2000-2013, many more children
    are now getting many more years of education, and virtually
    everyone is now covered by health insurance while other
    forms of social security have expanded. Access to safe water
    and basic sanitation is almost universal, and mobility and
    connectivity have increased remarkably (UNDP, 2014b).
    NOTABLY, THAILAND HAS ACHIEVED THESE GAINS DESPITE HIGH
    POLITICAL INSTABILITY, WITH SHORT-LIVED CONSTITUTIONS AND
    FREQUENT MILITARY COUPS.
    Since becoming a constitutional monarchy in 1932, Thailand
    has experienced 18 coups (the most recent one on May 22,
    2014, as well as a few additional attempted coups), with
    18 different constitutions and 35 different prime ministers
    (Malesky and Samphantharak, 2011). Few other countries
    in the world have experienced as many coups.8 Nonetheless,
    Thailand maintained high growth rates and was able to
    continue to attract sizeable amounts of FDI,9 thanks in large
    part to a strong bureaucracy that served as a buffer against
    political turmoil and to factors such as its hub location in
    Southeast Asia that made it relatively attractive for foreign
    investors compared to its neighbors in earlier years.
    HOWEVER, CONTINUED INSTABILITY COULD AFFECT FUTURE
    GROWTH AND PROSPECTS FOR SHARED INCOME GAINS.
    There are now indications that continued political instability
    may start hurting Thailand’s growth prospects. First, while
    Thailand’s governance indicators—most noticeably voice
    and accountability and political stability—have worsened
    in the past decade, they have improved among many of its
    neighbors (Figure 4). Foreign investors now have choices.
    Second, the quality of the bureaucracy has worsened, while it
    has improved in neighboring countries (Figure 5). The “shock
    absorber” against political shocks is no longer as effective
    as it was.
    8 Researchers have different views on what constitutes a coup, and as such,
    different global databases provide different counts on which country has
    experienced the most coups. According to Wikipedia, only Haiti surpasses
    Thailand in having more coups in its history (with 25 coups).
    (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_coups_d%27%C3%A9tat_and_coup_
    attempts_by_country). A more careful count by Powell & Thyne (2011) suggests
    that six countries may have experienced more coups than Thailand: Bolivia,
    Argentina, Sudan, Venezuela, Haiti, and Iraq.
    9 On average, FDI amounted to 2.3 percent of GDP during 1986-2000.

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    10 Structural peers are: Bulgaria, Colombia, China, Malaysia and Mexico (see Box 1 for details).
    11 High points are given to countries where the bureaucracy has the strength and expertise to govern without drastic changes in policy or interruptions in government
    services. In these low-risk countries, the bureaucracy tends to be somewhat autonomous from political pressure and to have an established mechanism for
    recruitment and training.
    FIGURE
    4 :
    FIGURE
    5 :
    2015
    Governance Indicators, percentile rank, 0 to 100
    Bureaucratic Quality 11
    1996
    Source: Political Risk Services, International Country Risk Guide (ICRG).
    Source: World Bank, World Governance Indicators. 10

    Thailand Systematic Country Diagnostic 29
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    prosperity is largely related to temporarily record-high
    agricultural prices, which have helped raise farm wages
    but without the corresponding productivity growth. The
    increasing importance of farm income in boosting shared
    prosperity with low agricultural productivity growth is
    worrisome in part because agricultural prices have already
    declined in 2015 and 2016 and are projected to remain
    subdued going forward, while the manufacturing sector has
    stopped creating new jobs.
    THE SYSTEMATIC COUNTRY DIAGNOSTIC (SCD) OF THAILAND
    IDENTIFIES PATHS TO FOSTER HIGHER PRODUCTIVITY-DRIVEN
    GROWTH AND SHARED PROSPERITY.
    The SCD aims to help the countr y, the World Bank Group
    (WBG), and other par tners identify key priority or focus
    areas for progress toward sustained pover ty reduction
    and shared prosperity. The analysis presented is not
    limited to areas or sectors where the WBG is currently
    (or anticipates to be) active but rather focuses on the
    countr y’s key development challenges and the underlying
    constraints to meeting the objective of growth leading
    to shared prosperity and pover ty reduction. Where
    appropriate, the analysis contrasts the experience of
    Thailand with its neighbors and peers (see Box 1 for
    more details).
    MOREOVER, POVERTY AND INEQUALITY CONTINUE TO POSE
    SIGNIFICANT CHALLENGES.
    As of 2014, 7.1 million Thais were still living in poverty
    (based on the current national poverty line, or about USD
    6.20 in 2011 PPP), equivalent to 10.5 percent of the
    population.12 Moreover, in 2013, an additional 6.7 million,
    or 10.1 percent, were living within 20 percent above the
    national poverty line and remained vulnerable to falling
    back into poverty. Both household data and provincial-level
    data also paint a picture of non-income gaps between the
    poor and non-poor, often persisting over time despite the
    rapid economic growth. Although inequality has declined
    over the past three decades, the distribution in Thailand
    remains unequal compared to numerous countries in
    East Asia. Significant disparities in household income
    and consumption remained across and within regions of
    Thailand, with pockets of poverty persisting in lagging
    regions such as the Northeast, North, and Deep South.
    SLOWER GROWTH THAN IN THE PAST, IF IT CONTINUES, WILL
    CONSTRAIN FURTHER PROGRESS IN REDUCING POVERTY AND
    PROMOTING INCLUSION.
    Historically, economic growth has been the key driver of
    poverty reduction in Thailand. More recently, growth has
    fallen from an average annual rate of more than 9 percent
    in the boom years of 1986-96 to less than 3 percent
    a year in the last two years. Looking ahead, the World
    Bank forecasts growth of 3.2 percent for 2016-18, and
    the IMF projects that growth will stay below 3.5 percent
    during 2016-2021 (WEO, October 2016)—well below the
    projected growth rates of other upper middle income
    countries in ASEAN as well as China and India.
    THE KEY ENGINES THAT DROVE PAST GROWTH HAVE LOST
    STEAM OR ARE UNSUSTAINABLE.
    The engine that delivered most of the productivity gains in
    the past—the movement of people from the low-productivity
    agricultural sector into higher-productivity jobs, particularly
    in the manufacturing sector—lost steam almost a decade
    ago. Furthermore, recent progress in creating shared
    12 Official aggregate poverty numbers for 2014 are available but, not the
    household level poverty numbers which the World Bank team behind this report
    uses to analyze trends, and regional variations. As such, this report has only
    been able to analyze trends through 2013.

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    This SCD benchmarks Thailand vis-à-vis countries in the same region (ASEAN countries), countries in the
    same income classification (upper-middle-income), and a set of structurally similar countries (“structural
    peers”).
    Structural peers are countries anywhere in the world that meet three criteria that also define Thailand
    • Upper-middle-income countries.
    • Countries with a strong track record in macro-economic management (identified as scoring at or
    above the 70th percentile during 2005-2015 in WEO’s Global Competitiveness Index third pillar
    (macro environment)
    • Economies not driven by exports of natural resources (identified by excluding economies in the 20th
    percentile of the indicator “natural resource as a share of GDP 2006-12”)
    Using these criteria, the structural peers for Thailand are: Bulgaria (USD 4,319 per capita), China (USD
    2,966 per capita), Colombia (USD 4,457 per capita), Malaysia (USD 6,499 per capita), and Mexico (USD
    7,814 per capita).
    In this SCD, references to “structural peers’ average” indicate the unweighted average for these countries
    (excluding Thailand).
    BOX
    1 :
    Benchmarking with Peer Countries
    THIS SCD IS ORGANIZED AS FOLLOWS.
    It begins with an overview of the country context, describing
    some distinctive country features that have affected
    Thailand’s development. It then takes a closer look at
    economic growth in Thailand, analyzing key trends and the
    likely prospects for future growth. Against this backdrop,
    recent progress in reducing poverty and promoting
    inclusion is examined, with a focus on understanding the
    factors that drive or constrain inclusive growth. The risks to
    Thailand’s growth and its inclusiveness and sustainability
    going forward are then discussed. Based on this analysis
    as well as inputs from extensive consultations with
    government and other stakeholders, some key priority
    areas for ensuring strong, inclusive, and sustainable
    growth in Thailand are proposed.

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    COUNTRY CONTEXT
    THAILAND IS AN UPPER-MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRY WITHIN A
    RAPIDLY GROWING REGION.
    With a population of 67.7 million and a gross domestic
    product (GDP) of USD 373.8 billion, Thailand is the second
    largest economy (after Indonesia) in the Association of
    Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Economic Community and
    the Greater Mekong Subregion (GMS). Thailand achieved
    most of the MDG goals well in advance of the 2015 deadline
    and set several more ambitious goals (MDG+) for itself in
    2004, some of which may also have been met by the end
    December 2015 deadline.
    THAILAND’S ECONOMY HAS DIVERSIFIED.
    The manufacturing sector is competitive, and the large
    agriculture sector is gradually becoming more productive.
    Many Thailand-based enterprises have integrated
    successfully with global value chains, providing the
    foundation for transformation of 27 the economy (ADB,
    2013). The economy is export-led, with exports accounting
    for more than twothirds of GDP.
    UNEMPLOYMENT IS LOW, BUT THE COUNTRY HAS A LARGE
    SHARE OF WORKERS IN THE INFORMAL SECTOR.
    The unemployment rate is low at 1.4 percent of the total
    labor force in 2014. Of the 35 million employed, 51
    percent are in work categories associated with the informal
    economy, namely self-employed workers (31 percent) and
    unpaid family labor (20 percent). Around 5.8 million of
    Thailand’s agricultural workers (40 percent) are “unpaid
    family workers,” compared to only 6 and 13 percent of
    workers in the industry and service sectors, respectively.
    In more developed countries, these workers would likely
    be out of the labor force or on the unemployment rolls.
    Women are slightly more likely than men to be working as
    self-employed workers or unpaid family labor.13 In addition,
    female heads of household working in the agricultural
    sector tend to have lower education, lower income, higher
    debts from the informal sector, and much less land tenure
    than male heads working in agriculture. The degree of
    informality raises concerns for workplace safety, job
    security, and other social protection.
    13 Fifty two percent of female employment is either self-employed or unpaid
    family workers, compared to 49 percent of male employment.
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    DISTINCTIVE COUNTRY FEATURES AFFECTING
    DEVELOPMENT
    THAILAND HAS A VERY FLUID WORKFORCE, WITH MILLIONS OF
    WORKERS MOVING IN AND OUT OF THE AGRICULTURAL AND
    INDUSTRIAL SECTORS DURING THE COURSE OF EACH YEAR
    (AND/OR IN AND OUT OF THE LABOR FORCE).
    Millions of workers continue to migrate between agricultural
    and industrial jobs, keeping a foot in the primary and
    secondary economies.14 While these fluctuations have
    declined over time, in 2013, approximately 2.3 million
    workers (approximately 6 percent of total employment
    in 2013) moved from an agricultural job (where they work
    during the planting and harvesting season) to an industrial
    job or out of the labor force.
    WHILE THERE HAVE BEEN IMPORTANT CHANGES IN THE
    LAST TWO DECADES IN THE NUMBER AND TYPOLOGY OF
    FARMS, COMMERCIALIZATION, AND DIVERSIFICATION, THAI
    AGRICULTURE IS STILL DOMINATED BY SMALLHOLDERS AND
    IS OFTEN CONSIDERED TO BE A SOCIAL SAFETY NET.
    In 1970, farmers comprised nearly 80 percent of Thailand’s
    workforce. Even as the industrial and service sectors began
    to grow and provide better-paid jobs, families kept their
    agricultural land. Doing so meant having an extra (although
    meager) source of income and, more importantly, a potential
    retirement income and a job during economic downturns.
    Employment figures for the agricultural sector are thus
    difficult to interpret: on paper, Thailand has approximately
    14.6 million workers employed in agriculture (40 percent
    of employment), an unusually high share for a country at
    Thailand’s income level (Figure 6). However, the number of
    full-time farm operators who worked at least 40 hours a week
    declined from 16.3 million farmers in 1992 to 9.6 million in
    2010—still 27 percent of employment. This points to the
    duality of farm structures in Thailand: commercial full-time
    farmers coexist with parttime farmers using land as a safety
    net rather than a productive asset, slowing down the land
    consolidation needed for productivity growth in the sector.
    14 Interestingly, similarly large fluctuations are not observed for the services
    sector during the year.
    Source: Asia Productivity Database, accessed on November 1, 2015.
    FIGURE
    6 :
    While agriculture’s share of total value-added has declined, the movement of Thai workers
    out of agriculture has slowed in recent years
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    Source: UN: Trends in International Migrant Stock: The 2013 Revision Database.
    FIGURE
    7 :
    FIGURE
    8 :
    Most of Thailand’s international migrants
    are from neighboring countries
    Thailand has a higher percentage of migrants
    than the average of its structural peers but
    less than Malaysia and Singapore
    THAILAND PLAYS AN IMPORTANT ROLE IN THE REGION AS AN
    IMPORTANT DESTINATION FOR MIGRANT WORKERS.
    Thailand has an estimated 3.7 million migrant workers
    (5.6 percent of the population, or 9.6 percent of total
    employment), with the share of males ranging from 50-60
    percent, depending on the source. 15 Virtually all migrants
    to Thailand come from neighboring Myanmar, Lao PDR,
    and Cambodia (Figure 7). At the current rate, Thailand
    has substantially more migrants than its structural peers
    (except Malaysia) but, as a share of its workforce, fewer
    than both Malaysia and Singapore (Figure 8). Studies
    suggest that the inflow has not negatively affected Thai
    labor (Lathapipat, 2015).
    A LARGE PROPORTION OF THESE MIGRANTS ARE POOR AND
    VULNERABLE.
    According to SES 2013, about one-third of those who speak
    Mon/Burmese, Cambodian/Souy, and Karen at home are
    living below the national poverty line. The Thai Government
    is intent on regularizing their status and providing social
    services, but the systems are far from perfect. More than
    half of Thailand’s migrants are undocumented migrants
    who are prey to human trafficking, exploitation, and human
    rights abuses (UNDP, 2014b). Thailand is one of the major
    sending and receiving countries for human trafficking, and
    although data on the number of people who have been
    trafficked in Thailand is limited, it was estimated that several
    thousands were forced to become sex workers or labor in
    fishing industries (Box 2). With the upcoming regional labor
    movement as a result of the ASEAN Economic Community
    (AEC), there is increasing concern over the possibility of an
    escalation in human trafficking.
    15 The estimate of 3.7 million migrants (of both registered and unregistered
    workers) are from the UN’s Trends in International Migrant Stock (The 2013
    Revision Database). These data suggest that approximately half of these
    migrant workers are female.
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    The fishery sector in the Greater Mekong sub-region has been identified as being particularly vulnerable
    to coercive and deceptive labor practices (Pearson et al., 2006). The industry, which makes Thailand
    the world’s third-largest seafood exporter, has been found in need of further controls and restructuring
    to prevent illegal fishing, illegal migrant labor, and human trafficking. The shortage of Thai nationals
    willing to work on fishing vessels and the availability of labor from neighboring countries implies that the
    industry’s workforce is mostly composed by migrants (ILO, 2013a; ILO, 2013b).
    Why are seafarers so vulnerable? Fragmented recruitment and incorrect practices
    Recruitment of fishermen is handled by a variety of brokers (at origin or destination) who use different
    methods to attract potential workers. The process is often characterized by subcontracting, no written
    contracts, and lack of transparency in wages and conditions of work (Robertson, 2011). The payment
    system on boats makes fishers vulnerable to irregularity and ambiguity of pay (ILO, 2013a). Payments
    generally depend on profit sharing at the end of a fishing period (varying in length between short- and
    long-haul fishing), at times combined with a monthly basic wage (Chantavanich et al., 2016). The practice
    of wage withholding is done to prevent the workforce from reneging on the work agreement, but it could
    result in forced labor practices as it may keep the migrants on the vessel against their will (Chantavanich
    et al., 2016; Derks, 2010).
    BOX
    2 :
    An example of migrants’ vulnerability: The fishery sector
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    TOURISM IS AN IMPORTANT PART OF THAILAND’S ECONOMY AND HAS THUS FAR REMAINED A SOLID SOURCE OF REVENUE THROUGH
    THE COUNTRY’S ECONOMIC UPS AND DOWNS.
    With nearly 30 million visitors in 2015, Thailand is considered one of the world’s top tourist destinations and generates
    approximately 12 percent of GDP from tourist receipts (Figure 9). Thailand has an impressive ability to attract new groups of
    tourists (from Russia and now China) and different segments of the tourist market (from low-budget tourists to golfers to medical
    tourists). With tourist numbers doubling over the past decade, authorities are planning for even more rapid growth: the Electricity
    Generating Authority of Thailand (EGAT) presumes that by 2032, Thailand will receive more than 100 million tourists a year, 40
    percent of them visiting Phuket and neighboring areas such as Krabi.
    HOWEVER, THERE ARE GROWING CONCERNS OVER THAILAND’S
    ABILITY TO MANAGE ITS NATURAL RESOURCES IN THE WAKE OF
    SO MANY ARRIVALS.
    Numerous examples of short-sighted planning and degradation
    of formerly pristine coastal resort destinations can be found.
    As an example of the challenges involved in supporting such
    rapidly growing tourist numbers, the power consumption of a
    tourist is four times higher than that of a local resident on
    average.16 Existing locations are overused and may become
    unsustainable.
    VIOLENCE IN THE DEEP SOUTH CONTINUES, WITH LIMITED
    SIGNS OF A TRANSITION TO PEACE.
    The secessionist movements in Thailand’s southernmost
    provinces (Pattani, Yala, and Narathiwat) date back more than
    a century, making them one of the oldest subnational conflicts
    in Southeast Asia. Since the reemergence of the insurgency in
    2004 after 30 years of dormancy, state-minority relations have
    deteriorated in the South, with nearly 13,000 violent events
    that resulted in more than 6,000 deaths and 11,000 injuries.17
    Source: Department of Tourism, website accessed on
    June 15, 2016 (http://www.tourism.go.th) and World
    Development Indicators. Tourist receipt (% of GDP) for
    2015 is the 2013 figure (where receipts totaled 11.9
    percent of GDP).
    FIGURE
    9 :
    Tourism is an important source of revenue for Thailand
    16 “Future of Krabi’s power plant unclear.” Bangkok Post. 2015-09-27. Retrieved
    27 September 2015.
    17 The justification for separatist violence is based on long-running grievances of
    the predominantly Malay Muslim community with the central Thai state.
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    Socioeconomic inequalities have exacerbated the situation, inspiring resentment and violent responses among some minority Malay Muslims living in the areas. Peace
    dialogues have been initiated by successive governments since 2013 with leaders of insurgent groups, mainly the Barisan Revolusi Nasional (BRN)—one of the rebel
    groups active in the South—with facilitation support from the Government of Malaysia. Given the fractious nature of the insurgent leadership, high levels of distrust, and
    persistent violence, it is too early to predict the outcome of these efforts. While the attempt at dialogue is encouraging, the insurgency remains active, levels of violence
    are significant, and it is not clear how and when a definitive end to the conflict will be secured.
    18 For example, see WDR 2011.
    IN ADDITION TO CAUSING THE TRAGIC LOSS OF THOUSANDS OF
    HUMAN LIVES, THE CONFLICT HAS HAMPERED DEVELOPMENT
    EFFORTS AND AFFECTED THE WELL-BEING OF THE APPROXIMATELY
    2 MILLION PEOPLE IN THE AFFECTED PROVINCES.
    Similar to other countries affected by conflict,18 pover ty
    rates in the Deep South have been substantially above
    national averages, and their human development
    achievements have consistently lagged the rest of
    the countr y. Although the State’s main response to
    the resurgence of violence has been security led,
    greater emphasis has been placed on various social
    and economic development effor ts in recent years.
    Nonetheless, despite higher budgets provided to the
    conflict-affected areas to improve ser vice deliver y and
    gain the confidence of local communities, the Deep
    South has continued to lag behind in several development
    indicators, par ticularly in education (see Annex 1: Deep
    South for more details).
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    GROWTH

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    GROWTH
    GROWTH : STELLAR PAST PERFORMANCE
    BUT RECENT SLOWDOWN.
    CAN GROWTH BE REVIVED?
    HISTORICALLY, GROWTH PERFORMANCE HAS
    BEEN STRONG
    PRIOR TO THE ASIAN CRISIS OF 1997, THAILAND’S EXPORT-
    ORIENTED “ECONOMIC MODEL” DELIVERED HIGH GROWTH RATES,
    MILLIONS OF JOBS, AND RAPID POVERTY REDUCTION.
    For more than a quarter century, the country’s economy grew
    at an average annual rate of 7.5 percent, contributing to its
    exceptional success in reducing poverty and sharing prosperity.
    Since the mid-1990s, exports mainly of manufactures have
    served as the leading drivers of Thailand’s economic growth.19
    Exports grew at a blistering annual rate of 15 percent from
    1986 to 1996, driving the demand for capital investments and
    labor hours. The strong outward orientation influenced the
    allocation of inputs and sustained unconstrained expansion
    of outputs as long as they were competitive. The continued
    growth of outputs and export of manufactures allowed the
    gains of the more productive manufacturing sector to be
    extended over a greater volume of factor inputs, including
    labor from agriculture. Thanks to such growth, the poverty
    rate fell from 67.7 percent (34 million people) in 1986 to 35
    percent (20 million people) in 1996.20
    DURING 1986-96, INVESTMENT INCREASED AT A RAPID CLIP OF
    14.8 PERCENT PER YEAR ON AVERAGE.
    Private investment averaged more than 30 percent of GDP,
    reaching 32 percent in 1995. Rising foreign direct investment
    (FDI) brought in foreign savings and, more importantly, the
    technology and marketing skills necessary for maintaining
    export competitiveness.
    19http://econ.nida.ac.th/en/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id
    =458%3Arecent-evidence-of-thevalidity-of-the-export-led-growth-hypothesis-forth
    ailand&catid=29%3Apublication-33&Itemid=117&lang=en;http://econpapers.
    repec.org/RePEc:bth:wpaper:2009-02
    20The numbers reported here are national poverty rates. Food poverty plummeted
    as well during this period: in 1986, Thailand had 3.6 million people who were
    considered poor due to inadequate calorie intake. By 1996, that number had
    dropped to 700,000.
    PUBLIC INVESTMENT, ESPECIALLY IN INFRASTRUCTURE AND
    BASIC EDUCATION, ROSE CONTINUALLY NOT ONLY TO BUILD
    THE COUNTRY’S INFRASTRUCTURE IN GENERAL BUT ALSO TO
    REDUCE COSTS FOR INVESTORS AND FACILITATE THE INTER
    SECTOR REALLOCATION OF LABOR.
    Infrastructure was typically built ahead of demand. The
    Eastern Seaboard Infrastructure Development program, a
    mega-infrastructure plan, was developed and implemented
    to encourage private investment and support expansion of
    manufactured exports.

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    21 The important role of capital accumulation in driving Thailand’s economic growth during the period before the Asian crisis is a well-established fact (see, for instance,
    Bosworth (2005) (Economic Growth in Thailand: the Macroeconomic Context; or Lathapipat and Chucherd 2013). However, researchers differ in their estimates of the
    role played by TFP before and after the crisis. To our knowledge, only one other paper on Thailand (Chuenchoksan and Nakornthab 2008) explicitly take improvements
    in the quality of labor into account, as is also done in the calculations in Table 2. When ignoring the improvements in labor quality, the contribution of TFP growth is
    overestimated.
    G RO W T H WA S D R I V E N M A I N LY B Y C A P I TA L A N D L A B O R I N P U T S , W I T H TOTA L FAC TO R P RO D U C T I V I T Y G RO W T H P L AY I N G
    A S M A L L E R RO L E .
    During 1988-1996, total factor productivity (TFP) contributed an average of 1.5 percentage points a year toward overall GDP
    growth, playing a far lesser role than the rapid accumulation of capital (Table 2).21
    Note: p.p means “percentage point.” For example, for 1988-2013, it shows that capital accmulation contributed 3.1 percentage points per year on
    average to the observed 5.5 percent annual growth in GDP.
    Source: Authors’ calculations based on data from LFS and National Accounts data.
    AS THE ECONOMY BECAME MORE CAPITAL-INTENSIVE, THE
    AVERAGE PRODUCTIVITY OF WORKERS ROSE RAPIDLY.
    The rapid growth in investment reflected the underlying
    growth of the more capitalintensive sectors, such as
    manufacturing and construction. Reflecting the bigger
    importance that machines play in those sectors, overall
    labor productivity in the economy soared as workers
    moved from sectors that employed few machines (e.g.,
    agriculture) to sectors that did employ them. As described
    in Box 3, depending on the method of calculation, labor
    productivity in industrial or service sector jobs has
    been five to ten times higher than labor productivity in
    agriculture. As Figure 12 shows, the shift from sectors
    with low labor productivity (mainly reflecting low capital
    intensity) to sectors with higher labor productivity
    TABLE
    2 :
    Rapid accumulation of capital inputs was the key driver of growth,
    with total factor productivity growth playing a smaller role
    (labeled as “Labor productivity growth coming from ‘cross
    sector reallocations’”) was an important part of overall
    productivity growth in Thailand and in most of East Asia.
    In Thailand, this movement—sometimes referred to as
    “structural transformation”—contributed 1.3 percentage
    points of growth toward overall productivity growth of 7.1
    percent (during 1987-1996).
    PERCENTAGE POINTS ANNUAL CONTRIBUTION FROM:
    Period
    1988-2013
    1988-1996
    2000-2013
    GDP
    5.5%
    9.4%
    4.5%
    Capital
    3.1p.p
    6.2p.p
    1.4p.p
    Labor Quality
    0.9p.p
    0.7p.p
    1.0p.p
    Hours
    0.6p.p
    0.1p.p
    0.6p.p
    TFP
    0.8p.p
    1.5p.p
    1.5p.p

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    Given the difficulties in estimating employment in agriculture as discussed earlier, it is equally difficult
    to calculate labor productivity: should value-added in agriculture be divided by the 11.5 million full-time
    equivalent workers or by a smaller number, assuming the 5.5 million unpaid family workers’ contribution
    to output to be very small? Depending on whether unpaid family workers are included in employment or
    not, labor productivity in industrial or service sector jobs has for decades been around 5-10 times larger
    than labor productivity in the agricultural sector (see figures below).
    BOX
    3 :
    How large are the productivity differences across
    Thailand’s sectors?
    Source: Authors’ calculations based on labor force survey
    (for employment data) and NESDB (for value-added)
    FIGURE
    10 :
    FIGURE
    11 :
    Most of Thailand’s international migrants
    are from neighboring countries
    Even in terms of labor productivity per
    full-time equivalent paid worker

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    GROWTH HAS SLOWED SIGNIFICANTLY IN
    RECENT YEARS, RAISING CONCERNS ABOUT
    STRUCTURAL WEAKNESSES
    THAILAND NEVER FULLY RECOVERED AFTER THE 1997 CRISIS.
    During the Asian crisis, the slump in investment in
    Thailand was exceptionally deep, and its recover y was
    exceptionally slow (Zhou, 2013). Thailand and Malaysia
    were the worst affected during the currency crisis
    of 1997 with a 20 – percentage-point decline, but the
    latter’s investment rate recovered much faster than the
    former. Private investment in Thailand fell from more
    than 32 percent of GDP in 1995 to less than 12 percent
    of GDP in 1999 and has recovered to 19 percent since
    then (Table 4). Public investment fell from 9 percent of
    GDP in 1995 to 5.6 percent in 2013. Only expor t growth
    Source: World Development Report 2013 (Jobs),
    Thailand Labor Force Surveys
    FIGURE
    12 :
    Labor reallocation was a driver of labor productivity growth
    in Thailand and the rest of East Asia
    1999-2008, except Thailand 1986-1996 and 2003-2013
    remained robust for much longer, but since the onset
    of the financial crisis in 2007-2008, Thailand’s expor t
    performance has faltered. Expor ts on average grew 13
    percent per year from 2006 to 2011 before slowing down
    to less than 1 percent from 2012 to 2014, a far more
    pronounced drop than what is obser ved in neighboring
    countries.22
    22 World Bank. 2015a. “Thailand Economic Monitor, January 2015.”

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    Source: World Bank Indicators Source: NESDB
    FIGURE
    13 :
    FIGURE
    14 :
    Investment never fully recovered after
    the 1997 crisis…
    (investment and domestic savings, % of GDP)
    …with both private and public investment
    behind the decline
    Gross fixed capital formation (public and private,
    % of GDP)
    THAILAND’S GROWTH RATE HAS BEEN THE LOWEST AMONG
    COMPARABLE COUNTRIES IN THE REGION SINCE 2010, AND IS
    EXPECTED TO REMAIN THE LOWEST FOR THE NEXT FIVE YEARS.
    Growth fell from an average annual rate of more than 9
    percent in the boom years of 1986-96 to 5 percent in
    2000-07 and less than 3 percent in 2010-15 (Table 4).
    The World Bank forecasts growth of 3.2 percent per year
    during 2016-18, similar to IMF’s growth projections for the
    period 2016-2021. Thailand’s growth rate is falling behind
    that of its peers in the region and elsewhere, resulting in
    adverse perceptions among domestic and foreign investors.
    Moreover, growth may be too low to generate the resources
    needed to strengthen social protection adequately to
    ensure shared prosperity on a sustained basis.
    SLOWER GROWTH IN 2010-15 WAS DUE IN PART TO A
    DETERIORATING GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT AND A NUMBER OF
    COUNTRY-SPECIFIC SHOCKS,
    namely political unrest (in 2010), the tsunami in Japan
    (2011), a major flood (2011), and protracted political
    tensions culminating in a coup (2014). Following the
    global financial crisis, per capita GDP of developing
    countries grew by 4.6 percent per year in 2010 – 13,
    about 2 percentage points slower than in the pre- crisis
    period (Qureshi et al., 2014). Estimates suggest that
    on average, about two -thirds of this developing- countr y
    slowdown resulted from a decline linked to sluggish
    recover y in advanced economies, while another third
    was structural resulting mainly from slower productivity
    growth (World Bank, 2014).

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    THE SLOWDOWN IN THAILAND CAN BE ATTRIBUTED LARGELY TO
    SLOW GROWTH IN THE NONAGRICULTURAL SECTORS.
    In 1986-96 when industry and services grew at 12 percent
    and 9 percent a year, respectively, GDP grew rapidly (Table 4).
    In 2000-07, the industry and service sectors grew at around
    half their earlier rate, and industrial growth collapsed further
    during 2010-15.25 The service sector was more resilient,
    maintaining growth at a steady rate of around 5 percent. In
    contrast, agricultural growth revived after the 1997 crisis
    due to the recovery of exports, driven by depreciation of the
    national currency and increasing global demand for agricultural
    commodities. However, during 2010-15, agricultural growth
    slowed down, as well.
    RATES, NEIGHBORING COUNTRIES THAT FACED THE SAME
    ADVERSE EXTERNAL ENVIRONMENT GREW FASTER THAN THAILAND.
    Neighbors like Malaysia, Philippines, Indonesia, China, and
    India grew faster than Thailand (Table 3). Evidence suggests
    that countries that implemented reforms and investments to
    boost productivity growth did better than those that did not
    during this period (Dabla-Norris et al., 2013; Qureshi, 2014).
    THAILAND IS NOW FACING A MIDDLEINCOME TRAP, CONTENDING
    WITH STRUCTURAL BOTTLENECKS THAT HAVE PREVENTED SOME
    COUNTRIES FROM SUSTAINING STRONG PRODUCTIVITY-DRIVEN
    GROWTH AND ACHIEVING HIGH INCOME LEVELS.
    In East Asia, only Korea, Singapore, and Taiwan, China
    succeeded in sustaining such growth long enough to become
    a high-income economy. In contrast, Argentina, Brazil, Mexico,
    and Peru—which attained upper middle-income levels long
    before Korea and Taiwan, China —have not been able to do
    the same. This is because middle-income countries face
    bottlenecks to higher growth that are different from those
    they faced earlier. The earlier period of rapid growth is driven
    by capital accumulation and labor-intensive exports, and
    the economy reaps productivity gains mainly from structural
    change. However, with rising incomes and wages, labor-
    intensive exports are increasingly squeezed by competition
    from lower-cost producers in low-income countries and better
    quality exports from higher-income ones. Indeed, rising
    production costs are eating into Thailand’s competitiveness
    relative to some of its neighbours: its exports of garments,
    food products, auto parts and electronic components are
    being squeezed both by products from China, which is higher
    up the income scale, as well as from Cambodia, which enjoys
    the advantage of lower wage costs.24
    TABLE
    3 :
    Other countries in the region are
    achieving more rapid GDP growth than
    Thailand
    Source: IMF WEO October 2016, World Bank EAP Update,
    October 2016 and NESDB (for Thailand 2010-2015).
    23 Bulgaria, China, Colombia, Malaysia and Mexico. See Box 1 for a description of how these countries were selected.
    24 OECD, 2013, Innovation Report for South East Asia
    25 The manufacturing sector accounted for around 30 percent of GDP from 2000 onward. It increased from 28 percent in 2001 to 31.1 percent in 2010, and then
    declined to 27.7 per cent in 2014. By contrast, the share of service sector in GDP slightly increased in the past seven years from 2008. When the manufacturing
    sector is disaggregated according to the 4-digit International Standard of Industrial Classification (Rev 3), growth performance varied substantially across industries.
    Among these top-10 fastest growth sectors, the largest industry was manufacturing of office, accounting and computing machinery (ISIC 3000) dominated by hard disk
    drive manufacturing. Its annual growth rate registered at 14.5 percent so that its share to total manufacturing gross output increased from 7.1 percent in 2000-02 to
    16.6 percent in 2011-13. The other major industries in these top-10 included machinery (ISIC 2921 and 2915), auto parts (bearing and gears, ISIC 2913), and testing
    equipment (ISIC 3312), with growth rates of 17, 15, and 14.5 percent, respectively.
    2010-2015
    2.9
    8.7
    5.6
    5.6
    6.2
    6
    7.2
    4.6
    IMF
    2016-2021
    3.2
    6.1
    5.5
    4.7
    6.8
    6.2
    7.8
    3.8
    WB MFM
    2016-2018
    3.2
    6.5
    5.3
    4.3
    6.3
    6.2
    n.a.
    n.a.

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    TABLE
    4 :
    The recent slowdown in GDP growth can be attributed mainly to a slowdown in the industry
    and service sectors
    Average annual growth rates in GDP and its components (excluding crisis periods, 97-00 and 2008-10)
    STRUCTURAL CHANGE STALLED AFTER 2004 AS WORKERS
    STOPPED MOVING FROM THE AGRICULTURE SECTOR INTO THE
    SECONDARY SECTORS OF THE ECONOMY.
    As such, one engine of overall labor productivity growth (i.e. the
    movement of people from lower- to higher-productivity sectors)
    stopped working, as shown in Figure 12 above: during the period
    2003-2013, labor productivity growth coming from ‘cross sector
    reallocations’ had collapsed. With workers moving back into
    the lower-productivity agricultural sector, the contribution of
    “structural transformation” was negative.
    TWO FORCES − PUSH AND PULL FACTORS − WERE BEHIND THE
    STALLING OF STRUCTURAL TRANSFORMATION.
    On the “push” side, booming agricultural prices—with real
    prices rising by nearly 70 percent between 2001 and 2011
    (Figure 15—rapidly pushed up real wages for agricultural
    workers, despite little growth in agricultural productivity
    (Lathapipat, 2015). Real agricultural wages rose by more
    than 70 percent between 2001 and 2013, which nearly
    eliminated the hourly “wage premium” between agricultural
    and off-farm jobs (Figure 16). With this wage premium
    all but gone, farmers saw few incentives to move out of
    agriculture but rather to move within the sector, mainly from
    crop production to production of fisheries, livestock, and
    perennial crops. Moreover, employment in the agricultural
    sector expanded by more than one million workers (since
    2004), pulling even secondary and post-secondary educated
    workers back into the agricultural sector. Other factors
    outside of the agricultural sector also likely caused structural
    transformation to slow down: in particular, there are some
    indications that workers increasingly found it harder to find
    good jobs. Job growth slowed, and even highly educated
    workers (at all age levels) started finding jobs in the informal
    sector (especially in wholesale and retail). Possibly, their
    skills may not have matched what firms were seeking (see
    firm level survey results in Figure 66).
    Source: Authors’ calculations based on APO Database 2015 for 1986-96 and 2000-07 and NESDB (2015) for 2010-15.
    BY SECTOR
    GDP
    9.4
    5.4
    2.9
    Private
    8.5
    5.4
    2.4
    Exports
    15.0
    8.1
    3.4
    Imports
    18.3
    8.7
    2.6
    Invest
    14.8
    7.7
    1.6
    Govern.
    14.8
    7.7
    3.4
    Services
    9.1
    5.1
    4.6
    Indu.
    11.9
    6.3
    1.2
    Agri
    3.9
    2.8
    1.2
    1986-96
    2000-07
    2010-15
    BY EXPENDITURE
    Consumption

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    Source: World Bank Commodity Markets Outlook (2015).
    Source: Authors’ calculations based on Labor Force Survey
    FIGURE
    15 :
    FIGURE
    16 :
    Agricultural prices boomed between 2001 and 2012
    The hourly wage premium of a primary- and secondary-educated graduate to
    work in the off-farm sector has decreased significantly

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    THE SLOWDOWN OF LABOR AND CAPITAL PRODUCTIVITY
    GROWTH IN RECENT YEARS (WORLD BANK, 2016) HAS FURTHER
    WIDENED THE PRODUCTIVITY GAP BETWEEN SMALL AND
    MEDIUM-SIZED ENTERPRISES (SMES) AND LARGER FIRMS,
    WHICH IS WORRISOME GIVEN THE PREDOMINANCE OF SMES IN
    THAILAND’S BUSINESS SECTOR.26
    Virtually all of Thailand’s firms (99.7 percent) (or 2.7 million
    enterprises) are classified as being small or medium-sized,
    accounting for 80.3 percent (13.0 million) of total employment
    in the country. However, while SMEs dominate the landscape
    of firms, their contribution to GDP has decreased continuously
    during the past 12 years from 41.3 percent of GDP in 2002 to
    37.4 percent in 2013, causing concern among policymakers.
    Moreover, the productivity gap between SMEs and larger firms
    has widened. As the gap in productivity between small and
    large firms is significant, improving productivity in smaller firms
    will take extra effort because their turnover rates are high (70
    percent fold up after a few years).
    FALTERING EXPORT GROWTH HAS ALSO PLAYED
    AN IMPORTANT ROLE IN THE SLOWDOWN
    ANALYSIS UNDERTAKEN FOR THIS SCD SUGGESTS THAT THE
    SIGNIFICANT SLOWDOWN IN THAILAND’S EXPORT GROWTH IN
    RECENT YEARS IS DUE IN PART TO A LOSS OF MARKET SHARE IN
    LABORINTENSIVE MANUFACTURING.
    Many labor-intensive and resource-based manufactured
    exports (20 percent of total exports) have become less
    competitive, a trend that accelerated in 2010-14. In the
    face of rising wage rates, export items like textiles, footwear,
    leather products, and wood products have been losing export
    markets. This is also reflected in manufacturing value added
    where laborintensive and resource-based subsectors have
    declined, contributing in part to stagnating manufacturing
    employment in recent years.
    ANOTHER CONTRIBUTING FACTOR TO THE EXPORT SLOWDOWN
    HAS BEEN STAGNATION IN THE LEVEL OF SOPHISTICATION OF
    THAILAND’S MEDIUM- AND HIGH-TECH EXPORTS.
    Although Thailand’s exports became more sophisticated
    during the 1990s and early 2000s, that upgrading seems
    to have slowed since the late 2000s. Since goods that
    embody greater value-added fetch higher prices in world
    markets, increasing the quality content of exports can be a
    stable source of export growth. According to a strand of the
    trade literature, countries that produce goods that are more
    sophisticated tend to see higher rates of future economic
    growth.27 Thailand’s exports are dominated by medium-tech
    manufacturing (~43 percent), resource-based manufacturing
    (~21 percent), and low-tech manufacturing (~18 percent). Even
    though the technological composition of Thai exports has
    changed little over the last 8 years, low-tech manufacturing
    has lost its weight in the export bundle (from 20 percent
    to 16 percent) while resource-based manufacturing has
    become more important (from 20 to 23 percent) (Figure 17).
    Furthermore, Thailand has been losing world market shares
    in commodities, resource-based manufacturing, and low-tech
    manufacturing since 2011.
    26 Source: “Thailand Productivity and Investment Climate Study” 2015, Ministry of Industry and Thailand Productivity Institute”
    27 There is an ongoing debate over whether export competitiveness is best achieved through an evolutionary process of upgrading – selling lower quality goods to regional
    markets and building capabilities before moving into more competitive, sophisticated global markets – or leapfrogging immediately to sophisticated goods and / or
    rich country markets, and therefore benefitting from the prospect of greater spillovers of knowledge and technology (Hausmann et al., 2006). The concept of having a
    “sophisticated product” refers normally to the technological content of the product (Lall, 2000). More recently, Hausmann, Hwang and Rodrik (2006) developed a series
    of tools premised on the argument that exporting more sophisticated products leads to faster growth.

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    Source: Author’s calculations using Comtrade data.
    FIGURE
    17 :
    The share of medium- and high-tech manufactures has remained unchanged
    (Lall’s Classification of Tech Exports, 2007-14)
    THAILAND’S EXPORTS HAVE BECOME LESS SERVICES-INTENSIVE
    SINCE 2008, BOTH DIRECTLY AND INDIRECTLY AS INPUTS IN
    OTHER SECTORS’ EXPORTS, WHICH MAY HAVE IMPLICATIONS
    FOR COMPETITIVENESS AND GROWTH.
    Services are not only a source of competitiveness as
    inputs into manufacturing and agriculture, but direct
    exports of services also provide an opportunity for export
    diversification and can be used as an engine for economic
    growth. In other countries, services value added embodied
    in gross exports grew faster than gross exports themselves.
    In addition, growth in the indirect services linkages was
    lower than all economies except the Philippines and Taiwan,
    China, and lower than growth in the direct services value
    added contained in gross exports. Growth in the use of
    services inputs for manufacturing exports, including the
    Global Value-Chain (GVC)- intensive sectors, has also been
    among the lowest in Thailand. Between 2008 and 2011,
    the use of financial services for manufacturing exports had
    the strongest growth (9 percent annual growth), followed
    by distribution services (7.6 percent annual growth) and
    electricity, gas, and water supply (6.9 percent annual
    growth). This is particularly significant for Thailand’s loss
    of export market share wherein competitive services inputs
    are necessary for reviving the manufacturing sector by
    enhancing the quality of goods products.
    THE ECONOMY’S WEAKNESSES CAN ALSO BE
    ATTRIBUTED TO A SLUMP IN INVESTMENT
    WHILE THAILAND HAS TRADITIONALLY ENJOYED RELATIVELY
    HIGH LEVELS OF PRIVATE AND PUBLIC INVESTMENT, A MARKED
    SLOWDOWN IN RECENT YEARS COULD POSE CHALLENGES TO
    COMPETITIVENESS.
    Private investment declined significantly in the aftermath of
    the 1997 crisis, from levels above 30 percent of GDP in the
    early 1990s to less than 20 percent in recent years. Global
    foreign direct investment (FDI) declined in the aftermath of
    the 2008 crisis, although some emerging economies have
    been able to maintain inflow levels. Although FDI inflows
    have been comparable to those received by other peer
    and emerging economies, such inflows to Thailand have
    become more volatile since 2008, and net inflows slowed
    significantly in 2008-2014. Following a slowdown in 2008-
    2011, FDI inflows to Thailand reached an estimate of 3.2
    and 3.8 percent of GDP in 2012 and 2013, respectively.
    Inflows contracted again to an estimate of around 1 percent
    of GDP in 2014 and 2015, in the context of increasing
    political instability.

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    TABLE
    5 :
    Average FDI inflows in selected economies
    (% of GDP)
    Source: World Development Indicators
    MANY REASONS HAVE BEEN CITED FOR THE SLOW RECOVERY
    OF PRIVATE INVESTMENT IN THAILAND (JONGWANICH AND
    KOHPAIBOON 2008; ZHOU 2013).
    First, reflecting over-investment and overleveraged firms
    during the boom years, it took nearly a decade after
    the crisis simply to work off excess capacity: as Figure
    18 shows, capacity utilization remained low for nearly a
    decade following the crisis. Reflecting this, gross profits
    took a long time to recover as well (as Figure 19 shows).
    And, second, in more recent years, political turmoil and
    social tensions created uncertainty and political paralysis.
    The uncertainty put a damper on investors’ appetite; and
    the paralysis kept public investments low and, more broadly,
    prevented the public sector from helping to address the
    bottlenecks – whether on the infrastructure side; in terms
    of innovation; or in terms of worker skills – that would have
    shored up investors’ confidence in Thailand’s economic
    future. Indeed, for the past five years, when asked,
    business executives list government and policy instability
    as their leading concerns for doing business in Thailand
    (see Figure 63). 28
    A DISTURBING SIGN ON THE FDI FRONT IS THE DWINDLING SHARE
    OF FDI BEING DEDICATED TO EXPORTS PROJECTS.
    Even though foreign investment in export projects
    increased in absolute terms from 2.5 billion USD in 2009
    to 5.1 billion USD in 2014, its share in total investment
    fell from 60 percent to 35 percent during this period
    (Figure 20). The number of foreign investment projects
    approved for export purposes fell starting in 2010, and by
    2014, the number of approved foreign investment projects
    for exports was the lowest compared to the previous six
    years, with only 201 investments approved.
    28 The literature on cross-country determinants of FDI has found that political
    stability, rule of law, and investor protection framework are among the institutional
    variables that positively influence foreign investment, although empirical evidence
    varies across countries and regions (Asiedu 2002; Sánchez-Martín et al., 2014).
    1986-
    1997
    1.6
    2.3

    2.4
    2.5
    1.1
    2.9
    1.8

    5.0

    1.6
    2008-
    2014
    2.6
    4.7
    5.4
    3.7
    6.1
    3.3
    3.9
    3.2
    2.3
    1998-
    2007
    3.9

    2.9

    5.0

    5.0
    11.6
    3.8
    3.2
    3.4
    2.9

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    29 Calculated from national accounts data as: “Appropriated corporation profit”
    divided by “net national income”
    Source: Bank of Thailand
    Source: Authors’ calculations using Thailand’s BOI data
    Source: NESDB
    FIGURE
    18 :
    FIGURE
    20 :
    FIGURE
    19 :
    Capacity utilization
    Foreign Investment Dedicated to Exports
    Gross corporate profits29

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    THAILAND HAS ALSO BEEN RELATIVELY LESS SUCCESSFUL IN
    LEVERAGING SPILLOVERS FROM FDI, WHICH CAN BE ATTRIBUTED
    IN PART TO SKILLS SHORTAGES.
    Although Thailand is a key production base for MNCs producing
    electronics and automotive parts, it has been less successful
    than Singapore and Malaysia in developing indigenous
    technological capabilities and leveraging spillovers from FDI.
    Skills shortages and mismatches and inadequacies in the
    technological innovation system were cited as factors that
    limited the ability of Thai firms to increase productivity 30 and
    also posed an obstacle to successfully leverage spillovers
    from FDI.
    PUBLIC INVESTMENT ALSO HAS MAJOR IMPLICATIONS FOR
    COMPETITIVENESS AND GROWTH.
    Recent analysis has found that public investment increases
    have a bigger impact on growth than even private investment,
    not only because of its own direct impact but also because
    of its impact in inducing more private investment (IMF, 2015).
    This analysis also shows that that both public and private
    investment were consistently positive and statistically
    significant across all samples. In Thailand, public investment
    has been critical for increasing private investment, exports,
    productivity, and growth.
    HOWEVER, IMPLEMENTATION OF PUBLIC INVESTMENT
    PROJECTS HAS LAGGED IN RECENT YEARS.
    Major deficits in infrastructure were identified starting as far
    back as 2004, with a focus on reducing transport congestion
    within greater Bangkok, connecting it to other parts of
    Thailand, and expanding power supply. Two Government
    efforts to launch and implement mega-infrastructure
    investment programs were made in 2004 and in 2007, and
    both times, they were not implemented. The implementation
    of the THB 3.38 trillion infrastructure development master
    plan (2015-2022) (with 20 priority projects worth THB 1.796
    trillion) approved in July 2014 is expected to be crucial for
    “crowding in” private investments. However, of the 20 priority
    projects, 10 projects have been in the pipeline since 2004
    and have never been implemented, possibly due to a series
    of challenges described below. As acknowledged by the
    National Economic and Social Development Board, “fiscal
    constraints, plus unnecessary rules and regulations could
    delay infrastructure progress and hinder economic growth in
    the long run” (NESDB, 2011).
    WHILE THE PERCEIVED QUALITY OF PUBLIC INFRASTRUCTURE
    REMAINS HIGH, IT HAS DECLINED OVER THE PAST DECADE.
    The Infrastructure Development programs of the
    1970s, 1980s, and early 1990s placed Thailand in an
    outstanding position among emerging economies in terms
    of infrastructure. However, the advantage Thailand still
    enjoyed vis-à-vis peer economies in 2006 in infrastructure
    quality seems to be vanishing (Figure 21). The quality of
    Thailand’s infrastructure is perceived as having worsened,
    even as other countries in the region and elsewhere have
    strengthened their infrastructure (Figure 22). Recent
    analyses identify gaps in Thailand’s infrastructure as an
    important factor undermining competitiveness (World Bank
    2006 and 2010), especially with respect to the greater
    Bangkok region, the heart of Thai manufacturing and
    exports. There is congestion in transport within Bangkok
    and outside, especially connections to ports as well as
    connections from Bangkok to other parts of Thailand.
    Thailand does well with regard to access to electricity and
    water but seems to lag behind in roads per capita, probably
    due to persisting regional disparities.
    30 ICA for Thailand, 2008

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    31 Issues and recommendations are detailed in World Bank (2012) forthcoming
    World Bank report on Public Investment Management
    Source: World Economic Forum
    FIGURE
    21 :
    The quality of Thailand’s infrastructure is perceived to have declined
    vis-à-vis its peers
    INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS HAVE BEEN AFFECTED BY
    A SERIES OF PUBLIC INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT (PIM)
    CHALLENGES THAT HAVE ARISEN OVER TIME.
    The Thai PIM System was at the frontier of performing
    systems in the 1990s but, similar to some OECD countries,
    started to lag. A slowdown in investment in megaprojects
    since 1997, low disbursement rates averaging around 70-
    75 percent, and implementation delays even for shovel-
    ready projects are symptoms of a PIM function that has
    deteriorated over time. According to a preliminary PIM
    assessment conducted in 2013, increasing institutional
    fragmentation, outdated appraisal guidelines (with manuals
    akin to systems from the 1990s), limited capacity in core
    and line agencies for integrated large projects (including
    PPP), and missing independent appraisal review systems
    may be some of the causes behind weakening of the PIM
    function.
    THE FOLLOWING FACTORS ACCOUNT FOR THE SLOW
    IMPLEMENTATION OF THAILAND’S MEGAPROJECTS 31 :
    • Lack of multi-year costed and appraised sector investment
    plans that have gone through public consultations, passed
    environmental impact assessments,
    • Multiple plans and a single-year budget. Thailand
    has a five-year National Development Plan, fouryear
    Government Administrative Plan, 32 annual Ministerial
    Operating Plans, 76 Provincial Development Plans,
    18 Regional/Cluster Development Plans, and more
    than 5,000 local authority development plans. These
    plans are not effectively linked, costed, or informed by
    the medium-term resource envelope. Therefore, it is
    impossible for the single-year budget system to allocate
    resources to these plans.
    • Continued unconstrained budgeting. The Bureau of
    the Budget does not provide spending agencies with
    expenditure ceilings under which they can fit their
    budget requests. Agencies tend to request budgets on
    a needs basis, and under single-year budgeting, every

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    Source: Global Competitiveness Indicators, World Economic Forum
    FIGURE
    22 :
    Thailand’s peers have caught up in terms
    of the quality of their roads, ports and
    airports
    2006/07
    2016/17
    32 As of today, Thailand has 56 commercial entities with majority government ownership that are categorized as SOEs. These include: (i) 46 non-financial SOEs concentrated
    in key sectors of the economy such as electricity production and distribution, transportation, and water, some of which are among the largest listed companies in Thailand,
    and (ii) 10 financial SOEs, including a state-owned bank, a government pawnshop, and eight specialized financial institutions (SFIs) that carry out high-profile policy functions,
    with a growing share of the financial sector.
    year there is a new appropriation for money for which the
    agency has to submit another round of budget requests,
    which are then debated and sometimes not approved/
    delayed or redeployed to other priorities, causing agencies
    to shy away from undertaking big projects.
    • Lack of public trust in authorities’ follow-up on
    environmental and social impact mitigation measures.
    Therefore, people do not accept proposed measures to
    mitigate impact.
    • Use of e-reverse auctions for all construction contracts
    in the procurement system, which is not appropriate.
    Agencies are not allowed to start procurement before
    budget has been secured, and by the time procurement
    is concluded, the fiscal year is closing. Now authorities
    have implemented integrity pacts for all projects, so
    complaints from bidders can result in long delays.
    PART OF THE SLOWDOWN IN INFRASTRUCTURE IMPLEMENTATION
    COULD ALSO BE ATTRIBUTED TO THE STATE-OWNED ENTERPRISE
    (SOE) SECTOR, WHICH HAS HAD LOW INVESTMENT AND INEFFICIENT
    PERFORMANCE.32
    Investments by SOEs account for approximately 30 -40
    percent of total public investments (IMF, 2015), so the
    slowdown in public investment is partly a problem of
    SOEs no longer investing at the same rate they did in the
    early 1990s. The underlying problem is that SOEs are not
    performing as well as their domestic and/or international
    peers—as Figure 23 shows, at least 10 SOEs (across
    all sectors) are delivering poorer returns than domestic
    or international peers. The performance problems are
    also visible in the State Enterprise Policy Office (SEPO)
    annual evaluation which shows that only 8 SOEs (out of
    56) got SEPO’s top score in 2014, down from 14 in 2008.
    Worryingly, a growing number of SOEs are no longer being
    scored at all (11 in 2014 compared to 2 in 2008).

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    Source: Authors’ choice of peers; data from State Enterprise Policy Office, Stock Exchange of Thailand, Petronas, Singapore Airline,
    Hong Kong SAR, China International Airport website
    FIGURE
    23 :
    Thailand’s state-owned enterprise are not performing as well as their domestic and international peers33
    Return on assets, 2014 (Red = SOEs; Blue = selected domestic and international peers)
    SOEs FACE INVESTMENT SELECTION AND IMPLEMENTATION
    CHALLENGES SIMILAR TO THOSE OBSERVED AT THE CENTRAL
    GOVERNMENT LEVEL.
    Overall, the performance of SOEs in Thailand is uneven, with
    some of them seemingly in need of recapitalization, restructuring,
    or downsizing by discontinuing some inefficient activities.34
    Political interference in decision making, and burdensome
    procedures and procurement rules help partly explain
    underperformance in some SOEs. Ownership arrangements
    largely follow an advisory model, with line ministries being
    responsible for SOEs in their portfolio and acting as de facto
    owners, policymakers, and regulators for the SOE. Having
    line ministries in charge of ownership and policymaking may
    influence the nature of competition in the market and lead to
    anti-competitive behavior and inefficiencies, particularly in the
    absence of independent regulatory bodies. Moreover, the mix of
    functions not only dilutes the ownership function but also dilutes
    the importance of commercial returns and performance for the
    SOEs, and it reduces transparency and accountability for SOE
    service delivery and public policy objectives.
    RECOGNIZING THAT THAILAND HAS BEEN LOSING ITS
    RELATIVE ATTRACTIVENESS AS AN INVESTMENT DESTINATION,
    THE GOVERNMENT HAS LAUNCHED SEVERAL PROMISING
    INITIATIVES TO ATTRACT PRIVATE INVESTMENT AND IMPROVE THE
    IMPLEMENTATION OF INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS.
    The government’s strategy involves providing fiscal stimulus to
    boost economic activity, accelerate the approval of investment
    applications for projects, and encourage more foreign
    investment in various sectors and promote the implementation
    of infrastructure through the use of public-private partnerships
    (PPPs). This new vision for investment attraction is articulated in
    the “Seven-year investment promotion strategy” (2015-2021).
    Under this refocused strategy, a new incentive regime was also
    introduced last year (2015). Moreover, the government has
    designated 2016 as the “Special Investment Promotion Year”
    with incentives for private investment in selected industries
    and proposals for fast tracking infrastructure projects, including
    through mechanisms such as PPPs. More recent measures
    include revised regulations to speed approvals of PPPs
    through a fast-track scheme so as to further encourage the
    implementation of infrastructure projects through PPPs.
    34 IMF-World Bank PIMA diagnostic discussions held on March 10, 2016.
    http://www2.mof.go.th/picture_news_detail.php?id=9553

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    THE GOT RECOGNIZES THAT PPPs IN INFRASTRUCTURE CAN
    HELP LOWER INVESTMENT-SPECIFIC RISKS AND INCENTIVIZE
    ADDITIONAL PRIVATE SECTOR FINANCE IN AREAS OF KEY NEED
    INCLUDING ROADS AND URBAN TRANSPORT.
    PPPs can expand and improve the delivery of services and
    the operation of infrastructure by tapping the expertise and
    efficiency of the private sector, mobilize private capital to
    facilitate cost effective delivery of infrastructure and services
    and enable more efficient use of resources by improving the
    identification of long-term risks and their allocation, while
    maintaining affordable tariffs. If adequately structured, such
    projects involving PPPs can shape incentives, allocate share
    risks to the parties best equipped to manage then, and share
    rewards fairly, and include clear accountability mechanisms
    and whilst ensuring meet social and environmental standards
    are met. The GoT could leverage the enabling environment
    it has developed for large scale publicprivate partnership
    projects to become a vehicle for infrastructure delivery by
    in the country and ensuring it has the capacity to engage
    in adequate planning, structuring, contract negotiation,
    management, accounting and budgeting for contingent
    liabilities. Use of PPPs in infrastructure can help accelerate
    funding of projects during this time of fiscal constraint, reduce
    the cost of delivery and boost quality. The need for PPPs
    infrastructure investments will be felt all the more forcibly as
    Thailand’s rate of urbanization increases.
    MISSED OPPORTUNITIES: THE DECADE WHEN
    THAILAND STRUGGLED TO REFORM AND LOST
    ITS COMPETITIVE EDGE
    THAILAND HAS LOST THE COMPETITIVE EDGE IT ONCE ENJOYED
    OVER ITS PEERS AND OTHER COUNTRIES IN THE REGION.
    Comparing Thailand’s Global Competitiveness Score
    (compiled by the World Economic Forum) in 2006/07 and
    2016/17 is telling (Figure 24). Ten years ago, Thailand
    looked strong and healthy on all the dimensions tracked by
    the World Economic Forum. It stood out relative to ASEAN,
    upper-middle-income countries, as well as its structural
    peers, and it even looked impressive relative to high-income
    countries. Today, however, Thailand no longer stands out—
    the pack of other countries has caught up to it on virtually
    all dimensions.
    THE TWO GRAPHS BELOW TELL THE STORY OF MISSED
    OPPORTUNITIES.
    As described earlier, over the past decade, mega projects
    that could have relieved infrastructure constraints and made
    Thailand the hub of ASEAN did not get off the ground. Thailand
    also did not seize its “head start” to invest in its institutions
    and in innovation to make its universities the envy of the
    region and its businesses world-class. As the next section
    will show, although it was a decade in which growth was
    widely shared and poverty rapidly reduced, this was as much
    thanks to luck—i.e. favorable agricultural prices—as it was
    to policy design.

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    Source: World Economic Forum’s Global Competitiveness database35
    FIGURE
    24 :
    Other countries have been catching up to Thailand on multiple dimensions
    (Global Competitiveness, Score (7=best))
    2006/07 2016/17
    35 www.weforum.org/gcr, accessed on October 7, 2016.
    A S M E N T I O N E D E A R L I E R , G O V E R N A N C E C H A L L E N G E S A R E L I K E LY T O H AV E C O N T R I B U T E D T O T H E E R O S I O N O F
    T H A I L A N D ’ S C O M P E T I T I V E E D G E .
    Looking at the different governance dimensions, Thailand has been able to maintain intermediate levels of effectiveness
    in executive and regulatory quality in spite of increasing political instability (Figure 25). At the same time, according to the
    perceptions of surveyed experts, Thailand has experienced a marked decline in voice and accountability, control of corruption,
    and rule of law relative to other countries.

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    THAILAND’S LAGGING REGIONS HAVE FALLEN
    FURTHER BEHIND AND REPRESENT ANOTHER
    UNTAPPED POTENTIAL
    W H I L E C O M PA R AT O R C O U N T R I E S A L S O H AV E S I G N I F I C A N T G O V E R N A N C E C H A L L E N G E S ( F I G U R E 2 5 ) , T H A I L A N D
    S E E M S T O B E L O S I N G G R O U N D, W H I C H M AY U LT I M AT E LY A F F E C T E C O N O M I C P E R F O R M A N C E .
    Institutional quality influences the perceptions and behavior of economic agents in numerous ways. First, political instability is
    likely to hinder the capacity to implement long-term investment projects as well as to sustain major reforms. Second, even if it is
    not clear whether corruption hinders economic growth (Shleifer and Vishny, 1993; Khan, 1996), from the point of view of the firm,
    it may affect the business environment and the ability to innovate in some cases (Sharma and Mitra, 2015; Paunov, 2016). Finally,
    well-grounded empirical evidence shows that rule of law is among the main determinants of FDI (Cartensen and Taubal, 2004; Bevan
    and Estrin, 2004).
    FIGURE
    25 :
    World Governance Indicators in 2015, Thailand and peers
    Source: World Bank, World Governance Indicators. World
    Governance Indicators are measured on a scale from -2.5
    (minimum) to 2.5 (maximum).
    DUE TO LIMITED GROWTH IN LABOR PRODUCTIVITY, THAILAND’S
    LAGGING REGIONS – ESPECIALLY THE NORTHEASTERN REGION – HAVE
    BEEN FALLING FURTHER BEHIND IN RECENT YEARS.
    In terms of regional value-added per capita, the pecking order
    of Thailand’s regions – with Bangkok the richest, followed
    by the Central region, then the South, the North and with
    the Northern Eastern region at the bottom – have remained
    unchanged for decades (if not centuries) (see NESDB and
    World Bank 2005 and Figure 26). Worrisomely, though,
    this gap has widened further in recent years. The widening
    gap reflects much more rapid productivity growth in the
    Bangkok and Central regions – reflecting the concentration
    of Thailand’s economic sector in and around Bangkok and
    the Central region.

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    FIGURE
    26 :
    Regional value-added per capita; and labor productivity
    Source: Gross provincial products from the National Economic and Social Development Board and
    employment from the National Statistical Office.
    THE CONCENTRATION OF THE ECONOMIC SECTOR IN AND
    AROUND BANGKOK IS REINFORCED BY THE ORGANIZATION
    OF THAILAND’S PUBLIC SECTOR AND HOW BUDGETARY
    RESOURCES ARE ALLOCATED.
    Thailand has a highly centralized fiscal system which only
    grants limited autonomy to lower government levels in terms of
    functions, area, staffing, funding and decision making (NESDB
    and World Bank 2005). The central government appoints the
    chief local officials, determines local salaries, and approves
    local budgets. Even local utilization of the restricted funding is
    to a large part centrally mandated. For example, staffing levels
    and staff appointments of local governments are centrally
    controlled. Local authorities are required to hire personnel and
    pay salaries, wages, and benefits in accordance with central
    regulations that often result in overstaffing and overspending.
    This most visible example of this Bangkok-centric public
    policy is how budgetary resources are allocated: although
    Bangkok accounts for about 17 percent of population and
    25.8 percent of GDP, it benefits from about 72.2 percent of
    total expenditures. This is in sharp contrast to the Northeast
    which accounts for about 34 percent of population and 11.5
    percent of GDP, but received only 5.8 percent of expenditures.
    Even correcting for the fact that Bangkok is the administrative
    capital for the country, such concentration of expenditures is
    extreme (World Bank, 2012a).
    THE LAGGING REGIONS REPRESENT UNTAPPED POTENTIAL.
    For instance, the one third of Thailand’s workers living in the
    Northeast contributes only 10 percent of Thailand’s total output
    in 2013, and the productivity per workers in Bangkok was more
    than 10 times higher than average productivity per worker in the
    Northeast. To illustrate the magnitude of the lost opportunities
    that Thailand’s lagging regions represent from an overall growth
    perspective, consider the following example: if, during the period
    2002-2013, the Northeast had narrowed the labor productivity
    gap to 25 percent of Bangkok’s level (in 2013), annual growth of
    Thailand’s GDP would have been 1.6 percentage points faster (ie
    the economy would have grown by 5.9 percent per year instead
    of the actual growth of 4.3 percent).

    Thailand Systematic Country Diagnostic
    INCLUSION AND
    POVERTY
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    INCLUSION
    AND POVERTY

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    A. WHAT ARE THE TRENDS IN POVERTY?
    POVERTY HAS FALLEN PRECIPITOUSLY OVER
    THE PAST THREE DECADES, BUT MAJOR
    CHALLENGES REMAIN IN REDUCING POVERTY
    AND INEQUALITY
    THAILAND HAS MADE IMPRESSIVE PROGRESS IN REDUCING
    POVERTY OVER THE PAST THREE DECADES.
    As will be discussed further below, growth remains the main
    driver for poverty reduction in Thailand, with GDP per capita
    increasing drastically from 1,084 in 1986 to 3,415 in 2013
    (constant 2005 US dollars). Extreme poverty as measured
    by the international extreme poverty line (USD 1.90 per day,
    2011 PPP) is no longer a concern for Thailand as a whole,
    falling from 14.3 percent in 1988 to 0.1 percent in 2012.
    Similarly, measured by the official food poverty lines from the
    NESDB, the poverty headcount dropped from 7.2 percent in
    1986 to 0.6 percent in 2013. Based on the national poverty
    line (in 2013, approximately USD 6.20 per day 2011 PPP),
    the poverty rate fell from 67 percent in 1986 to 10.5 percent
    in 2014, with 26.8 million Thai people moving out of poverty
    (Figure 27). Box 4 below provides an overview of how poverty
    is measured in Thailand.
    DESPITE THE PROGRESS IN REDUCING POVERTY, POVERTY AND
    VULNERABILITY CONTINUE TO POSE SIGNIFICANT CHALLENGES.
    As of 2014, 7.1 million Thais were still living in poverty,
    measured by the national poverty line (at about USD 6.20
    in 2011 PPP). Moreover, in 2013, an additional 6.7 million,
    or 14 million in total, were living within 20 percent above the
    national poverty line and remained vulnerable to falling back
    INCLUSION AND POVERTY: IMPRESSIVE PROGRESS
    BUT CHALLENGES REMAIN
    into poverty. As of 2014, 7.1 million Thais were still living
    in poverty, measured by the national poverty line (at about
    USD 6.20 in 2011 PPP). Moreover, in 2013, an additional 6.7
    million, or 14 million in total, were living within 20 percent
    above the national poverty line and remained vulnerable to
    falling back into poverty.

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    POCKETS OF POVERTY REMAIN IN LAGGING REGIONS, SUCH AS
    THE NORTHEAST, NORTH, AND DEEP SOUTH.
    As of 2014, 4.7 million poor people (out of the total 7.1
    million in Thailand) lived in the Northeast and North
    regions, which have the highest share of poor relative to
    the total population living in each region as well as the
    highest number of poor. The share of Thailand’s poor living
    in the Northeast and North increased from 61 percent
    in 1986 to 71 percent in 2013, despite the fact that the
    total population living in these two regions declined from
    55 percent to 45 percent. Among the top 15 provinces
    with the greatest number of poor, 9 of them have been on
    the lists for both 1996 and 2013, of which 8 are in the
    Northeast. For the three conflict-affected provinces in the
    Deep South, poverty rates have remained stubbornly above
    national averages (and remain at 33 percent in 2013).
    Note: For the Vulnerability Poverty Estimate, vulnerability is defined as within 20 percent above the national poverty line.
    Source: Poverty estimates calculated from Socio-Economic Surveys.
    FIGURE
    27 :
    By all measures of poverty, Thailand has made impressive progress in poverty
    reduction

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    The national poverty line in Thailand captures the expenditure needed to cover basic minimum
    food and non-food needs. Poverty lines in Thailand are household-specific—they depend on the
    demographic composition of households and the price vector that they face in local areas. National
    poverty lines in Thailand have been revised every ten years to take into consideration improvements
    in standards of living. The revisions capture updates in the concept of basic minimum needs—from
    a heavily food- and carbohydrates-based poverty basket toward more non-food items and more
    diversified foods. As a consequence of continuously raising the bar, the line and poverty rate have
    almost doubled from THB 473 per capita and 32 percent to THB 881 per capita and 65 percent poor
    in 1988, respectively, using the earliest and most recent lines. The current poverty line is based on
    2011 consumption patterns and is estimated using the 2011 Socio-Economic Survey.
    The national poverty line is the sum of the household-level food and non-food lines:
    • The food poverty line captures the amount of money needed to cover basic calorie and protein needs for
    a household with a given age and gender composition. It is calculated by applying the cost of a calorie
    and gram of protein in a given area to the household’s calorie and protein needs. The cost of a calorie
    and a gram of protein is calculated from the Socio-Economic Survey using the expenditure patterns of
    households in the bottom decile. The cost of a calorie is allowed to vary across 9 geographic areas:
    Bangkok, and rural and urban areas in the Central, Northern, North-eastern, and Southern regions.
    Minimum calorie and protein intakes for households are estimated using 2003 nutritional norms from
    the Bureau of Nutrition at the Ministry of Health. These nutritional norms vary by age and sex. The cost
    of meeting these nutritional needs is adjusted using an economy of scale coefficient—this assumes
    that the cost of a calorie and gram of protein is lower in households with more members.
    • The non-food poverty line includes nine broad categories of non-food goods and services: housing,
    including maintenance; housing expenditures including fuel, lighting, water, purchase of furniture and
    appliances; domestic workers; clothing, laundry and dry cleaning; footwear; personal care and personal
    services; health care; transportation and communication; education expenditure. Expenditures on
    non-food items are examined for those households whose food expenditures fall within 10 percent of
    the food poverty lines and whose total expenditures lie under median expenditure. Average non-food
    expenditure per capita is calculated in each of the nine geographic areas for each of the non-food
    categories. Economies of scale parameters are applied to each non-food category separately. There are
    no economies of scale for private goods such as personal care and medical care, and economies of
    scale are higher for goods that can be shared such as housing and domestic workers.
    BOX
    4 :
    How is poverty measured for Thailand?

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    ALTHOUGH INEQUALITY HAS DECLINED OVER THE PAST THREE
    DECADES, THE DISTRIBUTION IN THAILAND REMAINS UNEQUAL
    COMPARED TO MANY COUNTRIES IN EAST ASIA.
    As shown in Figure 28, the Gini coefficient for Thailand has
    been on a downward trend, falling from 0.43 in 1986 to
    0.38 in 2013 for real per capita household expenditure and
    from 0.50 to 0.46 for real per capita household income. As
    will be discussed in more detail below, inequality has fallen
    as the bottom 40 percent of the population has witnessed
    higher growth compared with the average population.
    Nevertheless, Thailand’s Gini coefficient has remained
    high compared with many countries in the region (such as
    Cambodia, Lao PDR, Mongolia, and Vietnam) and across
    the world (Figure 29).36 Furthermore, the measurement
    of inequality in Thailand is likely to be underestimated
    by limited information on the evolution of incomes and
    wealth at the top end of the distribution. Analysis of non-
    responses over time in the SES data suggests that non-
    response among richer households is quite pertinent in
    Thailand. The ways in which in-kind income and durable
    use value are calculated in Thailand are likely to result in
    further underestimation of the inequality of the income
    distribution.
    FIGURE
    28 :
    Gini coefficients have been on a downward trend in Thailand (1986-2013)
    Source: Authors’ calculations based on SES
    36 As in many other countries, the measurement of inequality in Thailand is
    likely to be affected by limited information on the evolution of incomes and
    wealth at the top end of the distribution. Analysis of non-responses over
    time in the SES data does however suggest that non-response among richer
    households are quite pertinent in Thailand.

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    Note: Gini coefficients for the comparator countries are the
    most recent available for each country.
    Source: Data from World Development Indicators.
    Note: The SES has been provincially representable since 1994.
    The South numbers include the Deep South provinces.
    Source: Authors’ calculations based on SES.
    FIGURE
    29 :
    TABLE
    6 :
    Thailand’s Gini coefficient declined but remains relatively unequal compared
    to many other countries
    (Gini coefficients around the world)
    Poverty in Thailand remains predominantly a rural phenomenon and is
    concentrated in certain regions (poverty headcount by region, %)
    Thailand 1996
    60-69 50-59 40-49 30-39 20-29
    Philippines
    70
    60
    50
    40
    30
    20
    10
    0
    South Africa
    Brazil
    Thailand 2010
    Indonesia
    Thailand 2013
    China
    Lao PDR
    Vietnam India Cambodia
    Japan Afghanistan
    Denmark
    Sweden
    MOREOVER, WHILE INEQUALITY HAS DECLINED AT THE NATIONAL
    LEVEL, SIGNIFICANT DISPARITIES IN HOUSEHOLD INCOME AND
    CONSUMPTION REMAINED ACROSS AND WITHIN REGIONS.
    Gaps have widened within urban areas and within the two
    leading regions (Bangkok and central) in relative terms. In
    1986, the poverty rate in the rural areas (75.7 percent)
    was about 160 percent that in urban areas (47.6 percent).
    The ratio increased to around 240 percent in 2000 before
    dropping back to around 180 percent in 2013. The regional
    disparities are also striking: in 2013, only 1 percent of the
    population in BMR lived below the national poverty line
    compared to 17.4 percent in the Northeast and 16.7 percent
    in the North.
    1986
    2000
    2013
    Total
    67.4
    42.6
    10.9
    Northeast
    80.2
    59.6
    17.4
    Deep South
    n.a.
    64.7
    32.8
    Urban
    47.6
    22.3
    7.7
    Rural
    75.7
    51.7
    13.9
    South
    67.0
    42.0
    11.0
    Bangkok
    36.6
    6.0
    1.1
    North
    66.6
    49.1
    16.7
    Central
    66.9
    29.0
    5.4

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    Source: Authors’ calculations based on SES.
    Source: Authors’ calculations based on SES.
    FIGURE
    30 :
    TABLE
    7 :
    Pockets of high poverty are concentrated in the North, Northeast, and Deep South (2013)
    Proportion of vulnerable groups
    SOME SUBGROUPS ARE PARTICULARLY VULNERABLE.
    Pockets of poverty are concentrated in the lagging North, Northeast, and Deep South, as well as among the ethnic minorities (Figure
    30). For instance, households headed by an elderly (above 65 years old) have a higher poverty rate (14 percent) compared to the
    national average, and for these elderly-headed households, poverty rates are higher in the North/Northeast (20 percent) and Deep
    South (30 percent). Among ethnic minorities (i.e. identified as those speaking a language other than Thai at home), the poverty rate
    spikes to 31 percent for the entire country and is even higher in the North/Northeast (40 percent) and Deep South (33 percent).

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    POVERTY IN THAILAND CAN ALSO BE SEEN IN
    NON-INCOME DIMENSIONS
    POVERTY IN THAILAND IS NOT ONLY CHARACTERIZED BY LOWER
    INCOMES BUT ALSO DIFFERENCES IN NON-INCOME DIMENSIONS.
    Both household data and provincial-level data paint
    a picture of non-income gaps between the poor and
    non-poor, often persisting over time despite the rapid
    economic growth. From household data, it is clear that
    the poor continue to have poorer access to basic ser vices.
    From provincial-level data, the UNDP “regional human
    achievement index” – tracking human development
    across multiple dimensions such as education, housing
    and living conditions, and the degree to which people
    actively par ticipate in public life— confirm household
    level data: the poorer provinces of Thailand persistently
    lag in multiple dimensions (Figure 31).
    AS IN MANY UPPER-INCOME COUNTRIES, THE INEQUALITIES HAVE
    BECOME HARDER TO SPOT.
    The inequalities in the easy-to-measure and easy-to-fix
    areas have narrowed (e.g., number of children enrolled
    in primary and lower secondary education). However,
    inequalities persist or have widened where it really matters
    (e.g., quality of education provided, enrolment rates at the
    post-secondary education level).
    FOR EXAMPLE, WHILE THE GAPS IN LOWER SECONDARY
    E N RO L M E N T D U E TO S O C I O – E C O N O M I C S TAT U S H AV E
    NARROWED, THEY REMAIN PERSISTENTLY LARGE AT THE POST-
    SECONDARY LEVEL.
    Around 90 percent of Thailand’s youth complete a lower
    secondary education, with relatively small differences
    between the bottom 40 percent and the rest of the population.
    Somewhat troubling, though, is that there does not seem
    to have been any further increases in enrolment rates in
    recent years. The postsecondary enrolment rates are more
    problematic: on average, gross enrolment rates are at 69
    percent, but the bottom 40 percent and especially the poor
    are trailing behind the rest at 59 and 46 percent, respectively.
    One factor driving the differences could be the possible lower
    quality of lower secondary education received by the poor, as
    discussed below.
    ALTHOUGH THE BOTTOM 40 PERCENT ARE STAYING IN SCHOOL
    LONGER, RESULTS FROM THE OECD’S ASSESSMENT OF
    STUDENTS’ LEARNING OUTCOMES (PISA) SUGGEST THAT A
    VERY LARGE SHARE OF THEM ARE FUNCTIONALLY ILLITERATE.
    The PISA results shows that one-third of all 15-year-old
    students nationwide are functionally illiterate, and the
    situation is worse for the poorest-performing students in
    small village schools.37 In the most recent PISA reading
    assessment (in 2012), one-third of Thai 15-year-olds knew
    the alphabet and could read, but they could not locate
    information or identify the main messages in a text—they
    were “functionally illiterate,” lacking critical skills for
    many jobs in a growing modern economy (Figure 32). The
    greatest concentration of the functionally illiterate is found
    Source: UNDP (2014a).
    FIGURE
    31 :
    Poorer provinces lag in multiple dimensions
    (UNDP’s Regional Human Achievement
    Index 2014)
    37 PISA tests 15-year olds, irrespective of which grade they are enrolled in. For
    Thailand’s 2012 PISA round, 75+ percent of the assessed students were in grade 9
    and another 20+ percent in grade 8, with the remaining students in grades 7 or 10.

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    in villages, where 47 percent of their 15-year-old students
    are functionally illiterate. While it is not possible to merge
    PISA data with household expenditure data to accurately
    pinpoint the quality of education received by the poor and
    bottom 40 percent, given their rural nature, the poor and
    the bottom 40 percent are most likely to be enrolled in
    schools in which nearly half are functionally illiterate after 7
    or 8 years of schooling. If a student is functionally illiterate
    at age 15 (i.e. the end of lower secondary education), they
    will never finish a secondary education or proceed to a
    tertiary education. As World Bank (2015b) points out, there
    are no easy fixes for these problems; broad and sustained
    reforms on several fronts will be needed to raise learning
    outcomes.
    38 PISA results are reported both as an overall score (a number between 0 and 700) but also as the percentage of students performing at different six “proficiency
    levels”. For instance, the description of proficiency level 2 (which we refer to as the functionally literate level) is: “Some tasks at this level require the reader to locate one
    or more pieces of information, which may need to be inferred and may need to meet several conditions. Others require recognizing the main idea in a text, understanding
    relationships, or construing meaning within a limited part of the text when the information is not prominent and the reader must make low level inferences. Tasks at this
    level may involve comparisons or contrasts based on a single feature in the text. Typical reflective tasks at this level require readers to make a comparison or several
    connections between the text and outside knowledge, by drawing on personal experience and attitudes” (OECD, 2014).
    Source: OECD PISA 2012.
    FIGURE
    32 :
    FIGURE
    33 :
    Distribution of Thailand’s 15-year-olds on
    the 2012 PISA reading assessment 38
    Enrolment increased rapidly in the 1990s (and gaps were narrowed) but have since stagnated;
    the gaps between the poor and non-poor remain wide for postsecondary gross enrolment
    Source: NSO – Thailand SES.

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    IN TERMS OF HOUSING AND LIVING CONDITIONS, WHILE
    ALMOST ALL THAI HOUSEHOLDS HAVE ACCESS TO ELECTRICITY,
    DISPARITIES PERSIST IN OTHER AREAS SUCH AS THE BUILDING
    MATERIALS USED FOR HOMES.
    Having houses constructed with weaker materials is a
    potential source of vulnerability, particularly for poor
    households living in areas that are prone to national
    disasters such as floods. The Northeastern region is
    particularly hard-hit by droughts, affecting more than
    half of the population living in that region (UNDP, 2014a).
    In 2013, less than 60 percent of poor households lived
    in houses built with concrete, cement, brick, or stone,
    compared to over 80 percent of rich households.
    THE POOR ALSO LACK THE SAME ACCESS TO INFORMATION
    ENJOYED BY THE NON-POOR, AS REFLECTED IN INTERNET
    PENETRATION RATES.39
    As indicated in the World Bank’s World Development Report
    (WDR) 2016, the internet can be a force for development,
    especially for the poor in developing countries through
    its contribution to economic growth, social and economic
    opportunity, and efficiency of public service delivery.
    Inadequate and unequal access to the Internet limits the
    opportunities for the poor. Despite significant progress,
    the Internet penetration rate for poor households is low in
    Thailand. As of 2013, only 21.5 percent of poor households
    in Thailand had access to the Internet, compared with 45.9
    percent of the non-poor (Figure 35).
    Source: Data from Socio-Economic Surveys.
    FIGURE
    35 :
    Access to the Internet
    Source: Data from Socio-Economic Surveys.
    FIGURE
    34 :
    Building Material for Walls
    2
    0
    1
    3
    46%
    39 Measured by household members who accessed the Internet during the
    past 12 months.

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    IN ADDITION, THE POOR AND THE BOTTOM 40 PERCENT ARE LIKELY
    OVERREPRESENTED IN THE GROWING NUMBER OF DEATHS AND
    INJURIES FROM ROAD ACCIDENTS.
    A recent study by the University of Michigan Transportation
    Research Institute shows that, with 44 deaths per 100,000
    person per year, Thailand ranks 2nd in the world in terms of
    accidents and deaths resulting from road traffic accidents,
    behind only Namibia.40 Road traffic injuries and fatalities
    are a major public health and development challenge in
    Thailand. Every year, over 12,000 persons are killed in
    road traffic crashes, with nearly 100,000 people injured,
    and thousands of people are crippled for the rest of their
    lives, with disproportionate impacts on the young and the
    poor. While almost half of the number of accidents are in
    Bangkok, 96.4 percent of fatal accidents occur outside
    Bangkok.
    WHO ARE THE POOR AND BOTTOM 40 PERCENT
    IN THAILAND?
    THE POOR AND THE BOTTOM 40 PERCENT ARE MORE LIKELY TO
    WORK IN AGRICULTURE.
    In line with the overall declining trend in agricultural
    sector employment, the ratio of the labor force (15 – 65
    years of age) in the agricultural sector has declined
    steadily from 70 percent in 1986 to 40 percent in 2013.
    However, some 12-15 million workers still worked in
    agriculture in 2013, of which approximately 8.8 million
    were from the bottom 40 percent (or 2.8 million poor).41
    It is wor th noting that after a steadily declining trend, the
    number of workers in agriculture increased during the
    recent years in 2011-2013, par ticularly for the poor and
    bottom 40 in urban areas.42
    THE POOR AND THE BOTTOM 40 PERCENT ARE LESS LIKELY TO
    HAVE STABLE ENGAGEMENT IN THE LABOR MARKET (E.G., AS
    PRIVATE OR PUBLIC EMPLOYEES).
    In part, reflecting their large share of workers in the agricultural
    sector, more than half of poor household heads worked as
    own account workers in 2013, and only 29 percent of poor
    household heads were public or private employees, compared
    to 49 percent overall (Figure 36). Related to small firm size
    (lack of economies of scale, limited capital and technology
    intensity) and limited risk-sharing mechanisms, own account
    workers tend to be more vulnerable to shocks, especially
    because more than half of the own account workers are
    working in the agricultural sector. Natural disasters and price
    fluctuations for commodities present risks that are not easily
    addressed by farmers who lack adequate insurance and risk
    mitigation tools. These market failures have thus far been
    met with Government programs such as price guarantees and
    social subsidies instead of with development of the necessary
    financial infrastructure and market reforms, creating a fiscal
    liability which may not be sustainable in the future. A similar
    situation can be seen for the bottom 40 percent who are not
    employed in agriculture—they, too, are vulnerable to shocks
    and lack appropriate financial tools to mitigate these risks.
    40 University of Michigan Transportation Research Institute, Mortality from road crashes in 193 countries: A comparison with other leading causes of death, 2014.
    41 As discussed earlier, establishing an accurate count of employment in agriculture is difficult for a range of reasons
    42 As discussed earlier, the increase in employment in agriculture in the recent years might show that agriculture provided some sort of safety-net nature for the poor
    and bottom 40; it might also indicate the latent underemployment problems.

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    THE POOR AND THE BOTTOM 40 PERCENT TEND TO BE IN
    HOUSEHOLDS HEADED BY SOMEONE LESS EDUCATED.
    Heads of poor households tend to be less educated than heads
    of non-poor households, and the gap has been widening over
    time. The average number of years of education for heads of
    poor households increased from 3.7 years in 1986 to 4.0 in
    2013 (and from 3.3 to 4.6 for the bottom 40 percent), compared
    to an increase of 6.2 to 7.7 over the same period for the nonpoor.
    TABLE
    8 :
    Years of schooling for heads of households
    Source: Data from Socio-Economic Surveys.
    FIGURE
    36 :
    Heads of poor households are more likely to be own account workers than employees in
    the public or private sectors
    Source: Authors’
    calculations based
    on SES
    Looking at the sub-periods, the increase in average years of
    schooling for heads of poor households occurred mainly in
    the early part of the period. In the 2000s, the gaps between
    the poor and the non-poor widened as the number of years of
    schooling continued to increase rapidly for the non-poor but not
    for the poor (Table 8). Similar disparities in years of schooling
    could be seen between the bottom 40 percent and the top 60
    percent, between rural versus urban households, and between
    males and females.
    WORK STATUS OF HOUSEHOLD HEADS IN 2013, BY TYPE OF EMPLOYMENT

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    THE POOR TEND TO BE HEADED BY OLDER HOUSEHOLD HEADS.
    Households headed by older people have higher poverty
    rates than other households. The average age of the head
    of household increased from 45 years in 1985 to 51 years
    in 2013, but the average age of heads of poor households
    was about 57 years in 2013. As shown in Figure 37, the
    average poverty rates among households with older heads
    were higher than for other groups and higher than the
    national average. The poverty rate of the elderly is also
    higher than that of the overall population. A second notable
    feature is higher child poverty rates, which may be driven in
    part by the prevalence of “missing generation” households
    where grandparents are the primary caretakers for
    grandchildren in the absence of parents.
    POSSIBLY REFLECTING THEIR INCREASED VULNERABILITIES, THE
    POOR ARE THE LEAST HAPPY IN THAI SOCIETY.
    Based on analysis of the “Mental Health Survey” which was
    included as a module in the 2010 SES, individuals from
    the poorest households are twice as likely to report being
    unhappy with their lives relative to the richest segment of
    the population. Unfortunately, the survey does not provide
    much additional information that could help interpret the
    results. Possibly, the higher levels of unhappiness among
    the poor could reflect the fact that poor people have poorer
    access to quality public services (i.e. quality education or
    health services) and job opportunities. In addition, they are
    more vulnerable to shocks such as weather-related shocks
    for farmers or accidents that could render them unable to
    work and to have a satisfactory life.
    FIGURE
    37 :
    Poverty rates are significantly higher amongst the elderly and children
    NATIONAL AVERAGE
    Source: SES, 2013

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    FIGURE
    38 :
    Poorer households are more likely to report they are unhappy with their lives43
    Source: Authors’ analysis of Mental Health Survey attached to the 2010 Socio-Economic Survey.
    B.HOW INCLUSIVE IS GROWTH, AND WHAT
    FA C TO R S A F F E C T S H A R E D G RO W T H I N
    THAILAND?
    THE BOTTOM 40 PERCENT HAVE BEEN SHARING
    IN ECONOMIC GROWTH, ALTHOUGH PROGRESS
    HAS BEEN UNEVEN
    THAILAND HAS MADE SIGNIFICANT STRIDES OVERALL IN
    IMPROVING THE INCLUSIVITY OF ECONOMIC GROWTH.
    Incomes of the bottom 40 percent of the population have
    tended to grow faster than average income growth (Figure
    40). Broadly speaking, the income distribution has become
    more equalized, with the bottom 40 percent accounting for
    17 percent of total household expenditure in 2013, compared
    with 15.5 percent in 1986. This compares favorably with many
    other countries in the most recent period with comparable
    data. In 2000-2013, while the average consumption of the
    overall Thai population grew at 5.1 percent, that of the bottom
    40 percent grew at 5.5 percent (see Figure 39).
    43 Analysis based on the following question: “How would you scale your life
    happiness in general? (this year)” (the Least happiness = 00; the Highest
    Happiness = 10)

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    FIGURE
    39 :
    Shared prosperity in Thailand and select other countries (annualized growth rate
    of consumption for the poorest 40 percent and the overall population)
    FIGURE
    40 :
    Annual consumption and poverty changes (%)
    Source: Data from Socio-Economic Surveys
    HOWEVER, THE INCLUSIVENESS OF GROWTH HAS VARIED ACROSS DIFFERENT SUB − PERIODS.
    Inclusive growth can be seen for most time periods since 1986, with the exception of the 1996-2000 crisis period (when incomes
    fell for most income groups) and the 2000-2006 period when growth for the bottom 40 percent lagged that of the rest of the
    population (Figure 40). While the discussion here focuses on three big time periods (1986-1996, 1996-2000 and 2000-2013),
    Annex 2: Inclusiveness of growth includes graphs that explain what happened in each of the sub-periods.

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    TABLE
    9 :
    Decomposition of Poverty Changes into Growth and Redistribution Components
    poor, and redistribution has also played a larger role,
    primarily through the introduction of elderly pensions
    and universal health care.
    MORE AND GRADUALLY BETTER JOBS WERE CRUCIAL IN
    TRANSLATING ECONOMIC GROWTH INTO SHARED PROSPERITY.
    As the economy modernized, millions of off-farm jobs
    were created: 6.7 million such jobs were created in
    during 1987-96, and another 5.7 million during the years
    2000 -13 (see Table 10 and “Annex 4: Details on the
    labor market” for more details, including a breakdown by
    gender). These jobs initially required ver y little education,
    but they provided a rapidly expanding population (and
    former farmers) with higher incomes, the possibility of
    fur ther skills development, and insulation from the whims
    of nature (droughts, floods and fluctuating commodity
    prices). There is an interesting gender dimension to this
    stor y: during the boom years (1986 -1996), men were the
    primar y beneficiaries of the rapidly expanding “modern”
    economy, taking up 60 percent of the new jobs on offer.
    This gradually changed, and during the more recent
    period of 2000 -2013, women took a slightly bigger share
    of these new jobs (52 percent).
    Note: The measure of poverty is based on real per capita household expenditure, which is normalized to 2011 using national
    CPI produced by the Bureau of Trade and Economic Indices, Ministry of Commerce. Bourguigon (2005) residual included in the
    redistribution component. The unique poverty line is set at the unique average real household poverty line in 2011.
    ECONOMIC GROWTH HAS BEEN THE MAIN
    F O R C E B E H I N D P O V E R T Y R E D U C T I O N
    A N D S H A R E D P R O S P E R I T Y, A LT H O U G H
    REDISTRIBUTION IS PLAYING A GREATER ROLE
    ECONOMIC GROWTH HAS BEEN THE KEY DRIVER OF
    POVERTY REDUCTION IN THAILAND, BUT REDISTRIBUTION
    IS INCREASINGLY PLAYING A BIGGER ROLE.
    As shown in Table 9 which decomposes changes in
    pover ty over the past three decades into a “growth
    component” and a “redistribution component,” pover ty
    reduction was driven exclusively by growth during
    1986 -96: if not for the worsened income distribution,
    pover ty reduction would have been 24 percent instead
    of 22.5 percent. Pover ty then increased 4.6 percent
    during 1996 -2000 due to negative growth. Since 2000,
    economic growth has continued to play the dominant
    role in reducing pover ty but, increasingly, redistribution
    has also helped: nearly 85 percent of pover ty reduction
    was attributable to growth while the remaining 15
    percent was attributable to improvements in income
    distribution. Fur ther analysis suggests that par ticularly
    for the 2006 -2013 period, growth has been highly pro –

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    OFF-FARM JOBS PROVIDED BETTER INCOMES, ESPECIALLY
    DURING THE EARLY BOOM YEARS
    A decomposition analysis identifying the factors which contribute
    to poverty reduction shows that during the 1988-1996 period,
    labor income and non-farm income were major contributors to
    poverty reduction. These contributed 42 percent and 15 percent,
    respectively, to the total reduction of poverty experienced in
    Thailand (the population below the poverty line fell from 65 to
    TABLE
    10 :
    Employment by sector
    Authors’ calculations based on the average of all rounds of the LFSs (except for the periods before
    1998 where rounds 1 and 3 were used)
    FIGURE
    41 :
    Decomposing the factors that explained the decline in poverty during 1988-1996
    Note: Poverty decomposition (based on Azevedo et al., 2013) is performed with consumption as welfare measure,
    population weights and ranking for all components. Source: World Bank staff calculations using SES 1988, 1996.
    35 percent by 1996) (Figure 41). During this period, private
    transfers accounted for 12 percent of the decline in poverty,
    and government transfers only 2 percent. The demographic
    composition of the household also seems to have played a role,
    with greater shares of adults in working-age accounting for 8
    percent of the drop in poverty, suggesting that a bigger pool
    of potential workers and a reduced dependency ratio may have
    stimulated income generation.

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    AS THE ECONOMY BECAME MORE SOPHISTICATED, CONSISTENT WITH THE IMPROVEMENT IN EDUCATION LEVEL OF THE GENERAL LABOR
    FORCE, THE NEW JOBS CREATED FOR WORKERS WITH HIGHER EDUCATION INCREASED.
    As mentioned above, initially a large share of the new jobs required little education. This meant that the poor and the bottom
    40 percent could apply. Starting from the 1996- 2000 period, however, the net number of jobs requiring primary education that
    were created actually declined. Instead, more and more of the jobs being created required either a secondary or postsecondary
    education. In 2000-2013, the trends of increasing demand for workers with secondary education or tertiary education continued.
    ALONGSIDE THE RAPID GROWTH IN JOBS AND THEIR
    INCREASED SOPHISTICATION, THE EDUCATIONAL BACKGROUND
    OF THE POPULATION ALSO INCREASED RAPIDLY.
    The increase in the number of employed workers in
    Thailand was accompanied by significant improvements
    in the educational attainment of the labor force. As
    shown in the Figure 43, the share of the labor force with
    primar y education or below declined from 84.5 percent
    in 1986 to 49.2 percent in 2013. Over the same period,
    the share of workers with secondar y education jumped
    from 10.8 percent to 32.5 percent, while the share of
    workers with post-secondar y education increased from
    4.7 percent to 18 percent.
    FIGURE
    42 :
    Net Job Creation by education level
    (million)
    Source: Labor Force Survey.
    FIGURE
    43 :
    Shares of Thai labor force by level
    of education
    Source: Labor Force Survey.

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    FIGURE
    44 :
    The contribution of income and household composition to poverty reduction
    THE DRIVERS OF SHARED GROWTH CHANGED
    AFTER THE 1997 ASIAN CRISIS BUT NOT
    NECESSARILY ALL FOR THE BETTER
    DURING 2000-13 (WHEN REDISTRIBUTION STARTED TO PLAY
    A BIGGER ROLE), POVERTY REDUCTION CONTINUED TO BE
    DRIVEN MAINLY BY INCOMES, OF WHICH FARM INCOMES
    PLAYED A KEY ROLE.
    A comparison of the economic and demographic factors
    explaining the decline in poverty in 1988- 1996 versus 2000-
    2013 reveals stark differences (Figure 44). In 2000-2013,
    THE INCREASING IMPORTANCE OF FARM INCOME IN THE CONTEXT OF LIMITED IMPROVEMENT IN PRODUCTIVITY RAISES CONCERNS
    ABOUT THE LACK OF STRUCTURAL TRANSFORMATION AS WELL AS SUSTAINABILITY.
    In part, the rising importance of farm income reflects the structural problems facing the economy: a slowdown in non-agriculture
    employment growth (Table 10) and the stalling of structural transformation (discussed in Section 3), combined with the struggle
    within agriculture to move labor from low- to higher-productivity jobs. It is worrisome because it likely reflects the 70 percent real
    increase in agricultural prices (Figure 15) and not productivity increases in agriculture. When agricultural prices fall back to more
    normal levels—a process that has already started—the inclusiveness of growth will no longer look good.
    Note: Poverty decomposition (based on Azevedo et al., 2013) is performed with consumption as welfare measure,
    population weights and ranking for all components. Source: SES 1988, 1996; 2000, 2013.
    increasing farm income accounted for 46 percent of the observed
    decline in poverty, compared to only 9 percent in 1988-1996.
    During the first half of the 2000s, the increasing role of farm
    income was associated with increased farm commercialization,
    diversification from paddy production to other agricultural
    outputs, and greater integration in global food value chains. After
    2008, partly as a result of the hikes in global agricultural prices
    and partly as a result of domestic price support schemes, farm
    income played an even stronger role in contributing to poverty
    reduction. At the same time, the limited new job creation in non-
    agricultural sectors over the decade was likely the main factor
    that led to the declining role of labor income.
    1988 – 1996 2000 – 2013

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    A MORE “HEALTHY” AND SUSTAINABLE CHANGE THAT HAS TAKEN PLACE IS
    THE INCREASED ROLE OF PRIVATE TRANSFERS IN POVERTY REDUCTION
    IN THAILAND, PRIVATE TRANSFERS ARE COMPRISED MAINLY OF REMITTANCES FROM MIGRATION, WHICH CONTINUES TO BE AN IMPORTANT
    SOURCE OF INCOME.
    Over one-fifth of Thai households have migrants, with the highest proportions being from poor households and disadvantaged regions
    (Figure 45). Looking across income groups, a higher share of poor households and the bottom 40 percent have migrants (over 25 percent)
    compared to the top 60 percent (around 18 percent). In terms of geographic location, 26 percent of households in the Northeast and 15
    percent in the North have migrants, shares that are significantly higher than those for other regions. Notably, while migration flows have
    generally declined over time, the share of households in the bottom 40 percent with migrant workers has stayed constant—for example, in
    the Northeast, it has remained at 80 percent for households in the bottom decile and around 70 percent for the remaining three deciles.
    Source: SES
    A COMPARISON OF OBSERVED CONSUMPTION LEVELS REVEALS
    THAT REMITTANCES BENEFIT THE POOR (THE BOTTOM 40 PERCENT)
    RELATIVELY MORE THAN THE NON-POOR (THE TOP 60 PERCENT),
    SUGGESTING THAT REMITTANCES ARE LIKELY AN IMPORTANT
    CONTRIBUTING FACTOR TO SHARED GROWTH IN THAILAND.
    Among those receiving remittances, the remittances account
    for an average of 30-40 percent of their household income,
    and the reliance on this source seems not to have changed
    over time. This points to an important role for remittances in
    promoting shared prosperity.
    THE RELATIVELY HIGH COST OF REMITTANCES IS AN ISSUE OF
    CONCERN, ESPECIALLY FOR THE POOR WHO TRANSACT IN SMALL
    AMOUNTS.
    According to the commercial banks’ standard rate, the
    starting remittance fee to different clearing zones is THB
    30 for every THB 10,000 and an additional THB 1 is charged
    for every THB 1,000 fraction. The fee is therefore the same
    for a remittance of THB 1,000 or THB 10,000, creating a
    much higher proportional cost for the small remitter.
    FIGURE
    45 :
    Share of households having a member migrating for work purposes,
    by decile and geographic region (2006, 2013)

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    THE LABOR MARKET HAS PLAYED A CRITICAL
    ROLE IN CREATING SHARED PROSPERITY,
    ALTHOUGH CHALLENGES REMAIN
    GIVEN THE IMPORTANCE OF THE LABOR MARKET IN TRANSFORMING
    ECONOMIC GROWTH INTO POVERTY REDUCTION, THIS SECTION
    PROVIDES SOME MORE DETAILS ON HOW EXACTLY THIS WORKED.
    The aim of such analysis is to understand whether the labor market
    is likely to continue to play this supportive role in the coming years.
    IN THE PAST THREE DECADES, THE LABOR MARKET HAS BEEN
    CHARACTERIZED BY A LARGE INCREASE IN THE WORKING-AGE
    POPULATION, WHILE UNEMPLOYMENT REMAINED LOW.
    Throughout the period from 1986 to 2013, the Thai population
    between 15-65 years of age grew massively from 30.7 million in
    1986 to 47.6 million in 2013, and its labor force increased from
    26.1 million to 37.8 million over the same period. The increase in
    the labor force can thus be attributed to a “demographic dividend,”
    being brought about by a rapid increase in the prime-age population
    (between 25-54 years old). Throughout this period, unemployment
    remained low. Demographic dividends have therefore played a non-
    negligible role in poverty reduction: as Figure 44 shows, 17 percent
    of the poverty reduction was due to there being more adults in the
    working age population (who ended up working).
    WAGE GROWTH AMONG THOSE WITH LOWER WAGES AND LESS
    EDUCATION HAS BEEN A STRONG EQUALIZING FORCE.
    Faster wage growth has led to some convergence in wages, even
    before the recent minimum wage increases were implemented.
    The real wage increase in Thailand from 1986 to 2011 (i.e.
    ahead of the recent large minimum wage increase) averaged
    around 2 percent per year, and the average real hourly wage
    rate (in constant 2011 THB) almost doubled from around THB
    30 in 1986 to around THB 53 in 2011 (Figure 46). As shown
    in Figure 46, those with the lowest education level (a group
    of people in which the bottom 40 percent comprise the vast
    majority) have experienced the largest wage increases.44 This
    reflects a labor market that gradually tightened at that end:
    more and more new labor market entrants had secondary or
    post-secondary education, but that “educational upgrading”
    took place faster than what firms demanded. Firms (and
    farms) still wanted laborers for jobs requiring only primary
    education or less, which benefited the bottom 40 percent.
    The faster wage growth for female workers also contributed to
    some convergence in wages, and this could be related to the
    increase in their skill level. For example, female employees
    have achieved greater levels of schooling (from an average
    of six years in 1986 to ten years in 2011), exceeding male
    employees (from an average of seven years of schooling in
    1986 to nine years in 2011).
    44 However, as illustrated in the figure, the real wage growth rates for the
    college-educated and for workers in the highest wage quintile were relatively
    high in absolute terms.
    Note: The bar charts represent average real hourly wage in 1986 and 2011
    (experssed in 2011 prices) for workers aged 15- 65, the scatter points represent
    the annualized real growth in hourly wage (between 1986 and 2011). Statistics
    by area, education level, gender, wage quintiles and geographic region.
    Source: LFS 1986, 2011.
    FIGURE
    46 :
    Real hourly wages in 1986 and 2011 with annualized growth rate, by location, education,
    gender and wage quintiles

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    HOWEVER, THE AVERAGE WAGE AND LABOR PARTICIPATION RATES
    FOR FEMALE WORKERS HAVE REMAINED LOWER THAN FOR MALE
    WORKERS, DESPITE WOMEN HAVING MORE YEARS OF EDUCATION.
    Although Thailand has achieved gender parity in education
    at all levels, this does not result in equal economic
    opportunities. According to data from UNESCO 2014, the
    gross primary education enrolment ratio for both sexes for
    the period 2006-2010 was 98 percent. However, women lag
    behind men in terms of pay and quality of jobs: women were
    paid 16 percent less than men in 2013.45 Although Thailand
    is ahead of its peers, women’s participation rates are nearly
    20 percentage points below those of males (71 percent
    versus 87 percent in 2013). The situation is particularly
    acute in the Deep South of Thailand where the female
    participation rate stands at 66 percent vs. 86 percent for
    males. Low female participation rates are likely related to
    the less promising employment prospects faced by women.
    Moreover, the lower participation rates also likely reflections
    women’s family obligations (e.g. childcare and elderly care)
    which would make their reservation wage higher.
    MOREOVER, WOMEN ARE UNDERREPRESENTED IN SEVERAL NON-
    AGRICULTURAL SECTORS AND HIGHPAID OCCUPATIONS.
    In particular, they are underrepresented in sectors such
    as utilities, real estate, transportation and communication,
    and public administration as well as in high-paid
    occupations such as managerial or executive positions.
    Notably, female students tend to study in fields that are
    not directly linked with productivity enhancement such
    as humanities, social sciences, and health-related fields,
    while male students prefer to focus on engineering and
    technical skills. The selection of the field of study is largely
    attributed to socialization and gender stereotyping.
    SIMILARLY, LESBIAN, GAY, BISEXUAL, TRANSGENDER, AND INTERSEX
    (LGBTI) PERSONS FACE LIMITED EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES
    AND DISCRIMINATION IN THE WORLD OF WORK.
    LGBTI46 people experience employment discrimination and
    workplace exclusion, which affects the type of employment
    they obtain and compensation they receive. Transgender
    individuals are being systematically excluded from many
    mainstream jobs in both the public and private sectors
    and are marginalized to a few stereotypical jobs open to
    them (Suriyasarn, 2014). The ILO has found that jobs in
    the public sector are the least LGBTI friendly (Suriyasarn,
    2014) As a result of repeated rejections, a hostile work
    environment, limited freedom of gender expression at
    work, and limited career advancement opportunities, LGBTI
    persons opt out of formal jobs in large organizations and
    seek employment in smaller enterprises or non-government
    organizations (Suriyasarn, 2014). The cost to the economy
    of such exclusionary treatment of LGBTI people includes
    unemployment or underemployment, lost labor time and
    lost productivity, underinvestment in human capital, and the
    inefficient allocation of human resources (Williams, 2014) On
    the micro level, workplace discrimination reduces wages for
    LGBTI people in Thailand (Suriyasarn, 2014)
    IN TERMS OF GEOGRAPHIC INEQUALITIES, THE WAGE GAPS
    BETWEEN RURAL AND URBAN AS WELL AS BETWEEN BANGKOK
    AND OTHER REGIONS (PARTICULARLY THE NORTHEAST AND DEEP
    SOUTH REGIONS) HAVE INCREASED.
    In 1986, the average wage rate in Bangkok was only slightly
    above that in the Northeast, while in 2011, the average
    wage rate in Bangkok was almost twice that in the Northeast,
    reflecting the fact that the industrial heartland—where 75
    percent of manufacturing output is produced and where
    productivity levels are highest—lies around Bangkok.
    45 This gap in pay is based on a regression analysis which compares male and female workers with the same characteristics (Annex 4: Details on the labor market)
    46 The acronym LGBTI refers to people who are lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender or intersex. Exclusion based on sexual orientation and gender identity (SOGI) exists in
    different forms across cultures, countries and regions. Homosexuality is punishable by death and illegal in some countries, and although homosexuality is not illegal in
    many others, lesbian, gay, or bisexual people commonly face social exclusion. Transgender or intersex people may not be homosexual at all but are frequently classified
    as “gay” regardless. Social stigma driven by homophobia, transphobia and discriminatory laws fuels the exclusion of LGBTI people and creates barriers to accessing
    markets, essential services, and spaces. Such social stigma also often precludes participation by LGBTI persons in social institutions and decisionmaking, and exposes
    them to violence. Sources: World Bank. 2013. Inclusion Matters: The Foundation for Shared Prosperity (Advance Edition). Washington, DC: World Bank. License: Creative
    Commons Attribution CC BY 3.0; Crehan, Phil. (2016). Latin America and Caribbean Region: Addressing Social Exclusion based on Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity
    (SOGI). Washington, DC: World Bank Group.

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    RECENT CHANGES IN MINIMUM WAGE REGULATIONS HAVE
    HAD A MAJOR IMPACT ON THE BOTTOM 40 PERCENT, BUT THE
    IMPACTS ARE MIXED.
    The most significant change in recent years was the
    adoption of a national daily minimum wage of THB 300, as
    described in Box 5. Empirical analysis suggests that the
    major increase in the minimum wage further supported
    the incomes of wage workers. However, not all benefited
    equally, as some very low-paid workers in microenterprises
    The minimum wage policy in Thailand started in Bangkok and vicinities in 1973 followed by the entire
    kingdom in 1974, with minimum wage bands set by geographic region to take into account differences in
    the cost of living and other socioeconomic conditions (e.g., inflation reflected by the CPI, and since 1990,
    economic growth) (Del Carpio et al., 2014). In 1998, the Labor Protection Act (No. 2) further modified
    the wage adjustments criteria into a two-tiered system intended to differentiate minimum wage levels by
    province and industry. The province-specific minima were implemented since the early 2000s and the
    wage adjustment criteria was readjusted in 2008.
    Most recently in 2011, the government announced a change in the minimum wage regulations
    aimed at harmonizing wages into one national minimum wage rate in two major steps:
    (i) The daily minimum wage was set at THB 300 in seven core industrial provinces (Bangkok and vicinities
    plus Phuket province), while the wage in other provinces was raised by 40 percent. The policy started in the
    second quarter of 2012 and lasted for nine months.
    (ii) Starting in January 2013, the entire kingdom was subject to the THB 300 minimum wage rate.
    BOX
    5 :
    The evolution of minimum wage policies
    in Thailand
    THE EMPLOYMENT COMPOSITION IS SHIFTING TOWARD MORE EDUCATED WORKERS, WHICH POSES FURTHER CHALLENGES
    TO YOUNG WORKERS.
    Statistics for the bottom 40 percent suggest that total employment for young females and males decreased by 6.8
    and 2.5 percent, respectively, in 2012- 2013. While some moved into education, others moved out of employment or
    out of the labor force. For example, almost one in four females aged 15 -25 were neither working nor studying in 2013.
    experienced higher levels of non-compliance, thus yielding
    no increase to their wage. Additionally, during 2002-2013,
    the increase in the minimum wage resulted in some
    contraction in employment of the less educated and in
    particular reduced employment of young less educated
    workers (Lathapipat and Poggi, 2016). Even if the adoption
    of the national minimum wage may not have fully revealed
    its effects yet, greater enforcement is needed to allow fair
    rewards to vulnerable groups who are overrepresented in
    the low-wage sectors.

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    GOVERNMENT PROGRAMS HAVE ALSO LIKELY
    CONTRIBUTED TO SHARED PROSPERITY,
    ALTHOUGH THEY STILL LEAVE A SIGNIFICANT
    SHARE OF THE POPULATION POOR OR
    VULNERABLE TO POVERTY
    THAILAND HAS IMPLEMENTED SEVERAL PUBLIC TRANSFERS
    AND OTHER GOVERNMENT INITIATIVES AIMED AT REDUCING
    POVERTY, ALTHOUGH THEIR IMPACTS ON SHARED GROWTH
    ARE NOT WELL UNDERSTOOD YET.
    The importance of public transfers in reducing poverty has
    increased in recent years. As shown in Figure 44 above, in 2000-
    2013, public transfers accounted for 9 percent of the decline in
    poverty compared to only 2 percent during 1988-1996, reflecting
    the introduction of social pensions for the elderly.47 Recent
    governments have used a variety of other interventions to support
    the poor or help reduce their vulnerability to shocks, ranging from
    agricultural price supports to provision of universal access to health.
    The discussion below reviews four major programs: agricultural
    price supports, social pensions, universal health care, and the
    Village Fund.
    THE AGRICULTURAL PRICE SUPPORT SCHEMES—PERHAPS AMONG
    THE MOST DIRECT INTERVENTIONS AIMED AT HELPING POOR
    FARMERS—MAY NOT BE AS PRO-POOR AS PLANNED AND ARE
    FISCALLY COSTLY.
    The sustained increase in agricultural prices was among the
    major contributors to poverty reduction, but a closer look at the
    price-support schemes reveals several inefficiencies which have
    reduced their effectiveness. Research suggests that the rice
    pledging scheme, although wellintentioned, was biased in favor of
    richer farmers (net rice sellers) and created hardship for the poor
    (net rice purchasers). The take-up has been found to favor large
    farms (Duangbootsee and Myers, 2014) and to not induce greater
    investments in farm modernization (Attavanich, 2016). According
    to TDRI, 63 percent of the funds spent on the pledging program
    went to merchants and millers, with the rest going to farmers.
    Only 5 percent of funds spent went to poor farmers. It has also
    47 Annex 2 breaks down this overall story further by shorter time periods, with
    analysis by region of Thailand. The annex also provides more details on the
    composition of incomes of different population groups.
    48 World Bank (2012c).
    worsened Thai competitiveness in world markets, leading to the
    accumulation of very large rice reserves which are still being
    cleared. The program’s ultimate fiscal cost is still unknown
    because it will depend on how much of the tons of rice
    which has accumulated in government warehouses in recent
    years can be sold and at what price. Thus, it appears that
    such schemes may actually be costly and inefficient ways of
    supporting the poor.
    ALTHOUGH SOCIAL PENSIONS SEEM TO HAVE HELPED REDUCE
    POVERTY AMONG ELDERLY-HEADED HOUSEHOLDS TO SOME
    EXTENT, A SIGNIFICANT PROPORTION OF BENEFITS HAVE ALSO
    BEEN GOING TO THE NON-POOR.
    Thailand has eight pension programs covering different segments
    of the elderly, including both formal sector pensions, which were
    introduced relatively late in the demographic transition and have
    very limited coverage, and a universal social pension under the
    Old Age Act for anyone age 60 and above who is not receiving a
    formal sector pension. Although the social pension level is modest
    (ranging from THB 600 per month for those ages 60-69 to THB
    1,000 for those age 90 and over), there are indications that the
    social pension has had an impact on reducing old age poverty,
    particularly in the informal sector. At the same time, because the
    social pension is universal, the majority of the benefits have been
    going to the non-poor.48 A more recent study has found relatively
    limited impacts on poverty for the majority of beneficiaries.49
    THAILAND HAS MADE GREAT STRIDES IN PROVIDING
    HOUSEHOLDS WITH BETTER PROTECTION AGAINST THE RISK
    OF FALLING ILL
    The most important step was the introduction of the Universal
    Health Coverage (UHC) scheme in 2001. The UHC scheme
    has provided free health care services to all Thai citizens in
    the informal sector as well as those who were not covered by
    existing publicly run health insurance schemes such as the
    Social Security Scheme and Civil Servant Medical Benefits
    Scheme. Under Thailand’s health schemes, 99.5 percent of the
    population have health protection coverage,50 and most Thais
    are financed by patient self-payment and private insurance.
    49 Badiani-Magnusson (forthcoming) as cited in World Bank (2016).
    50 World Bank. 2012d Thailand: Sustaining Health Protection for All.
    World Bank Thailand. Available at: http://www.worldbank.org/en/news/
    feature/2012/08/20/thailand-sustaining-health-protection-for-all

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    FIGURE
    47 :
    The actual/estimated number of households who were/would have been impoverished from
    health care costs-related expenditures fell after the introduction of UHC in 2001
    Source: Tangcharoensathien, Limwattananon, Patcharanarumol, and Thammatacharee (2014).
    THE UHC SCHEME HAS IMPLIED THAT FALLING ILL DOES NOT
    NECESSARILY MEAN BECOMING POOR.
    Out-of-pocket health expenditures fell from 42 percent in
    1996 to 11 percent in 2013. As a result, the incidence of
    catastrophic health expenditures has dropped from 6.8
    percent in 1996 to 2.8 percent in 2008 in the poorest quintile.
    Similarly, the incidence of impoverishment due to health care
    costs fell from 2.7 percent in 2000 to 0.49 percent in 2009.
    It is estimated that as many as 76,000 households avoided
    impoverishment due to health care costs in 2009 thanks to
    the UHC scheme (Figure 47).51 With costs taken out of the
    equation, the poor were able to access health services when
    they needed them: the number of outpatient visits per person
    per year increased from 2.5 in 2003 to 3.2 in 2010.
    THE MAIN WORRY ON THE HEALTH FRONT NOW IS HOW TO
    RESPOND TO GROWING COST PRESSURES.
    The success of UHC was underpinned by the Thai government’s
    ability to increase financing for UHC for the three publicly run
    health insurance schemes, which was possible thanks to
    economic growth and the prioritization of social sectors in
    government spending, reallocation from military and security
    budgets, and gained fiscal space from the declining need to
    service external debts. However, this enabling environment
    is no longer there as economic growth has faltered and
    reprioritization of government expenditure has reached its
    ceiling. The proportion of government health expenditures
    out of total government expenditures grew from 10 percent in
    2001 to 17 percent in 2013. For a number of reasons, costs
    continue to rise, with the government financing the lion’s
    share. The increases reflect the expansion of the breadth
    and depth of health coverage, increased utilization of health
    services, higher costs for each visit (associated with rising
    labor costs and other factors such as the introduction of
    more sophisticated medical devices and surgical procedures),
    rising prevalence of chronic non-communicable diseases,
    and the demographic transition to an aging society, which will
    result in greater demand for special and long-term care.
    51 Tangcharoensathien et al. (2014).

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    52 World Bank. 2012e. Teenage Pregnancy and Opportunities in Latin America
    and the Caribbean. On Teenage Fertility Decisions, Poverty and Economic
    Achievement. Washington, DC: World Bank.

    53 Busakorn
    54 C. Boonprasert (ed.): Violated lives, op. cit., p. 19 as cited in ILO 2014.
    DESPITE THE POSITIVE IMPACT OF UHC, LGBTI PEOPLE REMAIN
    VULNERABLE TO HEALTH RISKS
    ILO (2014) reports that some insurance companies refuse to
    sell insurance to LGBTI people and that LGBTI people are forced
    to pay higher premiums because their lifestyle is considered
    “high-risk,” with more vulnerability to contracting HIV (Suriyasarn
    2013)53 Moreover, insurance companies, which commonly allow
    non-married partners as beneficiaries in male-female couples
    only, do not issue life insurance policies with a same-sex partner
    as beneficiary because same-sex partners are not considered
    “natural heirs”—defined as blood relations or relations through
    marriage under Thai law.54 This leaves LGBTI people vulnerable
    to health and other risks.
    EFFORTS TO EXPAND FORMAL BORROWING—INCLUDING
    THROUGH THE VILLAGE FUND PROGRAM—MAY PERHAPS HAVE
    BEEN MORE SUCCESSFUL IN FACILITATING SHARED GROWTH IN
    THAILAND.
    Since 2001, formal borrowing has expanded rapidly while
    informal financing has decreased, giving low-income people
    better access to lower-cost and more reliable formal financing.
    Empirical evidence shows that the introduction of the Village Fund
    Program, a microfinance scheme promoted by the government
    in 2001, increased total short-term credit available at the village
    level while boosting agricultural investment, income growth,
    and consumption of borrowers (Kaboski and Townsend, 2012),
    and the effect on expenditure was stronger for lower-income
    quantiles (Boonperm et al., 2013). Additionally, the take-up of
    this type of credit has reduced individuals’ likelihood to migrate
    (Khun and Chamratrithirong, 2011; Poggi, 2015). Borrowing
    has been found to be the most relevant coping strategy for
    rural households to react to shocks (Tongruksawattana et al.,
    2013), and access to formal financial systems has helped in
    smoothing consumption in the face of income shocks (Kinnan
    and Townsend, 2012). The presence of village-level microfinance
    institutions such as women’s lending groups improved access
    to formal credit, reducing the likelihood of households becoming
    costumers of moneylenders (Kaboski and Townsend, 2005).
    LIMITED ACCESS TO HEALTH CARE FOR VULNERABLE GROUPS
    AND PEOPLE IN REMOTE AREAS AS WELL AS INCREASING
    NUMBERS OF TEEN PREGNANCIES ARE ANOTHER A GROWING
    CONCERN.
    Although UHC has increased women’s access to health care
    (especially for HIV/AIDS prevention, maternal care, and child
    care), women in rural and remote mountainous areas of the
    north as well as in the three southern conflict-affected provinces
    have limited access to health care. In addition, worrying trends
    are the increase in teen pregnancy rates and HIV infection
    among young pregnant women. In 2013, WHO reported that
    Thailand’s adolescent pregnancy rate ranked 5th among ASEAN
    countries (47 per 1,000 females ages 15-19). When individuals
    cannot realize their full educational and occupational potential,
    society loses their economic contributions. Teen pregnancy is
    also relevant from the point of view of development because
    it is a manifestation of lack of opportunity and because early
    motherhood can have implications in terms of continuing the
    poverty cycle between generations, social exclusion, and high
    social costs.52
    ANOTHER CONCERN ON THE HEALTH FRONT IS CONTINUED
    O R I N C R E A S E D H I V / A I D S P R E VA L E N C E A M O N G C E RTA I N
    GROUPS.
    According to the 2010 and 2012 UNAIDS reports, Thailand’s
    surveillance data showed an increase in the level of HIV/AIDS
    infection among pregnant women aged 20-24. HIV/AIDS is also a
    critical challenge for the LGBTI community in Thailand, especially
    among MSM and transgender women who are a particularly
    vulnerable population in HIV transmission. Considering the
    marginalized or hidden nature of this group in some societies,
    services for HIV/AIDS prevention or treatment may not be
    provided or may be inadequately resourced. Although HIV
    prevalence among men having sex with men (MSM) declined
    from 16.0 percent in 2010 to 12.2 percent in 2012, it remains
    significantly higher than in most groups of FSW and the general
    population. In addition, a new higher risk group is non-venue-
    based female sex workers who have higher HIV prevalence.
    These non-venue-based female sex workers are outside the
    formal HIV prevention program.

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    WHILE ACCESS TO FORMAL CREDIT HAS LIKELY HELPED THE
    POOR AND BOTTOM 40 PERCENT BY PROVIDING ACCESS TO
    CHEAPER AND MORE RELIABLE CREDIT, IT HAS ALSO BROUGHT
    A NEW RISK : THE RISK OF INDEBTEDNESS.
    Currently at 83 percent of GDP, Thailand’s household debt
    level is among the highest in the region and is well above
    average for a country in the upper-middle income range. At
    the household level, the high level of indebtedness among
    low-income households is particularly worrying. The debt-
    servicing ratio (DSR) for households in the first income
    quintile is almost 50 percent. Policymakers and keen
    observers have often cited the household debt situation as
    a cause for concern for macroeconomic stability, and some
    have tried to draw a correlation between household debt
    and the economic slowdown although those associations
    have largely been judgment calls.55
    THUS, DESPITE RECENT EFFORTS, THE POOR AND THE BOTTOM
    40 PERCENT REMAIN VULNERABLE TO OTHER RISKS
    While UHC reduces the direct costs associated with
    seeking care, having a household member fall ill can still
    be a major shock. The opportunity costs of caring for sick
    family members can be high, and oftentimes it is women
    who bear more of the burden. Similarly, the death of a family
    member and the high funeral expenses can also be a major
    shock for a household. Given the limited development of the
    insurance system, millions of farmers are impoverished by
    droughts every year, particularly those in the Northeast who
    are more prone to such disasters and at the same time have
    less ability to cope.
    CHALLENGES REMAIN IN TERMS OF SOCIAL
    INCLUSION
    ALTHOUGH SIGNIFICANT PROGRESS HAS BEEN MADE IN
    FOSTERING INCLUSIVE GROWTH, SOCIAL EXCLUSION
    CONTINUES TO AFFECT WOMEN, LGBTI, AND OTHER GROUPS
    IN THAI SOCIETY.
    While the earlier section highlighted some of the inequities
    facing women, LGBTI, and other groups in terms of
    employment and health, these groups also face social
    exclusion that is manifested in their legal status and in
    violence against them. Such discrimination marginalizes a
    significant proportion of the population, not only hurting the
    affected individuals but also undermining the inclusiveness
    of growth. Box 6 provides an examination of issues facing
    LGBTI people in Thailand, provides context on the legal and
    institutional framework, and offers pathways forward.
    55 See Muthitacharoen, Nuntramas, Chotewattanakul (October 2014): Rising
    Household Debt: Implications for Economic Stability

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    In recent years, Thailand has been advancing toward inclusion of LGBTI people. Legal and institutional
    progress started with the decriminalization of homosexuality in 1956. The 2007 Constitution prohibits
    discrimination based on sexual orientation, in addition to labour standards which specifically prohibit
    discrimination based on sexual orientation. Sexual orientation and gender identity (SOGI) are specifically
    protected statuses in the Gender Equality Act of 2015. Some legal protections also exist for transgender
    individuals, like the ability to change their sex assigned at birth on official documents and the legality of
    gender-confirming surgeries.
    However, significant challenges remain to achieve full inclusion of LGBTI groups in practice. During
    consultations with LGBTI civil society organizations for a World Bank research project, participants
    mentioned that there is still significant stigma and exclusion of LGBTI people in society, school, and
    in the family. In the 2010-2014 World Values Survey, only 2.4 percent of Thai respondents believed
    homosexuality was “always justifiable,” only slightly above the average for the sample of countries
    surveyed. This stigma has implications on an LGBTI person’s ability to access markets, services, and
    spaces.
    In the labor market, employment discrimination and workplace exclusion affect the type of employment
    LGBTI people obtain as well as the compensation they receive—thus limiting overall labor productivity. The
    ILO finds that jobs in the public sector are the least tolerant to LGBTI people, and as a result of repeated
    rejections and a hostile work environment they often opt out of formal jobs in large organizations and
    seek employment in non-government organizations or the informal sector—notably sex work. Participants
    during World Bank consultations mentioned that their current job in civil society organizations is one
    of the few professional opportunities that had been afforded to them throughout their adult life. Maya
    mentioned that as a transgender woman it has been very hard for her to find jobs within her field of
    expertise.
    Stigma also limits their access to education and healthcare. In a study of 2,070 students, as high as 56
    percent of LGBTI respondents reported being bullied within the past month due to their SOGI (UNESCO,
    2014). This violence hampers the development of their human capital, and thus limits their future
    employment prospects and even perpetrates a cycle of poverty. Finally, LGBTI people experience many
    obstacles when accessing appropriate healthcare coverage as well as services. In fact, some insurance
    companies refuse to sell insurance to LGBTI people or require them to pay higher premiums—under the
    guise that their lifestyle is considered “high-risk” (Suriyasarn, 2014). For transgender individuals, the
    services needed for gender-confirming surgeries are inadequate and often lead some of them to self-
    medicate in harmful ways.
    BOX
    6 :
    Inclusion of LGBTI people in Thailand’s development: progress, challenges, and
    steps ahead

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    Stigma also fuels the rampant violence committed against LGBTI people. In a survey of 868 LGBT Thai
    respondents, 27 percent experienced violence in their families due to their SOGI. Other research shows
    that, in Pattaya, as high as 89 percent of transgender women reported an experience of violence due
    to their gender identity and expression (Policy Research and Development Institute Foundation 2008).
    The ILO, UNDP, UNESCO, bilateral aid agencies, and recently the World Bank are pursuing data collection
    efforts on LGBTI people in an attempt to fill significant knowledge gaps which limit progress on the policy
    level. In fact, the bulk of data on LGBTI issues in Thailand is qualitative in nature and based on interviews
    and consultation with the communities, and biased toward those living in cities. The true extent of
    economic development outcomes—from housing to education to health care—are largely unknown,
    and the impact of discrimination and violence on socioeconomic status and essential assets is largely
    unexamined.
    In Thailand, the ILO “PRIDE” campaign is addressing this knowledge gap by measuring SOGI-based
    discrimination in the workplace. SIDA, USAID and UNDP launched “Being LGBTI in Asia”, a regional
    campaign to undertake numerous consultations and literature reviews (Phase 1) in support of the
    rights of LGBTI people. Currently, Phase 2 is working with community-based organizations and national
    human rights institutions to increase their capacity, as well as support sensitization of lawmakers and
    governments. UNESCO and UNDP committed to combat homophobic/transphobic bullying in schools—
    with a focus on teacher sensitivity, awareness-raising, peer support and counselling—to support the
    “Education and Respect for All: Preventing and Addressing Homophobic and Transphobic Bullying in
    Educational Institutions” program. Finally, USAID supports LGBTI organizations by funding programs to
    increase their visibility and empowerment.
    ALTHOUGH THE GENDER EQUALITY ACT PROMULGATED IN
    2015 WAS A LANDMARK ACHIEVEMENT FOR THAILAND, THAI
    LAW FALLS SHORT ON A NUMBER OF DIMENSIONS RELATED
    TO EQUALITY AND NONDISCRIMINATION.
    The Gender Equality Act was significant in promoting
    gender56 equality and recognizing sexual orientation
    and gender identity as important factors for the overall
    development of the country. Along with this law, a gender
    equality fund was established as well as committees to
    promote public awareness and to eliminate all forms of
    56 Gender refers to the social attributes and opportunities associated with being male and female. It encompasses the relationships between women and men and girls
    and boys, as well as the relations between women and those between men (UNDP 2008). Ideals about the appropriate attitudes and behaviors for men and women are
    learned, socially constructed norms that vary across local contexts and interact with socio-cultural factors, including class, race, poverty level, ethnic group, and age
    (Connell 2008). At a local level, and a broad societal level, the situations in which men’s and women’s roles are formed vary and change over time (Kimmel, Connell
    2000). Sources: UNDP. 2008. Gender Equality Strategy 2008-2011. New York: United Nations Development Programme; Connell, R. 2000. Men and the Boys. Berkeley:
    University of California Press; Kimmel, M. 2000. The Gendered Society. New York: Oxford University Press; Connell, R. 2000. Men and the Boys. Berkeley: University of
    California Press; Kimmel, M. 2000. The Gendered Society. New York: Oxford University Press.
    discrimination. However, the Gender Equality Act contains
    no provisions to promote and protect equal opportunity
    and gender equality and gives no clear mention of sexual
    or gender-based violence and sexual harassment (Sriyai,
    2012) Furthermore, the exception clause in the Bill is
    inconsistent with equality and non-discrimination principles
    and not in compliance with international treaties to which
    Thailand is a party, in particular the CEDAW (Suriyasarn,
    2014).

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    FIGURE
    48 :
    While progress has been made in some gender dimensions, Thailand has
    exceptionally few women in politics and leadership positions
    Source: The Global Gender Gap
    Report 2015, World Economic
    Forum.
    57 For more information please see: https://micssurveysprod.s3.amazonaws.
    com/MICS4/East%20Asia%20and%20the%20Pacific/Thailand/20122013/
    Summary/Thailand%202012%20MICS%20Summary_English
    58 The poll was conducted during 15-16 May 2013 with 1,252 respondents
    representing. Thais in all education levels and a wide range of occupations from
    all regions of Thailand (S.E. <1.4). The reasons for acceptance among the 88.49 percent include: “LGBTs are no burden to others,” “[sexuality does not matter] as long as they are good persons,” “LGBT people are capable,” “Thai society is more accepting now.” The 8.79 per cent that do not accept LGBT persons say “[diverse sexuality is] unnatural,” and “LGBTs create a negative image for the organization.” IN TERMS OF GENDER INEQUALITIES, IN ADDITION TO THE LOW FEMALE LABOR PARTICIPATION RATES DISCUSSED EARLIER, ANOTHER PRESSING GAP IS THE SCARCITY OF WOMEN IN LEADERSHIP POSITIONS. A major gap can be seen in “political empowerment”: Thailand has exceptionally few women in politics and leadership positions (Figure 48). SOCIAL ACCEPTANCE OF VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN AND GIRLS (VAWG) IS HIGH, SUGGESTING A RIGID DICHOTOMY OF MASCULINITY AND FEMININITY AND MALE-FEMALE GENDER ROLES. According to the Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey (2012), around 13 percent of 21,981 women ages 15-49 feel that their husband/partner has a right to hit or beat them for at least one of a variety of reasons, with 11 percent of women agreeing with and justifying violence in instances where they neglect their children.57 A study by UN WOMEN (2012) with 574 15-18 year olds across four provinces in Thailand revealed that although close to 100 percent of respondents said that they find it unacceptable for a man to perpetrate VAWG, they also expressed the view that violence is acceptable if the woman has done something wrong such as having an affair, and they were simultaneously inclined to hold the female victim responsible for the event (UN Women 2012). A SIMILAR DICHOTOMY CAN BE SEEN IN THE CASE OF LGBTI INDIVIDUALS. Although a recent national poll with 1,252 respondents nationwide (NIDA 2013) indicated a high level of acceptance of LGBTI persons in the larger Thai society, almost 9 percent of all respondents did not accept LGBTI friends and colleagues in the same workplace, and 17 percent did not accept them in the family.58 Thailand Systematic Country Diagnostic 89 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps INCLUSION AND POVERTY LACK OF LEGAL RECOGNITION FOR TRANSGENDER IDENTITY AND SAME-SEX PARTNERSHIP AND LACK OF CONSTITUTIONAL LAW ON ANTI-DISCRIMINATION BASED ON SEXUAL ORIENTATION OR GENDER IDENTITY HAVE NEGATIVE IMPACTS ON THE COUNTRY’S DEVELOPMENT. LGBTI Thais face major barriers to many social and economic opportunities throughout their lives, leaving them deprived of chances to advance in education, employment, and other areas of life. On a macro level, global data shows a correlation between the enactment of rights for LGBTI people, a rise in GDP per capita, and higher levels on the Human Development Index (HDI). A study that examined 39 countries including Thailand revealed a clear positive correlation between per capita GDP and legal rights for LGBTI people: the simplest correlation shows that one additional right is associated with USD 1,400 more in per capita GDP and with a higher HDI value (Williams, 2014).59 A SIGNIFICANT PROPORTION OF LGBTI INDIVIDUALS ARE VICTIMS OF VIOLENCE. A 2012-2013 survey involving 868 LGBT respondents from eight provinces in four regions of Thailand revealed that 27 percent experienced violence based on their sexual orientation and gender identity in the family (Samakkikarom, 2013).60 Between January 2008 and December 2014, the Trans Murder Monitoring Project identified 1,731 killings of transgender people in 62 countries, including 14 in Thailand, which ranked 4th in Asia. 61 In a research conducted by the Policy Research and Development Institute Foundation (2008), in Pattaya, 89 percent of transgender women reported experiencing violence as a result of their gender identity and/ or behaviour (Policy Research and Development Institute Foundation 2008). 59 Correlation between per capita GDP and legal rights for LGBTI people was measured by the Global Index on Legal Recognition of Homosexual Orientation (GILHRO) and the Transgender Rights Index (TRI). 60 With the highest percentage (38.4%) among MTF transgender persons, followed by gay men (13.8%), toms and transmen (12.7%), feminine lesbians (11.5%), bisexual women (5.6%), and bisexual men (5.4%). Ronnaphoom Samakkikarom and Jetsada Taesombat, Partnership and Making Family for LGBT: Meaning, Needs and Violence, research presentation at Thammasat University, 19 June 2013. The research project was supported by the Foundation for SOGI Rights and Justice and Teeranat Kanjanauksorn Foundation, and funded by the Thai Health Promotion Foundation. 61 Updated May 2015, The highest numbers of murders recorded since January 2008 were in India (48), the Philippines (35), Pakistan (22). Available at: www.transrespect-transphobia.org/en_US/tvt-project/tmm-results/idahot-2015.htm VIOLENCE AGAINST LGBTI STUDENTS IN SCHOOLS IS A SERIOUS PROBLEM WHICH AFFECTS THEIR EQUAL ENJOYMENT OF HIGH- QUALITY EDUCATION Persistent stigma, marginalization, discrimination, and violence against LGBTI people in education obstructs the path to gaining skills and competencies to secure a better future, hampers their future employment prospects, and perpetrates the cycle of poverty. ILO (2013) reports gender-based harassment and violence against LGBTI people in school, including serious physical and sexual violence and rape of LGBTI individuals perpetrated by students as well as teachers (Suriyasarn 2013). Research (UNESCO, 2014) with 2,070 students found homophobic/transphobic bullying to be pervasive and endemic in schools: 56 percent of LGBTI respondents reported being bullied within the past month due to their sexual orientation/gender identity.. Being bullied for these reasons was linked with higher rates of alcohol consumption, unprotected sex, absenteeism, and suicide attempts among LGBTI students (UNESCO, 2014). These findings also suggest that depression is likely to affect a higher proportion of LGBTI people than non-LGBTI people, especially those who face anti-LGBTI stigma and victimization, parental rejection, and/or feel they have to conceal their LGBTI identity (Ojanen, 2016). Getting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All SUSTAINABILITY SUSTAINABILITY Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps Thailand Systematic Country Diagnostic 91 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps SUSTAINABILITY BASED ON THE ANALYSIS PRESENTED ABOVE, A NUMBER OF RISKS TO THAILAND’S ABILITY TO GENERATE INCLUSIVE, SUSTAINABLE GROWTH FOR THE FUTURE HAVE BEEN IDENTIFIED. In par ticular, this section highlights four such risks: (i) failure to restar t the “structural transformation” engine to drive productivit y grow th and fur ther pover t y reduction, (ii) a rapid decline in the working- age population, (iii) continued social and political instabilit y stemming from widening regional gaps and the lack of a modern social safet y net system, and (iv) a worsening environmental situation. RESTARTING THE “STRUCTURAL TRANSFORMATION” ENGINE WILL BE KEY FOR PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH AND FURTHER POVERTY REDUCTION LOOKING AHEAD, WITH AGRICULTURAL PRICES SET TO REMAIN LOW, THEY WILL NOT BE THE MAIN ENGINE OF POVERTY REDUCTION IN THAILAND. As discussed earlier, the 70 percent real increase in agricultural prices was the locomotive behind Thailand’s rapid poverty reduction since 2002. Rising agricultural income in recent years mainly reflected a real increase in agricultural prices and not productivity increases in agriculture. However, since 2011, prices have fallen by 22 percent. Moreover, most forecasters expect agricultural prices to remain broadly flat between now and 2021 (Figure 49). As agricultural prices fall back to lower levels, growth could become less inclusive, with negative impacts on the rural poor. HOW SUSTAINABLE IS THAILAND’S “ECONOMIC MODEL” AND WHAT ARE THE RISKS ON THE HORIZON? 60 Graph shows: World Agricultural Commodity Price Index, constant 2005 USD converted into an index with 2002=100 FIGURE 49 : Agricultural prices have dropped by 22 percent since their peak and are not expected to increase much in the future 60 Source: World Bank Commodity Outlook Getting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All92 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps SUSTAINABILITY FIGURE 50 : Poverty rates in the Deep South dropped as rubber prices boomed Source: World Bank calculations based on SES and World Bank Commodity Outlook THE LOW AGRICULTURAL PRICES MAY SLOW THE PATH TO SHARED PROSPERITY, ESPECIALLY FOR HOUSEHOLDS HIGHLY DEPENDENT ON AGRICULTURE. Areas more exposed to variability in cash-crop prices such as the Deep South have seen their poverty rates fall while agricultural commodity prices were booming (as shown in Figure 50 plotting the growth in rubber export prices and the poverty rate in the area). Analysis conducted for this report suggests that between 2011 and 2014, reduced prices increased the likelihood of being poor for households involved in agriculture. As prices are forecasted to remain at low levels in the near future, new incentives are needed to raise farm incomes and keep lifting individuals engaged in agriculture out of poverty. SEVERAL FACTORS COULD IMPEDE SUCH STRUCTURAL TRANSFORMATION. First, failure of the economy to generate more productive farm and off-farm jobs that boost labor demand will keep workers in low-productivity agricultural subsectors. Second, structural transformation could be hampered by failure of the economy to improve human capital, because even if more jobs are generated, if they require skills that agriculture workers do not have, those workers will be unable to take up those jobs. Third, inefficient water management arrangements and the continued bias of water use for paddy pose risks to sustained agricultural growth. Fourth, policies such as rice and rubber support programs may make it attractive to stay in agriculture due to relatively high rewards, even if productivity is low. Thailand Systematic Country Diagnostic 93 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps SUSTAINABILITY FIGURE 51 : Projected total population by age groups (0-14, 15-64 and 65+) Source: United Nations Population Projection (2015 Revision). FUTURE GROWTH WILL DEPEND ON THAILAND’S ABILITY TO RE-IGNITE THE MOVEMENT OF WORKERS FROM LOW- PRODUCTIVITY TO HIGHER-PRODUCTIVITY ACTIVITIES (BOTH ACROSS AND WITHIN SECTORS), CREATING MORE AND BETTER JOBS. As mentioned above, the movement of labor from lowto high-productivity sectors has been a key driver of overall productivity improvements in Thailand (and in many East Asian countries). Thailand still has approximately 15 million workers left in the agriculture sector (approximately 27-41 percent of the workforce),63 and unless it manages to restart the engine of structural transformation and help workers attain better employment opportunities (by increasing productivity in both the agricultural and non-farm sectors), Thailand is likely to face growth well short of the draft 12th National Economic and Social Development Plan’s target 5 percent growth per year during 2017-2021. THAILAND WILL LIKELY GROW OLD BEFORE IT BECOMES RICH THAILAND FACES ONE OF THE WORLD’S SHARPEST DEMOGRAPHIC TRANSITIONS IN THE COMING 30 YEARS, WHICH WILL LIKELY AFFECT ITS ABILITY TO GENERATE GROWTH AND CREATE SHARED PROSPERITY. Specifically, Thailand’s working-age population will shrink by approximately 10 million (from 48.8 million in 2016 to 37.9 million in 2045, Figure 51) while the number of elderly people (age 65 and older) will increase by about 10 million (from 7.1 million in 2015 to 18.3 million in 2045). Only nine other economies in the world will experience a faster decline in the working-age population (relative to their total population) in the coming 30 years, but all of those countries are starting this transition at substantially higher income levels.64 By 2040, elderly people will account for more than onequarter of Thailand’s total population—the highest share of elderly of any developing country in East Asia and the Pacific.65 63 This range reflects the different ways in which agricultural workers can be counted (see earlier discussion). 64 These are: Republic of Korea; Hong Kong SAR, China; Singapore; Spain; Cuba; Italy; Macao SAR, China; Slovenia, and Portugal. 65 World Bank (2016). Getting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All94 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps SUSTAINABILITY THERE ARE SEVERAL REASONS WHY AGING WILL PRESENT HEADWIND TO GENERATING INCLUSIVE GROWTH. First, from a growth perspective, Thailand’s economy will have to work harder for each percentage point of growth. That is, future growth will increasingly have to come from improvements to labor productivity growth. Second, a rapidly aging population will present fiscal challenges, both in terms of rising healthcare expenditure and pension commitments. As discussed in World Bank (2016), although formal sector pensions are quite affordable currently due to their immaturity, poor parametric design—a combination of low contribution rates, a defined benefit design, and a low retirement age relative to life expectancy at retirement—is likely to make formal sector pensions unsustainable over time. Those fiscal pressures will make it harder to mobilize resources for the type of transformational investments that Thailand needs to increase growth. Finally, a rapidly aging population will likely result in more poor and vulnerable people—especially in the already poor Northeast where old age dependency rates are particularly high, which will further widen regional disparities. LAGGING REGIONS FALLING FURTHER BEHIND, AND A DATED SAFETY NET REPRESENTS GROWING RISKS TO SOCIAL COHESION (AND POLITICAL STABILITY) THAILAND’S LAGGING REGIONS PRESENT RISKS TO SOCIAL COHESION AND POLITICAL STABILITY. The tensions in Thai society - that culminated with the coups in 2006 and again in 2014 - reflect a deeply divided society. These divisions, in part, reflect growing regional disparities. The lagging regions are falling further behind. Empowered by more education, by broader horizons gained from labor migration, and supported by a strong and vocal network of civil society organizations, people from these lagging regions have become a far more potent force in Thailand than in the past. They can point to their regions falling further behind; and to a system of government that is Bangkok-centric - in terms of both the centralization of decision-making power; as well as the distribution of budgetary resources. Unless more efforts and resources are directed to narrowing Thailand's regional gaps, the underlying tensions will likely persist or worsen, fuelling discontent and political divisiveness. THIS RISK OF DIVERSENESS IS FURTHER HEIGHTENED BECAUSE THAILAND LACKS A MODERN SOCIAL PROTECTION SYSTEM THAT COULD HELP MITIGATE SOME OF THE VULNERABILITIES FELT BY POOR PEOPLE. Thailand has a handful of social protection programs aimed at supporting vulnerable groups and individuals, but these programs are fragmented, with no assessment of the overall support reaching households. As a consequence, assistance is thinly distributed, with limited impact on those who need it most. Another striking feature is the lack of a poverty or needs-based floor benefit/transfer for the poor, which is very unusual globally for a country of Thailand’s income level. Thailand is a laggard in never having had a needs-based approach to social protection across the whole population. Thailand Systematic Country Diagnostic 95 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps SUSTAINABILITY ENVIRONMENTAL AND NATURAL RESOURCE DEGRADATION AND VULNERABILITY TO NATURAL DISASTERS AND CLIMATE CHANGE MAY MAKE GROWTH UNSUSTAINABLE NATURAL CAPITAL CONSTITUTES A SIGNIFICANT SHARE OF THAILAND’S WEALTH. In 2005, natural capital—defined as the sum of crop land, pasture land, timber, non-timber forest, protected areas, oil, natural gas, coal, and minerals—comprised 21 percent of Thailand’s per capita total wealth, similar to other EAP countries (where the average contribution was 22 percent) but higher than its structural peers (where it was 11 percent) (Figure 52). This share would have been even higher if the tourism and recreation value of coastal resources had been estimated and incorporated. 66 Alesina and Perotti (1996), as cited in Ferreira (1999). 67 Rodrik (1997), as cited in Ferreira (1999). THE GROWING MIDDLE CLASS, POCKETS OF PERSISTENT POVERTY, AND REGULAR POVERTYINDUCING SHOCKS COULD MAKE IT DIFFICULT FOR THE CURRENT SOCIAL PROTECTION SYSTEM TO MEET THE ASPIRATIONS OF EACH GROUP. The poor are in need of targeted support through social assistance to address fundamental challenges in health, income generation, and risk management, but the current system only addresses their health and old-age challenges. The absence of holistic support to the “missing demographic middle” limits their productive capacity and their permanent pathway out of poverty. An equal number of non-poor are vulnerable to falling into poverty due to a combination of frequent economic shocks and no systematic (or appropriately funded) insurance or relief programs, with negative consequences for their productive capacity and, potentially, social stability. Finally, as seen in many countries, a rising middle class demands a state that provides quality social support, but only 28 percent of the active labor force was covered by formal sector pensions in 2014. INTERNATIONAL EVIDENCE SHOWS THAT SUCH UNMET ASPIRATIONS AND INEQUALITY CAN LEAD TO SOCIAL CONFLICT, POSING A THREAT TO ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL STABILITY. Strong evidence indicates that political instability generally stems from perceived and actual inequalities. Using one of the six dimensions in the Worldwide Governance Indicators (WGI) project (Kaufmann et al., 2010), Ortiz and Cummins (2011) find that unequal societies are much more prone to being destabilized or overthrown by unconstitutional or forceful means. Such conflict can in turn affect economic performance in numerous ways. For example, increasing political instability and unrest can have a negative impact on investment levels,66 or it can hamper the ability of political systems to respond to external shocks effectively.67 percent but could also help reduce inequalities and ultimately help heal the political divisions that have undermined the ability of the political system to address Thailand’s loss of competitiveness. Getting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All96 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps SUSTAINABILITY HOWEVER, GROWTH HAS BEEN DEPLETING NATURAL RESOURCES AVAILABLE FOR FUTURE GENERATIONS. As Figure 53 indicates, fueled by more rapid exploitation of available energy resources, the rate of natural resource depletion started to rise rapidly since 2002 and now stands at 4.4 percent of GNI. While this is around the average for EAP and upper-middle-income countries, it is almost double Thailand’s natural resource depletion rate in 2002 and three times the rate in the 1980s. Four targets were set for the MDG goal of ensuring environmental sustainability. Thailand has achieved the goal of halving the proportion of people who lack access to safe drinking water and basic sanitation and is likely to achieve the goal of significantly improving the lives of slum dwellers. However, the chance of achieving the other two targets—of reducing biodiversity loss and integrating sustainable development into national policies—is rated only “potentially” (UNDP, 2014b). FIGURE 52 : Composition of total wealth per capita in 2005 (2005USD) Source: Author’s calculations based on http://data.worldbank.org/data-catalog/wealth-of-nations Note: Non-natural capital is the sum of the value of net foreign assets, produced capital and intangible capital; intangible capital is the difference between total wealth and tangible capital, both produced and natural. Thailand Systematic Country Diagnostic 97 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps SUSTAINABILITY FIGURE 53 : Natural resource depletion in Thailand and select other countries (total natural resource depletion, in % of GNI) Source: World Development Indicators. NATURAL FORESTS AND COASTAL AND MARINE RESOURCES ARE BEING DEPLETED, PUTTING FUTURE ECONOMIC GROWTH AT RISK. Forest areas have declined steadily, falling from 171 million rai in 1961 to 107.6 million rai in 2009. Key here is the loss of natural forests, caused mainly by illegal logging and smuggling into neighboring countries. Other drivers of forest loss include land development for tourism and real estate, weak enforcement of the land titling regime, agricultural clearing, forest fires (often set by villagers to clear land for farming), hydroelectric projects, and illegal wildlife trading. Natural forest depletion means loss of the large variety of ecosystem ser vices they provide, including but not limited to providing a habitat for Thailand’s globally significant biodiversity and watershed protection. Marine and coastal resources continue to deteriorate due to coastal erosion, illegal logging, ocean waste, conversion to intensive shrimp farming, and illegal and destructive fishing. Yet, Thailand’s ability to attract 30+ million visitors annually (providing 12 percent of annual GDP) hinges on its ability to conser ve its beautiful coastal areas and coral reefs. Destruction of mangroves and coral reefs also reduce the coasts’ resilience to storm surges and sea level rise. ALTHOUGH THAILAND HAS ABUNDANT WATER RESOURCES, PRODUCTIVE GROWTH IS LIMITED BY INADEQUATE WATER ALLOCATIONS/RIGHTS AND FLOOD AND DROUGHT RISK MANAGEMENT. Thailand has an estimated exploitable volume of 126 billion cubic meters (m3)/annum against the reported national demand of 50–56 billion m3/annum (excluding navigation and ecosystem requirements) (ADB, 2013). Agriculture is the largest user of water, accounting for about two-thirds of Upper middle income Getting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All98 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps SUSTAINABILITY total water use, followed by water for human consumption, ecology, and industries. The amount of water used by agriculture increased by 37 percent between 2001 and 2009, and the demand for water from agriculture continues to rise (Poapongsakorn, 2013). However, no National Water Law or any formal system of water allocation and rights exists. Water resource management (WRM) institutions are fragmented, with responsibility spread across 30 departments in 8 ministries, so existing water policies, legislation, and guidelines have also been formulated in a disjointed fashion. In 2002, the Department of Water Resources (DWR) was established in the Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources as a regulator and to provide limited support to integrated WRM and operation of the 25+ river basin committees (RBCs), but RBCs still do not have legal standing. Furthermore, limited information exists to support water allocation decisions. Finally, while water resources investments are significant, operation of the infrastructure is not always efficient. AIR AND WATER QUALITY HAS GENERALLY IMPROVED BUT REMAINS LOW, ESPECIALLY IN URBAN AREAS. The air pollution problem is largely due to energy combustion from vehicles and factories. Despite a steady decline over the last decade, small particle and ground- level ozone concentrations in large cities remain the key concern. Particulate matter 10 and 2.5 per m3 levels in Bangkok still exceeded WHO air quality guidelines and national standards. In addition, volatile organic compounds continue to exceed the national standard around the Map Ta Put industrial estate. The smog problem in northern Thailand, due to burning of crop residues after harvest season, is another key cause of air pollution. Water quality in the national internal water bodies is improving and close to reaching the national target of 80 percent at or better than acceptable standards, but it is worse in central Thailand and around Bangkok due to discharges from households, contamination from agricultural production and livestock, commercial and industrial activities near the water resources, and direct discharges of wastewater into the rivers. Solid and hazardous waste generation may be on the decline, but the fact that nearly 50 percent of solid waste generated is disposed of through open burning and dumping in the environment is a major cause of concern. INADEQUATE PUBLIC CONSULTATIONS ON LARGE-SCALE PUBLIC INVESTMENTS THREATEN THE SUSTAINABILITY OF SUCH INVESTMENTS. Thailand has sophisticated public institutions for environmental management and well-developed regulations and procedures for assessing the environmental and health impacts of public and private investments. However, limited public consultations and information sharing on plans regarding large public investment projects, as well as inadequate monitoring and enforcement of environmental management plans, remain weak links toward sustainability. In addition, the cumulative impacts of multiple developments in the same general area are not always captured in individual environmental impact assessments. It was recently proposed that a Strategic Environmental Assessment (SEA) be adopted for national planning and policies and sectoral plans to evaluate options for development. However, there is still no regulatory requirement to conduct an SEA. Thailand Systematic Country Diagnostic 99 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps SUSTAINABILITY In 2011, the Chao Phraya river, fed in wide, low-lying plains and discharging into the former floodplains in Bangkok, experienced the most severe flooding ever recorded due to intense and particularly long rains (Komori, et al., 2012). The floods affected more than 13 million people, resulted in more than 680 deaths, and brought estimated damage and losses worth THB 1.43 trillion (USD 46.5 billion) to the economy (World Bank, 2012b). About 19,000 homes were destroyed (World Bank, 2011) and 2.5 million people displaced (Haraguchi & Lall, 2015). Although Thailand’s agricultural GDP rose by 0.7 percent in 2011, production decreased by 10.1 percent in the non-agricultural sector, and manufacturing decreased by 21.8 percent (Okazumi & Nakasu, 2015). The 2011 floods hit supply chains in electronics and car manufacturing not only in Thailand but also in Japan and other countries that depend on Thai suppliers for parts. Before the floods, Thailand had a 43 percent share in global hard disk drive production before the floods; in late 2011, its production dropped by more than 80 percent due to facility and supply chain disruptions, leading to a 30-percent global production decrease in the six months after the floods and causing a price spike between 50 percent and 100 percent (Haraguchi & Lall, 2015; Japanese Ministry of Economy, 2011). This experience led some Japanese companies to reconsider Thailand for investments or as a source for procuring parts (Haraguchi & Lall, 2015). BOX 7 : An Example of Thailand’s Vulnerability to Climate Risks: the 2011 Flood CLIMATE CHANGE AND VULNERABILITIES ARE RISKS TO FUTURE GROWTH AND SHARED PROSPERITY. The latest IPCC report confirms that Southeast Asia will be among the two most vulnerable regions in the world. The Thai meteorological department has already reported that the annual mean temperature rose by one degree Celsius from 1981 to 2007, and precipitation has suffered an overall decrease over the last fifty years. Climate change projections include increased flooding risks during the wet season—affecting agricultural lands along the Mekong River and its tributaries—and more severe water shortages in the dry season. If Thailand is unprepared, these changes can potentially negate any gains that might be made in agricultural productivity. Thailand is also likely to be affected by sea-level rise: sea levels are rising globally (having already risen approximately 12–22 cm during the last century), and as a low-lying country with its capital close to the ocean, Thailand is extremely vulnerable. Saline intrusion from the sea has already contaminated some underground water sources, and higher salt levels in the soil from coastal flooding—which will intensify with rising sea levels and could hit Bangkok and central Thailand the hardest—could make soils in Thai coastal farms even less productive. As described in Box 7, the 2011 flood, Thailand’s costliest disaster, illustrates the country’s vulnerability to climate risks. The inter-regional disparities in poverty rates and also the stalled transition for poorer households out of agricultural employment could further intensify since climate change often disproportionately affects the poorest communities, particularly for regions where more households are dependent on natural resources. Getting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All10 0 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps SUSTAINABILITY SCENARIO ANALYSES SHOW THAT THAILAND IS MODERATELY VULNERABLE TO CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACTS BY 2030, BUT THE BOTTOM 40 AND THE POOR WILL BE HIT THE HARDEST. In the high-impact high-vulnerability scenario, total GNI losses are estimated to be around 2.5 percent of GNI. The bottom 40 percent is affected more than the average population, with income reduced by over 4.5 percent in the same scenario. The impact on poverty is also large, with about 1 million more people with an income below USD 4 per day due to climate change (this represents more than 1.2 percent of Thailand’s population in 2030). Disaggregating the impacts, the largest effect of climate change is through food prices and the impact on food consumers. However, in the optimistic scenario with rapid and inclusive development, the impacts of climate change on poverty are much reduced and are close to zero. The reason for this is that there are much fewer people in poverty under the prosperity scenario (less than one million). These results show the potential and importance of development to reduce climate change impacts on poverty. THAILAND’S GROWTH HAS BEEN HIGHLY ENERGY-INTENSIVE AND RELIED ON OIL AND GAS, WHICH IS NOT SUSTAINABLE. Thailand’s proven oil and gas reserves are running low, which calls for looking 90 toward alternative sources, including increasing energy imports in the coming years to supplement domestic energy production. On the domestic front, Thailand’s Power Development Plan (PDP) for 2015- 2036 proposes to build 7,390 MW of coal-fired power plants and 2,000 MW of nuclear, which raised strong environmental and social concerns. Moreover, as plans for increasing Thailand’s energy capacity will rely to some extent on additional electricity imports from Lao PDR (and potentially Myanmar), the development of power projects to serve Thailand’s domestic demand will have social and environmental implications beyond the Thai border. The flood exposed the vulnerability of the population and limitations in the government’s ability to help affected people. Analysis of household survey data by Noy and Platel (2014) found that households who reported being affected by the flood saw a negative impact on their income. The estimated average decrease in income was about THB 7,600 per person for directly impacted households. Households that were not directly impacted (but lived in affected districts) suffered an almost equivalent decrease in income of about THB 6,700 per person. These impacts translate into changes in consumption, with more expenditure in housing (to rebuild) and less in luxury goods. The poorest quartile of the population sustained an average income loss of about THB 13,000 per person, of which about 70 percent was loss in agricultural income. Data also suggest that Government post-disaster assistance, which averaged THB 100 per person, was not only inadequate but also skewed toward the rich, with the richest quartile receiving on average about THB 500 per person. POLICY PRIORITIES Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps POLICY PRIORITIES Thailand Systematic Country Diagnostic A Systematic Country Diagnostic Getting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All10 2 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps POLICY PRIORITIES FOR STRONG, INCLUSIVE AND SUSTAINABLE GROWTH THE FINDINGS PRESENTED ABOVE CLEARLY INDICATETHAT WHILE THAILAND HAS MADE IMPRESSIVE PROGRESS IN PROMOTING SHARED GROWTH, SUCH GROWTH IS BY NO MEANS GUARANTEED GOING FORWARD. With the current trends in growth and shared prosperity and the risks on the horizon, a business-as-usual model is unlikely to deliver satisfactory results. Such a model is likely only to deliver growth of around 3.5 percent per year, is unlikely to eliminate poverty, and will continue to come with significant environmental costs. Moreover, at this rate, achieving high-income status will likely be at least two decades away (Figure 54). Achieving high-income status by 2032, for example, would require average growth of 5 percent per year (in GNI per capita). FIGURE 54 : At current growth rates, Thailand will need at least another two decades to achieve high income status Source: World Development Indicators Korea, Rep. Czech Republic Malaysia 2040 Thailand at 3.5 percentreal (annual) growth in GNI per capita Indonesia China Philippines 2032 0 5,000 10,000 15,000 20,000 25,000 30,000 1 9 9 8 1 9 9 9 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 1 2 0 0 2 2 0 0 3 2 0 0 4 2 0 0 5 2 0 0 6 2 0 0 7 2 0 0 8 2 0 0 9 2 0 1 0 2 0 1 1 2 0 1 2 2 0 1 3 2 0 1 4 2 0 1 5 2 0 1 6 2 0 1 7 2 0 1 8 2 0 1 9 2 0 2 0 2 0 2 1 2 0 2 2 2 0 2 3 2 0 2 4 2 0 2 5 2 0 2 6 2 0 2 7 2 0 2 8 2 0 2 9 2 0 3 0 2 0 3 1 2 0 3 2 2 0 3 3 2 0 3 4 2 0 3 5 2 0 3 6 2 0 3 7 2 0 3 8 2 0 3 9 2 0 4 0 2 0 4 1 2 0 4 2 2 0 4 3 2 0 4 4 2 0 4 5 G N I P E R C A P IT A (C U R R E N T U S D , A TL A S M E TH O D ) High income threshold High income threshold Korea, Rep. Czech Republic Hungary Slovak Republic Slovak Republic Poland Poland Chile Chile Malaysia Thailand (baseline) Thailand (baseline) Indonesia China Philippines Argentina Argentina Thailand (optimistic) Thailand (optimistic) Thailand at 5 percent real (annual) growth in GNI per capita AT THE SAME TIME, THAILAND RETAINS SOME OPPORTUNITIES FOR RENEWED ROBUST GROWTH. Thailand is strategically well-located in a rapidly growing region, surrounded by countries with rapidly growing economies and an ample supply of labor. The ASEAN Economic Community (which started on Jan 1, 2016) is strengthening trade and other linkages. As the second-largest economy in ASEAN (after Indonesia), Thailand has a strong starting position in terms of an agile business sector, a historically strong civil service, and a large cohort of young people in their 20s and 30s with a tertiary education. POLICY PRIORITIES Thailand Systematic Country Diagnostic 10 3 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps IMPORTANTLY, ANALYSIS SHOWS THAT THAILAND HAS CONSIDERABLE POTENTIAL TO INCREASE PRODUCTIVITY IN THE FUTURE. Not only is Thai labor productivity lower than in other upper- middle-income countries, its dispersion is also higher. Comparative data for 2013 shows Thailand to be at the same level as the ASEAN-5 average but considerably lower than Malaysia, Turkey, and Korea (Figure 56). The differences in labor productivity across the three sectors as well as across subsectors in manufacturing and services (see Klyuev, 2015 and Figure 55) are higher than for many countries in the region, FIGURE 55 : FIGURE 56 : The differences between labor productivity in the agricultural and non-agricultural sectors are much bigger in Thailand than elsewhere Thai labor productivity is comparable to ASEAN-5 countries but only half of the level in Malaysia and Turkey (USD ’000/worker) Note: GDP at constant basic prices per worker, using 2011 PPP, reference year 2013. 1/ Calculated using total number of workers 2/ Calculated using World Bank calculations of full-time equivalent workers Source: APO Productivity Database 2015 and Labor force survey (for calculation of “Thailand 2/”). Note: GDP at constant basic prices per worker, using 2011 PPP, reference year 2013. Source: APO Productivity Database 2015. indicating significant potential for increasing aggregate productivity. Similarly, high differences in productivity levels across manufacturing and across service subsectors (Klyuev, 2015; Dheera-aumpon, 2014) indicate considerable scope for increasing within-sector productivity through intra-sector reallocation of capital and labor, whereby poorly performing firms exit and more productive firms expand and enter. There are studies showing considerable misallocation of resources (Amarase et al., 2013; Dheera-Aumpon, 2014) in Thailand, but whether and how much of that potential can be tapped will depend on future policies. POLICY PRIORITIES Getting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All10 4 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps TO IDENTIFY POLICY PRIORITIES GOING FORWARD, IN-DEPTH WORLD BANK ASSESSMENTS AND AN EXTENSIVE LITERATURE REVIEW WERE USED TO HELP PINPOINT A FEW CRITICAL AREAS TO BE ADDRESSED TO ENSURE STRONG, INCLUSIVE, AND SUSTAINABLE GROWTH IN THAILAND. While arguments can be made for a wide range of interventions across various sectors, not all measures will have an equal impact in helping Thailand generate economic growth and ensure the inclusivity of that growth. Looking across the numerous expert assessments of challenges and key areas for intervention, World Bank experts focused on identifying priorities which would, in their judgement would likely have a high impact on the poor and bottom 40 percent. AN EQUALLY IMPORTANT PART OF THE PRIORITIZATION PROCESS WAS THE EXTENSIVE CONSULTATIONS THAT WERE HELD WITH GOVERNMENT, LOCAL EXPERTS, AND A BROAD RANGE OF OTHER STAKEHOLDERS. The prioritization was heavily informed by these consultations, which gave key stakeholders opportunities to influence the SCD. A technical working group consisting of government counterparts from Bank of Thailand, Fiscal Policy Office, NESDB, National Statistical Office, and Bureau of the Budget was established to help identify literature and ongoing and planned government initiatives and to receive feedback on emerging findings. More broadly, seven meetings were held in select areas of the country with 421 government officials, academics, and civil society experts to solicit feedback on both findings and the key opportunities to create growth that benefits everyone.68 DIFFERENT TOOLS WERE USED DURING THESE MEETINGS TO ENLIST LOCAL EXPERTS TO HELP IDENTIFY PRIORITIES. First, all participants were given a questionnaire which asked them to identify the top five opportunities for eliminating poverty and creating shared prosperity (an English language version of the survey is included in “Annex 4: Questionnaire used for consultations”). The questionnaire was completed by 300 participants, and their priorities are shown in Table 11.69 68 In particular, two meetings were held at in Bangkok (on March 17); two were held in Pattani (on April 25); two in Udon Thani (on May 11) and one in Chiang Mai (on May 31). 69 The questionnaire was also available online but was completed by only seven people. Second, in three of the meetings, groups of 8-10 participants were asked, as a group, to identify their top three constraints. This exercise triggered exactly the types of discussions that the authors of this report were having during preparation of the report—namely, to what extent is, for example, education a more important development priority to focus on than, for example, improving the business climate. Approximately 180 people in 23 groups participated in this exercise, and their results are also summarized in Table 11. Finally, the World Bank team brought and installed a “Wall of Hope” at all locations. On this wall, participants and individuals passing by could write their hopes for Thailand on a postcard and post it on the wall. Postcards were filled out by 544 individuals and have been analyzed and summarized in Figure 57. POLICY PRIORITIES Thailand Systematic Country Diagnostic 10 5 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps IRRESPECTIVE OF THE TOOL USED, A CLEAR LIST OF “TIER 1” PRIORITIES EMERGED FROM THE CONSULTATIONS, WITH VERY LITTLE VARIATION ACROSS THE REGIONS OF THAILAND WHERE CONSULTATIONS WERE HELD. (i) Education (as critical for both growth and to create shared prosperity); 70 300 individuals filled in the questionnaire and provided their top 5 priorities; 23 groups (with approximately 180 people) reached a consensus view on top 3 priorities. FIGURE 57 : TABLE 11 : Results from Wall of Hope postcards Top five priorities emerging from individual questionnaires and group discussions: opportunities for ending poverty and creating more shared prosperity 70 Access to quality education 32% Reconciliation across social and political divisions 23% True effective law, justice and democracy, human rights and equality focus 22% Economic prosperity, A business friendly environment for the private sector, including small and medium enterprises 14% Clean and transparent taxation and government spending, without corruption 9% (ii) High quality, expert government bureaucracy and central and local administrations (as a critical cross-cutting issue); and (iii) Increasing productivity and incomes in agriculture, including through access to irrigation (as critical to providing the 15 million farmers with more opportunities). Source: Results obtained from consultation meetings POLICY PRIORITIES Getting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All10 6 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps LIKELY AS A RESULT OF THE FOCUS ON PICKING ONLY 3-5 TOP PRIORITIES, THE PRIORITIES EXPRESSED BY LOCAL EXPERTS DO NOT INCLUDE PRIORITIES WHICH ARE DEEMED IMPORTANT IN MANY RECENT ACADEMIC AND POLICY PAPERS (E.G. BY TDRI OR BOT) AND/OR BY THE AUTHORS OF THIS REPORT. For instance, there is near-consensus amongst economic observers of Thailand that increasing both private and public investment in infrastructure is needed to address infrastructure gaps and help jump start growth. Similarly, most observers agree that Thailand will need to climb up the value-added chain by enhancing competition amongst firms and boosting innovation. Likely, by insisting that respondents focus on the top 3-5 priorities, the discussions zoomed in on what was considered the top-tier of priorities. As discussed below, this report widens that set of priorities to ten. TOGETHER, ANALYTICAL WORK FOR THIS SYSTEMATIC COUNTRY DIAGNOSTIC (SCD), A LITERATURE REVIEW, AND FEEDBACK FROM CONSULTATIONS INFORMED THE PRIORITIZATION OF TEN “DEVELOPMENT PRIORITIES” FOR ENSURING STRONG, SHARED, AND SUSTAINABLE GROWTH IN THAILAND. One of these priorities is cross-cutting while the remaining 9 are grouped into three “pathways”. As the table below shows, four of these priorities have been singled out for their likely high impact on improving the lives of the bottom 40 percent. All of the priorities aim to address some of Thailand’s most pressing challenges and make the most of its opportunities, while mitigating some of the identified risks that could undermine future progress. TABLE 12 : Development priorities for ensuring strong, shared, and sustainable growth POLICY PRIORITIES Thailand Systematic Country Diagnostic 10 7 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps IN MORE DETAIL, THE THREE PATHWAYS ARE: (i) Creating more and better jobs through improved infrastructure, more competition, and increased firm-level competitiveness. (ii) Providing more targeted support to the bottom 40 percent of the population by improving the education and skills of the workforce; implementing effective policies to boost productivity in the agricultural sector, where approximately half of the bottom 40 percent of the population and the poor continue to be employed; and providing a smarter social protection system focused providing a safety net for poor people. (iii) Making growth greener and more sustainable, which includes efforts to manage Thailand’s natural resources and environment; reduce vulnerability to natural disasters and climate change; and promote energy efficiency and renewable energy. FINALLY, THESE THREE PATHWAYS COULD BE SUPPORTED BY CROSS-CUTTING EFFORTS TO STRENGTHEN THE INSTITUTIONAL CAPABILITY OF THE PUBLIC SECTOR. Within each pathway, policy priorities and specific interventions are proposed, as laid out below. THESE PATHWAYS ARE CONSISTENT WITH THE STRATEGIC AREAS IDENTIFIED IN THE GOVERNMENT’S AMBITIOUS AND WIDE-RANGING 12TH PLAN BUT REPRESENT A MORE FOCUSED VIEW OF THE AREAS THAT REQUIRE GREATER POLICY ATTENTION. The government’s 12th Plan (see below) lays out a broad development agenda, with seven “targets” covering macroeconomics through “spatial development and connectivity.” A total of ten plans will guide the country toward achieving those seven targets, again covering a very large and ambitious policy agenda. Rather than covering all of these areas, the pathways proposed here focus on the key areas where more attention is needed to address the most critical challenges to poverty reduction and shared growth as described above. AS DESCRIBED ABOVE, THE PRIORITIZATION AIMED TO IDENTIFY THE CRITICAL AREAS FOR ENSURING STRONG, INCLUSIVE, AND SUSTAINABLE GROWTH ACROSS THAILAND, WITH A PARTICULAR FOCUS ON INTERVENTIONS WITH THE GREATEST IMPACT ON THE POOR AND BOTTOM 40 PERCENT. Ultimately, the priorities chosen reflect the expert assessment of the World Bank’s country team (who authored this report). Some areas were deemed lesser priorities not because they are unimportant but because progress is already being made in those areas, such as in improving macroeconomic and fiscal management; providing equal access to affordable quality health services; and expanding access to clean water. Some other areas, despite being both important development challenges and areas requiring more attention, were not included in the pathways because the impact on overall poverty and shared prosperity may be limited relative to the priorities identified. For example, as noted earlier, while road accidents likely affect the poor disproportionally and while each death and accident is a tragedy, making improvements will likely not have as big an impact on the 7 million people living in poverty as, for example, improvements in the quality of education provided to the 1 million children in Thailand’s small and poorly resourced schools. This is not meant to imply that they are unimportant—in fact, the earlier discussion of such issues is intended to highlight the important of such issues to Thailand’s development and to help foster dialogue and continued work on such issues going forward. Moreover, by improving jobs and social protection for all, the pathways proposed could benefit these smaller groups, as well. POLICY PRIORITIES Getting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All10 8 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps FIGURE 58 : The government’s 12th National Economic and Social Development Plan POLICY PRIORITIES Thailand Systematic Country Diagnostic 10 9 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps A. CREATING MORE AND BETTER JOBS A NEW AND IMPROVED ENGINE IS NEEDED TO GENERATE NEW SOURCES OF GROWTH AND CREATE MORE AND BETTER JOBS. Thailand needs to find a new engine that can deliver results like the locomotive that drove the boom in 1986- 1996—an engine that sustainably and consistently creates opportunities for millions to improve their livelihoods. This will require restoring the competitive edge Thailand has lost, which arguably must involve better infrastructure, more competition, and an emphasis on boosting firm-level competitiveness. Creating lots of low-skilled jobs is no longer an option (nor is it a desirable option for Thailand); those jobs are now more likely to be created in Cambodia, Vietnam, India, China, or Myanmar. Instead, Thailand needs to upgrade its industries and service sector and create high value-added jobs that require more skills. This will be harder and require much-needed investments in terms of physical capital as well as investments in improving the business and institutional climate. THE GOVERNMENT IS WELL-AWARE OF THE NEED TO GENERATE NEW SOURCES OF GROWTH AND RAISE THE COUNTRY’S COMPETITIVENESS, AND HAS LAUNCHED SEVERAL PROMISING INITIATIVES IN THE PAST YEAR. These include a focus on 10 industries as “new engines of growth” (so-called “S-curve industries”); renewed emphasis on the Eastern Economic Corridor; and a major push for the creation of an electronic payment system. These three initiatives are discussed in more details in Box 8. THESE INITIATIVES ARE PROMISING SIGNALS THAT THAILAND IS EDGING BACK ON TRACK, BUT THEIR IMPACT WILL DEPEND ON THE QUALITY OF IMPLEMENTATION. Ultimately, the priorities chosen reflect the expert assessment of the World Bank’s country team (who authored this report). Some areas were deemed lesser priorities not because they are unimportant but because progress is already being made in those areas, such as in improving macroeconomic and fiscal management; providing equal access to affordable quality health services; and expanding access to clean water. Some other areas, despite being both important development challenges and areas requiring more attention, were not New S-curve industries. On November 17th, 2015, the Cabinet approved a proposal from Ministry of Industry to promote ten industries as the new engine of growth for Thailand. The ten industries which will be promoted are five existing industries which will be encouraged to move up the value-added ladder (an initiative called “Extending the S-Curve”): (i) “Next – Generation Automotive”; (ii) “Smart Electronics”; (iii) “Affluent, Medical and Wellness Tourism”; (iv) “Agriculture and Biotechnology”; and (v) “Food for the Future”. In addition, five additional (new) industries will be promoted to generate growth in the medium to long-term: (i) “Robotics”; (ii) “Aviation and Logistics”; (ii) “Biofuels and Bio-chemicals”, (iv) “Digital”; and (v) “Medical Hub”. Eastern Economic Corridor. Covering the area of three provinces of the eastern region – Chonburi, Rayong and Chachoengsao – this initiative aims to build on the success of the “Eastern Seaboard” project (which was launched back in 1982). The Eastern Seaboard project boosted the GDP of the Eastern region from 3.6 percent of national GDP in 1982 to 17.7 percent in 2014. However, the Eastern region is facing new challenges as many of its manufacturers have relocated to neighboring countries where costs are lower. BOX 8 : Major government initiatives launched in 2015 to revive growth and restore competitiveness. POLICY PRIORITIES Getting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All110 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps Hence, the government is focusing on boosting the region’s attractiveness through a number of mega investments, including: • Laemchabang Seaport Project Phase 3 with an investment value of USD 1 billion. • U-Tapao International Airport Expansion Project to receive more than 10 million passengers per year and become the most important aviation HR development center and aircraft maintenance hub in ASEAN • Chuk Samet Seaport development project in Sattahip to become ferry terminal to Bangkok and Hua Hin • Dual track and High speed rail which will connect Rayong and Leamchabang with Bangkok with an investment value of USD 6,500 million • Connect the highway network The government also has plans to develop a future industrial estate around U-Tapao Airport and Chuck Samet Seaport which will incentivize investors to invest in the new S-Curve industries. The project expected to attract FDI of around USD 50 billion and generate more and better jobs in the coming two decades. National e-Payment. With the rapid growth in internet and mobile usage, the government is making a big push to launch an electronic payment system to propel e-commerce industry and transform Thailand into a cashless society. There are about 11 million online consumers in Thailand with an estimated of USD 58.4 billion in Thai e-commerce market value in 2015 but the market is rapidly growing. The Cabinet approved a strategic plan for national e-payment infrastructure development on December 22nd, 2015, laying out a 2 phase plan for the next 3-5 years: First, launching an electronic money transfer service at all major Thai banks called “PromptPay” for peer-to-peer transfers. PromptPay is expected to be ready for service in the last quarter of 2016. The second phase will allow electronic payments for goods and services, personal income tax returns, and subsidiaries and welfare services by 2017. With the national e-payment system in place, the number of online consumer is expect to double in the next 3-5 years. POLICY PRIORITIES Thailand Systematic Country Diagnostic 111 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps BOOST INVESTMENTS IN INFRASTRUCTURE AMPLE FISCAL SPACE, ACCESS TO INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL MARKETS, AND A STRONG TRACK RECORD OF MACRO- MANAGEMENT PLACE THAILAND IN A GOOD POSITION TO EXPAND INFRASTRUCTURE SPENDING. Fiscal management has remained exceptionally prudent in terms of deficit and debt and at the cost of stimulating growth (Table 13). Over the last five years, the general government deficit has averaged 1 percent of GDP, and the cyclically Source: IMF TABLE 13 : Fiscal Situation 2009-2014 (% of fiscal year GDP) NOTABLY, DEFICITS WERE NOT KEPT LOW BY DESIGN; RATHER, THEY WERE LOWER THAN EXPECTED BECAUSE DIFFERENT GOVERNMENTS STRUGGLED TO IMPLEMENT LARGE-SCALE PUBLIC INVESTMENT PROGRAMS. Increases in healthcare, social assistance, short-term transfers, subsidies as well as salaries have raised the share of current expenditure in total expenditure from 56 percent in 1997 to 79 percent in 2014. Correspondingly, the share of capital spending has been reduced from 41 percent to 18 percent respectively (Figure 61) to avoid higher deficits. adjusted primary balance has always been in surplus. As of March 2016, total debt stands at 32 percent and 44 percent of GDP for general government and the public sector, respectively. Thailand’s abundant international reserves, totaling 12 months of imports, and exchange rate flexibility adds to the economy’s resilience to external shocks. Thailand thus has room to increase spending and public debt, provided that the infrastructure spending is carefully selected to help boost economic growth. Public- private partnerships (PPPs) could potentially be used to stretch public resources further. This has brought down public gross capital formation to only 5 percent of GDP from 9 percent of GDP in 1995, resulting in large shortfalls in infrastructure investment. The failure to scale up public investment has stored up fiscal trouble for later: prolonged periods of low spending deprive infrastructure of investment and create serious infrastructure gaps that begin to affect business, private investment and exports adversely. There is then huge pressure to invest big in infrastructure. POLICY PRIORITIES Getting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All112 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps FIGURE 61 : Share of Current and Capital Expenditures in Total Expenditure Source: Budget in Brief 2011 and 2015, Ministry of Finance FIGURE 59 : FIGURE 60 : International reserves Public debt as a share of GDP Source: WDI. Source: IMF Article IV 2015. POLICY PRIORITIES Thailand Systematic Country Diagnostic 113 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps THERE ARE SEVERAL TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT THAT HAS BEEN IN THE PIPELINE FOR QUITE SOME TIME. THESE PROJECTS AIM TO ADDRESS TRANSPORT BOTTLENECKS, IMPROVE TRANSPORT EFFICIENCY AND SAFETY, AND CONNECT THE LAGGING REGIONS IN THAILAND. Railway double tracking projects, for example, have been discussed extensively during the past decade. Over 90 percent of railway in Thailand which covers 47 provinces have been single-track, which is rather constrained in terms of efficiency and safety. There are over 100 derailing accidents and more than 150 railway/personal vehicle accidents each year, which calls for investment in improved railway signaling. Delays in transport infrastructure investment in some cases does not only mean delays in benefits of connecting the lagging regions, but it also has increasing cost implications. For example, the feasibility study of Bang Pa-in to Korat Motorway conducted in 2003 estimated the project cost of THB25 billion. The project starts implementation in 2016 with the final cost estimated to be THB84.6 billion. THE GOVERNMENT COULD FOCUS ON ATTRACTING PRIVATE SECTOR INVESTMENTS IN A MORE CONCERTED MANNER. In the last few years, Thailand has attracted private sector investments in some areas of infrastructure, including areas like renewable power generation. Thailand has well-functioning capital markets, which can mobilize long-term private capital needed for funding well-structured infrastructure projects. The new infrastructure and logistics development plans could cover the following, as already discussed in the 11th and 12th National Economic and Social Development Plan: encouraging the development of multimodal transportation, facilitating cross-border trade, enhancing the efficiency of logistics and transport management systems, improving railways, modernizing the public transportation network, and introducing high-speed communication and e-government services. The Government could proceed with the implementation of its PPPs agenda, and leverage the enabling environment it has created through the passing of the PISU Act and PPPs fast-track scheme. It will be important for the first projects implemented under the new PPPs law to be well structured and allocate risks fairly amongst parties, as these first projects will set a precedent for the entire program going forward. Developing sustainable PPPs will require a comprehensive approach to address the multiple challenges faced by many infrastructure sectors and public services. While the political will is present, capacity building within Government will be needed in order to ensure that public-private partnership projects are adequately prepared and structured to balance public policy considerations, investors’ interests, lender’s bankability requirements and community needs, and that there is adequate public sector capacity for implementation and contract monitoring and management. REFORM OF THE SOE SECTOR MAY BE NEEDED TO FACILITATE THE EXECUTION OF LARGE INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT PLANS. As mentioned above, the Government appears to have had difficulty preparing and implementing major infrastructure investment programs. After more than a decade, the Government recently announced another mega-infrastructure investment plan for THB 1.93 trillion for implementation over eight years. In order to make this announcement credible, the strengthening of the public investment management framework would be desirable, as discussed later in this section. The authorities are already launching a series of SOE reforms, including the creation of a holding company for firms in the sector. Additional areas for action would be clarifying the policy framework for SOEs, restructuring public companies that are not making progress, opening up some infrastructure sectors to private competition, and strengthening capacity at the State Enterprise Policy Office (SEPO). POLICY PRIORITIES Getting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All114 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps INCREASE COMPETITION THROUGH FREE TRADE AGREEMENTS AND DEREGULATION LACK OF ADEQUATE COMPETITIVE PRESSURES MAY BE SLOWING OR PREVENTING INTRA-SECTOR RESOURCE REALLOCATION. Dynamism in firm entry when markets are open usually contributes to innovation, increases productivity, and crowds out inefficient firms. When firms with different levels of productivity survive and/or there is high dispersion of productivity across subsectors, within manufacturing or within services, competitive pressures are obviously not high. The regulatory and institutional framework that governs domestic market competition and market entry affect the ability of firms to reallocate resources to more productive uses, and the efficiency of their investments may depend on that ability. ACCORDING TO THE 2017 DOING BUSINESS REPORT, THAILAND RANKED 46 OUT OF 190 ECONOMIES ON EASE OF DOING BUSINESS. Businesses encounter barriers to their operations for many reasons: for example, due to cumbersome procedures for obtaining licenses or construction permits or due to lengthy, costly, and unreliable procedures involved in enforcing contracts or resolving commercial disputes. These can be seen as “generic” barriers to business operations, in addition to those mentioned above related to accessing credit, trading across borders, or entering a new market. Barriers to business operations usually result in a less- friendly environment, which may even encourage firms to move part of business operations to the informal economy. These barriers can inhibit access to credit, innovation, and productivity growth. It can thus be hypothesized that high barriers to business operations hamper productivity growth and discourage private investment. FIGURE 62 : Ease of Doing Business (score, 100=best)71 Source: World Bank Doing Business Report 2017 71 Figure is showing “distance to frontier”: This measure shows the distance of each economy to the “frontier.” The frontier represents the highest performance observed on each of the indicators across all economies measured in Doing Business since the inclusion of the indicator. An economy’s distance to frontier is reflected on a scale from 0 to 100, where 0 represents the lowest performance and 100 represents the frontier. POLICY PRIORITIES Thailand Systematic Country Diagnostic 115 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps GOVERNMENT CAN IMPROVE THE BUSINESS CLIMATE BY IMPLEMENTING A SERIES OF REGULATORY REFORMS THAT COULD IMPROVE THE EASE OF DOING BUSINESS. Two important issues raised by the private sector include the time taken to secure construction permits (Thailand 103 days compared with 26 days in Singapore), enforcing contracts (Thailand 440 days compared with 150 days in Singapore). Thailand could benefit from reviewing and rationalizing multiple rules and regulations that have gradually built up. Currently the Government is considering a “Guillotine Approach” to deregulation whereby it is working with the private sector to eliminate the approximately 6,000 outdated rules and regulations that serve no purpose but to create inefficiencies, avenues for corruption, and bureaucratic red-tape. FIGURE 63 : Top 10 Obstacles to Doing Business Note: From the list of factors, respondents were asked to select the five most problematic for doing business in their country and to rank them between 1 (most problematic) and 5. The score corresponds to the responses weighted according to their rankings. Source: WEF’s Executive Opinion Survey (2012-13, 2013-14, 2014-15, 2015-2016 and 2016-17). IN ADDITION REDUCING UNCERTAINTY—ESPECIALLY POLITICAL UNCERTAINTY—WILL BE IMPORTANT FOR MAINTAINING A BUSINESS-FRIENDLY ENVIRONMENT IN THAILAND. As highlighted earlier, among business executives surveyed as part of the World Economic Forum report, the top four concerns for 2016-17 were government instability, corruption, an inefficient government bureaucracy, and policy instability (Figure 63). International good practices suggest measures for tackling corruption, especially where it affects the business environment, for example through improvements in the areas of tax inspections, granting construction permits, provision of public utilities, and public procurement processes. In addition, ensuring greater transparency in public finances will be critical for building greater trust in government. POLICY PRIORITIES Getting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All116 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps DEEPER TRADE INTEGRATION AND IMPLEMENTATION OF AEC COMMITMENTS WILL BE CRITICAL FOR FOSTERING COMPETITION AND FACILITATING INNOVATION AND TECHNOLOGY SPILLOVERS. New mega trade agreements such as the AEC or the new mega agreements currently being introduced in Asia (such as EU-FTAs, Trans Pacific Partnership, Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), and the Free Trade Area of the Asia Pacific) come with deeper commitments and open up new opportunities. These deeper commitments include areas such as competition policy, government procurement, investment policies and investors’ protection, intellectual property rights, and labor and environmental standards. Thailand can also improve competitiveness by implementing Mutual Recognition Agreements agreed under the ASEAN Economic Community 2015 on free flow of skilled professionals and improving the Investment State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) mechanism. INVESTMENT STATE DISPUTE SETTLEMENT (ISDS) HELPS TO PROVIDE AN EFFECTIVE, SWIFT AND INDEPENDENT MECHANISM TO IMPLEMENT AND ENFORCE LEGAL COMMITMENTS AND THUS ATTRACT FOREIGN INVESTORS. A majority of Thailand’s investment treaties have an ISDS provision. This is necessary, particularly in countries where international public law commitments are not directly enforceable in domestic courts. ISDS fulfils that role, thus re- establishing a measure of equilibrium to the disadvantaged position that foreign investors may have in comparison to domestic investors. From an investment climate perspective, Thailand will greatly benefit from constructively using its IIA regime, by setting up effective mechanisms to implement IIAs and prevent disputes. Not only will this prevent costly investor- State disputes- it will also signal to the investor community Thailand’s commitment to increasing investor protection and strengthening its investment climate. ALTHOUGH THAILAND HAS A RELATIVELY OPEN ECONOMY OVERALL, SOME SUBSECTORS—PARTICULARLY IN THE SERVICE SECTOR—ARE MORE PROTECTED FROM IMPORT AND DOMESTIC COMPETITION. The service sector is more protected than manufacturing. The service sector is protected in two ways: (i) foreign entry/ investment into many of the service sectors is restricted, and (ii) delivery of some services by foreign firms is also restricted. In terms of trade policy, average applied tariff rates have come down from around 40 percent in the 1980s to 9 percent in 2005-06, but the average may hide higher protection for some products. THERE IS A SERIES OF OPPORTUNITIES FOR INCREASING COMPETITION IN SERVICES. In telecommunications, for example, foreign-owned companies may only provide services on a re-sale basis. Education and health facilities must be held by nationals. Thailand could consider progressively lifting the restrictions on entry of foreigners to perform professional services (see World Bank, 2015d). Other measures could include lifting the minimum capital requirement of THB 100 million for foreign subsidiaries to operate in the retail sector, lifting the limits on foreign ownership in a “local bank,” and introducing clear and objective criteria for the granting of licenses to foreigners in automobile and life insurance. GREATER ACCESS TO FINANCE AND BROADER FINANCIAL SECTOR DEVELOPMENT WILL ALSO HELP INCREASE COMPETITION. Obtaining finance is essential for successful entrepreneurs to invest, expand their businesses, and adopt new technologies required for productivity gains. If firms face fewer obstacles in getting credit and capital, and if there are good mechanisms for resolving financial distress (company insolvency), they are better placed to improve productivity and maintain sustained levels of private investment. Broader financial sector development is also critical for competition and investment across the economy beyond just the mSME sector, affecting corporates, SOEs and major infrastructure projects as well as the ability of the public sector to develop appropriate debt management tools. The capital market in Thailand (ie the Stock Exchange of Thailand) is well developed – compared to other neighboring countries – however it only serves the large conglomerates and well-established enterprises. POLICY PRIORITIES Thailand Systematic Country Diagnostic 117 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps THE GOVERNMENT HAS TAKEN IMPORTANT STEPS TO EXPAND ACCESS TO CREDIT TO SMALL AND MEDIUM-SIZED ENTERPRISES BUT MORE REMAINS TO BE DONE. For instance, a stock exchange for small and medium-sized enterprises (the “Market for Alternative Investments”, MAI) became operational in 1999. However, 17 years later, the MAI covers less than 0.1 percent of the registered SME in Thailand, leaving the vast majority of SMEs raising funds using traditional mechanisms (ie through friends, families, bank loans, and informal loans). MORE RECENTLY, IN NOVEMBER 2015 THE GOVERNMENT INTRODUCED THE BUSINESS SECURITY ACT WHICH CAME INTO FORCE ON IN JULY 2016, WITH THE INTRODUCTION OF THAILAND’S FIRST COLLATERAL REGISTRY AS THE TECHNOLOGY ENABLER The Act provides access to only licensed financial institutions and the taking of business collateral, meaning that only business entities falling under the scope of the Companies Act can take advantage of the new Act. A vast majority of mSME’s are not formally registered legal entities and they may have valuable collateral but are not in positon to take advantage of the new Act. Given its infancy, the Department of Business Development (DBD) (the administrator of the new system) has only partially automated the functionality of the system and made it available to only a limited set of licensed financial institutions regulated by the Bank of Thailand and other credit providers authorized under Ministerial regulations: as of October 2016, it is only those financial institutions lending to those formal companies who can submit their documents electronically. This creates an uneven playing field and, more importantly, the vast majority of mSME’s access funds from other types of financial institutions (such as non-bank financial institutions, specialized financial institution (SFI’s), and leasing companies, etc.,) these other types of financial service providers would benefit greatly if they had access to both an expanded scope of assets envisaged under the Business Security Act and the new Collateral Registry system. Furthermore, the Act does not appear to apply to the financing of consumer goods, which are often the only asset that a start-up or microbusiness possess. The financing secured with such assets has been the stepping stone for many, primarily women entrepreneurs, to open or expand their microbusinesses. A robust financial sector eco-system is much larger than just those institutions regulated by the Central Bank in terms of providing access to credit for mSME’s. THE INTRODUCTION OF THE BUSINESS SECURITY ACT WHICH PROVIDES FOR AN EXPANDED SCOPE OF MOVABLE PROPERTY TO BE PLEDGED AS COLLATERALS IS PARTICULARLY RELEVANT FOR THE MSME SECTOR BUT FURTHER WORK ON IMPLEMENTING THE ACT SUCCESSFULLY IS NEEDED. While the implementation of the new Act and registry as the central repository over these registered security interests administered by the Department of Business Development is very encouraging, further strengthening of the both Business Security Act and enhancements to the Registry system to align to international best practice are required. Once these two aspects have been implemented fully, a dedicated effort must be applied to develop a robust movables based lending market. This includes a coordinated approach to building up the financial sector ecosystem, including enhancements to the bankruptcy and insolvency regime. Over time, the visible benefits will be the decline in interest rates and NPL’s, diversification of financial services providers portfolio of products and services will grow and become more innovative and the overall cost of borrowing will decrease, which ultimately leads to diversified economy and job creation. RELATIVE TO ITS NEIGHBORS IN THE REGION, THAILAND HAS FALLEN SOMEWHAT BEHIND IN TERMS OF ITS ABILITY TO ADDRESS POLICY AND INSTITUTIONAL ISSUES RELATED TO ACCESS TO FINANCE. While the implementation of the new Act and registry as the central repository over these registered security interests administered by the Department of Business Development is very encouraging, further strengthening of the both Business Security Act and enhancements to the Registry system to align to international best practice are required. Once these two aspects have been implemented fully, a dedicated effort must be applied to develop a robust movables based lending market. POLICY PRIORITIES Getting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All118 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps INCREASING COMPETITION WILL ALSO REQUIRE IMPROVED PERFORMANCE OF THAILAND’S SOES, WHICH COULD INVOLVE TRANSFORMATION OF THE SOE OWNERSHIP FRAMEWORK. Today, the global trend is to transform the SOE ownership framework from an advisory to centralized model, which can have substantial impacts on SOE governance and performance by bringing greater clarity and professionalism to the state’s ownership role and reducing the scope for political involvement. This model delegates the state’s ownership functions to a specialized ownership entity and refocuses the line ministries’ role in policy-making and setting mandates while creating independent regulatory bodies. The ministry of finance focuses on financial monitoring, budgetary relations, and financing of public service obligations. This approach promotes good corporate governance in terms of transparency, accountability, and checks and balances. The Thai Government is in the process of setting up a State Investment Corporation (SIC) to act as a centralized owner, but full implementation of the real centralized model with good governance practices for all 56 SOEs will be a substantial challenge. 72 There are three reasons for this. First, Japanese firms played a key role in making Thailand a manufacturing hub and has a dominant presence. Second, Japanese firms’ overseas investment grew at 12% a year before the global financial crisis and this trend has accelerated recently due to yen appreciation & energy supply uncertainty after 2011 earthquake Kang & Piao 2015). Third, their continued FDI expansion will be a good signal to other potential foreign investors that Thailand is a favorable place for FDI to export. IN TERMS OF THE ROLE OF SOES MORE GENERALLY, THE GOVERNMENT AS A FACILITATOR COULD ENCOURAGE THE PRIVATE SECTOR TO COMPETE FAIRLY IN THE MARKETPLACE AND, IN THE CASE OF SOCIAL OBJECTIVES, MANDATE SOES TO FILL THE GAPS THAT MAY NOT BE ATTRACTIVE TO PRIVATE OPERATORS. This will lead to optimum performance and deploy assets more efficiently, which in turn benefits both domestic development and the long-term growth of the overall economy. IMPROVE FIRM-LEVEL COMPETITIVENESS AND INNOVATION THROUGH GREATER TECHNOLOGY ABSORPTION AND INNOVATION FDI INFLOW HAS ALWAYS BEEN IMPORTANT FOR EXPORT AND PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH AND IS STILL CRITICAL FOR UPGRADING OF MANUFACTURING AND SERVICE SECTORS. A lower level of FDI inflow could be equally or more useful for raising productivity-driven growth if it comes from foreign firms and into subsectors that are more likely to help Thailand upgrade the sophistication of its exports of both manufactures and services. In this context, the behavior of Japanese investors and Japanese FDI inflow may be particularly important,72 but a few other niche investors with necessary technology in fast-growing world export sectors may be just as critical. THAI ENTERPRISES COULD LEVERAGE GREATER SPILLOVERS FROM FDI TO HELP THEM UPGRADE AND INNOVATE. As discussed earlier, Thailand has been less successful than Singapore and Malaysia in leveraging spillovers from FDI. Building the capabilities to enable Thai firms to upgrade and innovate is now a priority. This in turn calls for a strengthening of the national innovation system, greater emphasis on developing a skilled workforce, and increased investment in research capital and institutions that would promote the deepening of the knowledge economy. POLICY PRIORITIES Thailand Systematic Country Diagnostic 119 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps THAI FIRMS NEED TO BUILD THEIR COMPETENCIES IN HIGHER-VALUE-ADDING NICHE SECTORS, TAKING ADVANTAGE OF THEIR EXISTING CAPABILITIES. Moving up the value chain would imply undertaking more complex functions such as design, research and development, and branding. It requires moving from the export of low-value parts and components to higher-value products and services and also to final manufactures. This would be particularly relevant for Thai SMEs which, while dominating the landscape of firms, have seen a continuous decrease in their contribution to GDP during the past 12 years from 41.3 percent of GDP in 2002 to 37.4 percent in 2013. As the gap in productivity between small and large firms is significant, improving productivity in smaller firms will take extra effort because their turnover rates are high (70 percent foldup after a few years). Policies would need to enable the SME sector to shift from a cost-based to a value- or knowledge-based competitive advantage. The recent UNCTAD Science Technology and Innovation Policy Review (2015) notes that the country also has a sizeable research infrastructure, but the linkages between industry and research are limited. These can be fostered by collaborative grants that include recipients from both industry and research with a view toward addressing problems faced by firms, greater incentives in universities and research institutions for researchers to collaborate with industry, and a greater awareness about intellectual property and the potential for commercializing research. DESPITE RECENT EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE SUGGESTING VERY HIGH RETURNS TO RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT SPENDING, THAILAND HAS BEEN LAGGING BEHIND ITS NEIGHBORS OVER THE PAST TWO DECADES. Lathapipat (2016)73 estimates that the gross rate of return on investment for business R&D activities ranges between 77-82 percent, while the corresponding figure for public R&D conducted by universities and research institutions is in the 252-334 percent range. Given the evidence of very high returns, it is worrisome for Thailand’s growth potential that its R&D intensity, defined as the ratio of GERD to GDP, is only less than half a percent of GDP in 2014 (sum of 0.26 for business and 0.22 for public R&D). From Figure 64, it is clearly evident that Thailand has been falling further and further behind most of its peers in the ASEAN+3 region, which have substantially increased their investments in R&D activities over the last two decades. 73 Lathapipat D. (2016). “Research and Development Spending and Total Factor Productivity Growth: Evidence from ASEAN+3 Economies.” Unpublished Manuscript. Lathapipat’s work focuses on a panel of 8 economies in the ASEAN+3 group for which data on public and private business gross expenditure on research and development (GERD) are available for the period 1996-2014. FIGURE 64 : Business and Public Research and Development Intensity 0.0% 0.5% 1.0% 1.5% 2.0% 2.5% 3.0% 3.5% 1996 1998 2 000 2002 2 004 2006 2008 2 010 2012 2014 BUSINESS R&D EXPENDITURE/GDP China Hong Kong SAR, China Japan Malaysia Singapore Korea Thailand Philippines 0.0% 0.5% 1.0% 1.5% 2.0% 2.5% 3.0% 3.5% 1996 1 998 2000 2002 2004 2 006 2008 2010 2 012 2 014 PUBLIC R&D EXPENDITURE/GDP China Hong Kong SAR, China Japan Malaysia Singapore Korea Thailand Philippines Source: UNESCO Institute for Statistics as shown in World Bank (2016) POLICY PRIORITIES Getting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All12 0 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps IMPROVE THE EDUCATION AND SKILLS OF THE WORKFORCE EDUCATION IS ONE OF THE MOST POWERFUL INSTRUMENTS FOR REDUCING POVERTY AND INEQUALITY AND IT SETS THE FOUNDATION FOR SUSTAINED ECONOMIC GROWTH. Investment in education not only helps explain growth but education is also associated with higher individual earnings. Governments, private sector, families, individuals spend more than USD 5.6 trillion a year on education and training. In fact, on average, another year of schooling raises earnings by about 10 percent a year. In Thailand, another year of schooling raises earnings by about 9.4 percent a year. This is typically more than any other investment an individual could make. Returns are increasing – particularly in tertiary education. AS UNDERSCORED BY FEEDBACK FROM THE CONSULTATIONS, IMPROVING ACCESS TO HIGH-QUALITY EDUCATION IS A TOP PRIORITY FOR ENABLING THE POOR AND BOTTOM 40 PERCENT TO BENEFIT FULLY FROM GROWTH. As the economy develops and demands for higher skills increase, the widening gaps in education between the poor and non-poor and in the returns to additional years of education between the low-skilled and high-skilled put the poor in a more challenging position. The widened wage gaps between tertiary education and secondary education, which capture the divide in human capital between the poor and the non-poor, points to the daunting challenges. For individuals, having the necessary skills and competencies to obtain productive employment can help them secure a better future and, for those who are poor, help them break out of the cycle of poverty. B. PROVIDE MORE TARGETED SUPPORT FOR THE BOTTOM 40 PERCENT GREATER AND MORE APPROPRIATE TARGETED SUPPORT FOR THE BOTTOM 40 PERCENT IS CRITICAL NOT ONLY TO IMPROVE THE LIVELIHOODS OF THOSE HOUSEHOLDS BUT ALSO TO HELP FOSTER SOCIAL COHESION AND STABILITY MORE GENERALLY. As discussed earlier, international evidence shows how inequality and social tensions can lead to political conflict and unrest. Although the causes of the current political turmoil are complex, it likely has its roots in a growing sense that economic prosperity has not been widely shared and/or everyone does not have equal opportunities in society. Politicians and planners seem to recognize that Thailand will not heal socially or politically unless these inequities are addressed, which may explain the emphasis on addressing inequality in the 12th Plan and the introduction of the Child Grant to poor families in October 2015. Greater and more appropriate targeted support for the bottom 40 percent—namely, through quality education; higher agricultural productivity, and social protection—is thus an important priority in terms of having a large impact on the bottom 40 percent as well as giving them the means for upward economic and social mobility and thus helping to strengthen social cohesion and maintain greater political stability. POLICY PRIORITIES Thailand Systematic Country Diagnostic 12 1 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps A BETTER-EDUCATED AND SKILLED WORKFORCE IS ALSO CRITICAL TO THAILAND’S ECONOMIC GROWTH PROSPECTS, AS THE STRONG GROWTH THAILAND NEEDS IN COMPETITIVE SKILL-INTENSIVE EXPORTS WILL DEPEND ON HAVING A STRONGER HUMAN CAPITAL BASE. Developing competitive skill-intensive exports depends on successful adoption of newer technologies and product innovation by firms, which relies in turn on good human capital because it involves research and development FIGURE 65 : The quality of Thailand’s education system is perceived to have worsened relative to its peers 74 The graph shows the average of the following five indicators tracked by the World Economic Forum: Availability of research and training services, 1-7 (best); Extent of staff training, 1-7 (best); Quality of management schools, 1-7; (best); Quality of math and science education, 1-7 (best); and Quality of the education system, 1-7 (best) Source: Global Competitiveness Indicators, World Economic Forum SIMILARLY, MANUFACTURING FIRMS COMPLAIN THAT FINDING SKILLED LABOR IS INCREASINGLY A PROBLEM. A shortage of skilled labor is the second most pressing constraint to growth (after political instability) for Thailand’s manufacturing firms, according to results from the 2015 Productivity and Investment Climate Survey (PICS) (see Figure 66). The same survey finds that the number of weeks it takes to fill a vacancy for a skilled worker has increased from 5.2 weeks in 2007 to 7.9 weeks in 2015. (R&D) and innovation activities as well as learning from FDI and GVC participation. Having a workforce with stronger literacy, analytical reasoning, and problem solving skills can thus help Thailand move up the value-added ladder to a more knowledge-based economy. However, similar to indicators on infrastructure, Thailand’s education system is perceived to have slipped while it has improved elsewhere (Figure 65). POLICY PRIORITIES Getting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All12 2 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps COMPARED TO ITS INCOME LEVEL, THAILAND’S STUDENTS ARE PERFORMING AS EXPECTED, BUT THE PERFORMANCE OF STUDENTS IN RELATIVELY POORER THAN VIETNAM SHOWS THAT THAI STUDENTS COULD BE DOING MUCH BETTER. On the OECD’s Program for International Student Assessment (PISA),75 Thailand’s average score has now reached a level slightly above what would be expected for a country at Thailand’s level of per capita income (Figure 67). With a GDP per capita of USD 3,390 (in constant 2005 USD) and an average PISA score of 437, Thailand’s performance is roughly similar to those of Bulgaria, Romania, and Chile and well above those of Malaysia, Brazil, and Mexico, which have higher levels of per capita income. However, Vietnam’s performance shows that it is possible to punch above its weight; Vietnam’s GDP per capita is only USD 986, yet its 15-year-old students performed at the level of students in much richer countries such as Australia, Germany, and New Zealand. FIGURE 66 : Main obstacle to doing business (% of firms pointing to particular constraint as one of top three constraints) 75 The PISA is an international survey that aims to evaluate education systems worldwide by testing the skills and knowledge of 15-year-old students. The tests are designed to assess the extent to which students can apply their knowledge to real-life situations and be prepared for full participation in society. To date, students from more than 70 countries have participated in the assessment, which is conducted every three years (see www.oecd.org/pisa/ for more details). 76 See http://www.ef.com/epi/ THAILAND FACES OTHER CHALLENGES ACROSS THE EDUCATION SYSTEM. For example, the growing tertiary education sector is increasingly producing business and marketing graduates, with very few graduates in the engineering and science fields sought by the private sector. Moreover, Thailand’s students and its workforce have a very low level of English language proficiency (ranked 62 out of 70 countries assessed on the EF English Language Proficiency Index 76 and 127 out of 168 countries/territories on ETS’ TOEFL iBT tests). Source: Thailand Productivity and Investment Climate Study (PICS) 2015, Ministry of Industry and Thailand Productivity Institute POLICY PRIORITIES Thailand Systematic Country Diagnostic 12 3 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps FIGURE 67 : Average PISA 2012 Scores vs. GDP Per Capita (constant 2005 USD) Note: The average of PISA scores in mathematics, science, and reading is used in this graph. Source: OECD 2012 PISA and World Development Indicators. THE SITUATION IS PARTICULARLY ACUTE FOR STUDENTS IN VILLAGE SCHOOLS, ESPECIALLY THE LOWEST-PERFORMING 40 PERCENT AMONG THEM WHO CONTINUE TO FALL FURTHER BEHIND, POSING A CONSTRAINT TO INCLUSION. While functional illiteracy can be seen across the various types of schools in Thailand, the greatest concentration of functionally illiterate students is found in villages, where 47 percent of their 15-year-old students are functionally illiterate. In 2003, these 15-year-old students were, on average, 125 “points” behind their peers in large city schools on the PISA assessment, corresponding to more than three academic years of schooling. That gap widened to 139 points by 2012 (see Figure 68). Village schools face unique challenges in being “remote” and small— despite lower student numbers resulting from falling birth rates, the number of small schools rose from 10,899 (33 percent of OBEC schools) in 2003 to 14,669 (47 percent) in 2011. These small schools, which predominantly serve the socioeconomically disadvantaged, lack adequate teachers, material resources, and physical infrastructure. POLICY PRIORITIES Getting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All12 4 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps FIGURE 68 : Thailand PISA scores have improved but mainly in urban schools and among the better students 17.4 24.7 340 360 380 400 420 440 460 480 500 Bottom 40% Top 60% P IS A R E A D IN G S C O R E IMPROVEMENTS EVERYWHERE BUT LARGER IMPROVEMENTS AT THE TOP 2003 2012 16.1 21.3 380 400 420 440 460 480 500 Village Large city P IS A R E A D IN G S C O R E LARGER IMPROVEMENTS FOR STUDENTS IN LARGE CITIES 2003 2012 Source: OECD PISA 2012. THE INEQUITIES IN LEARNING OUTCOMES HAVE THEIR ROOTS IN THE EARLY YEARS OF LIFE, WHERE TOO MANY POOR CHILDREN ARE BEING LEFT BEHIND, ESPECIALLY IN THE LAGGING REGIONS OF THAILAND. Still, approximately 16 percent of Thailand’s under 5 years of age are “stunted” (ie short for their height), with rates rising to 18.9 percent amongst the 0-5 years old living in the Northeast (MICS 2012).77 Stunting is a largely irreversible outcome of inadequate nutrition and repeated bouts of infection during the first 1000 days of a child’s life. Stunting has long-term effects on individuals and societies, including: diminished cognitive and physical development, reduced productive capacity and poor health, and an increased risk of degenerative diseases such as Diabetes.78 Thailand’s Mental Health Department also provide evidence that the learning problems observed in later years have their roots in the early years of life: the Department measures IQ and EQ (emotional quotient) of first graders in Thailand, and their results continue to show wide regional disparities, with children in Thailand’s lagging regions (especially the Northeast) lagging far behind children in Bangkok. IN RECENT YEARS, ACCESS TO PRE-SCHOOLS HAS EXPANDED BUT, AGAIN, THE POOREST CHILDREN (WHO NEED SUCH SUPPORT THE MOST) HAVE NOT BENEFITTED AS MUCH AS THEIR RICHER PEERS. Although access to preschool has improved markedly over the last decade, with average enrolment rate rising from 75 percent in 2004 to 85 percent in 2014, Table 14 shows that there remains significant gaps in enrolment between children across different family per capita consumption quintile. 77 “Stunting”, or being too short for one’s age, is defined as a height that is more than two standard deviations below the World Health Organization (WHO) Child Growth Standards median. 78 Source: WHA Global Nutrition Targets 2025: Stunting Policy Brief POLICY PRIORITIES Thailand Systematic Country Diagnostic 12 5 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps TABLE 14 : Pre-Primary Adjusted Net Enrolment Rates in 2014 (4-5 Years Old) Source: NSO - Thailand SES 2014. MOREOVER, THERE IS ALSO AN IMPORTANT ISSUE SURROUNDING THE DISPARITY IN THE QUALITY OF PRE- PRIMARY EDUCATION RECEIVED, AS WELL AS LENGTH OF TIME CHILDREN SPEND IN PRE-PRIMARY SCHOOL. According to a quality assessment sur vey conducted by the Depar tment of Health in 2013, only 67 percent of some 20,000 early childhood development (ECD) centers nationwide passed the quality assessment (UNICEF).79 Fur thermore, the PISA 2012 sur vey results indicate that the gap between the top and the bottom socioeconomic groups for 15 year-old students in regard to preschool attendance for more than 1 year is as high as 9 percentage TABLE 15 : Pre-Primary Adjusted Net Enrolment Rates in 2014 (4-5 Years Old) Source: OECD PISA 2012. points (Table 15). This is par ticularly worrisome given the evidence that investing in early childhood education yields a ver y high return. In par ticular, it is estimated that each year of attending preschool is associated with an increase in the PISA test score equivalent to around 1.6 years of formal schooling (Lathapipat 2016). In light of these findings, it is impor tant that Thailand addresses the inequality in children’s primar y school readiness by improving the quality of pre-primar y schools and closing the attendance gaps between socio - economic groups. 79 Source: http://www.unicef.org/thailand/education_14938.html POLICY PRIORITIES Getting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All12 6 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps GIVEN ITS POOR PERFORMANCE, REFORMS ARE NEEDED ACROSS VIRTUALLY ALL DIMENSIONS OF THAILAND’S EDUCATION SYSTEM (SEE WORLD BANK 2015B AND OECD UNESCO 2016). Still, three reforms areas seem of critical importance in the immediate future: first, investing more in the early years of children’s lives with an effort to eliminating stunting and dramatically improve access to quality ECD services for the poor. Second, addressing Thailand’s problems with small schools where approximately 1 million (mainly poor) children, on average, are currently getting an inferior quality education. Three, laying the foundations for a better run education system, by focusing on expanding autonomy to schools and by strengthening the mechanisms with which schools are held accountable for delivering a quality education. Broader and sustained education reforms along multiple dimensions are also needed to improve outcomes, including: increasing school autonomy and strengthening the use of information to hold teachers and schools accountable for performance. Below these options are discussed in more details. CLOSING THE SOCIOECONOMIC GAP IN ACCESS TO QUALITY INTEGRATED ECD SERVICES WILL REQUIRE EFFORTS ON THREE FRONTS: ON THE DEMAND SIDE; ON THE SUPPLY AND QUALITY SIDE; AND IN TERMS OF CREATING A MORE ENABLING ENVIRONMENT.80 On the demand side, the understanding of parents and communities on effective care for child development in areas such as breastfeeding, nutrition, protection, care and development of children are areas which need to be built upon and further strengthened. The supply and quality of adequately trained health professionals with parenting counselling skills (breastfeeding, nutrition, protection, care and development of children) and the supply of skilled ECD centre staff trained on nutrition, child protection, parenting counselling skills and monitoring of child development and developmental delays are related priority bottlenecks identified. Within the Enabling Environment domain, key bottlenecks identified include the capacity of ECD policy makers across Ministries to design and monitor integrated ECD plans as well as the comprehensive understanding of policy makers on the science of child development and evidence of impact of quality and integrated ECD as well as bottlenecks in the domain of legislation. TO HELP NARROW THE LEARNING GAPS IN THE SCHOOL SYSTEM, A MUCH MORE CONCERTED FOCUS ON THAILAND’S MANY SMALL SCHOOLS WILL BE NEEDED. As suggested in World Bank (2015b), addressing the village school challenge could involve: reorganizing small schools into fewer but larger and better-resourced schools; financing schools based on the number of students enrolled, thus incentivizing schools to become larger and more efficient; improving teaching resources for small and remote schools; and increasing awareness and understanding of the small school challenge. BROAD AND SUSTAINED EDUCATION REFORMS ARE NEEDED TO IMPROVE OUTCOMES. As World Bank (2015b) points out, there are no easy fixes for the types of problems Thailand’s education system is facing. Reforms along multiple dimensions will be needed, including: • Increasing school autonomy. Assessments of implementation of school autonomy and accountability policies in Thailand and elsewhere have shown that increasing school autonomy over personnel management can improve student learning, in particular at better- performing schools. Autonomy could perhaps first be increased for better-performing schools and delayed for other schools until they have a sufficient level of capacity and proper accountability for results. • Strengthening the use of information to hold teachers and schools accountable for performance. Several measures could be considered: (i)making school-level results on standardized exams publicly available; (ii) in school and teacher evaluations, placing greater emphasis on improvements in student learning outcomes; and (iii) requiring publication of school budgets and resource allocations across schools to enable parents and communities to monitor the efficiency of resource usage by their schools. 80 These recommendations are from UNICEF (2016): Programme Strategy note on “Early Childhood Development Outcome” POLICY PRIORITIES Thailand Systematic Country Diagnostic 12 7 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps IMPLEMENT EFFECTIVE POLICIES TO BOOST AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY RAISING LABOR PRODUCTIVITY IN THE AGRICULTURAL SECTOR REMAINS CRITICALLY IMPORTANT TO BOOSTING INCOMES OF THE BOTTOM 40 PERCENT. Despite greater commercialization and diversification of the sector in recent years, farm labor productivity remains low, calling for an improved agricultural policy to boost agricultural productivity. Achieving higher productivity requires a shift in mindsets to stop viewing agriculture as a social safety net. The best social policy for rural areas is the creation of good paid jobs, inside and outside of agriculture. However, the creation of more productive jobs in agriculture is constrained by numerous factors, among which the significant ones appear to be those related to the land rental market, the efficiency and sustainability of irrigation investments, and a decline in funding for agricultural research and extension programs against the increased funding of selected commodity programs that produce distortive outcomes.81 .DEVELOPING A BETTER-FUNCTIONING LAND RENTAL MARKET WOULD INCREASE THE COMPETITIVENESS AND PRODUCTIVITY OF THAI AGRICULTURE. It would help accelerate the process of land consolidation for use by more professional and commercial farm operators yet allow rural people to keep owning land without the fear of losing it to tenants. For the land rental market to function more efficiently, several legal and regulatory changes are needed. The Agricultural Land Tenancy Act B.E. 2524, which aims to protect tenant farmers’ rights and their investment security, stipulates that the tenancy contract must be at least six years. If a landowner wants to sell the land, he/ she must give his/her tenant the first chance to buy the land. Another obstacle is that the legal process to evict a tenant from land is very lengthy and costly, usually taking a few years of court proceedings. Even if the owner wins the case, the eviction process itself is also difficult and time-consuming, unless one resorts to the use of force. To avoid such problems, most land tenancy agreements are 81 The presentation of the constraints for agricultural productivity growth and increased competitiveness of the Thai agriculture is based on the report of Mr. Nipon Poapongsakorn from TDRI prepared for the Word Bank. 82 In October 2016, the Agricultural Land Reform Act was amended. However, the amendment only affects public land managed by the Department of Treasury. To streamline the rental market (and address the issues highlighted above), the Agricultural Land Tenancy Act will need to be revised. without written contracts. For those landowners (particularly absentee landlords) who cannot force tenants off the land, the opportunity cost of leaving the land idle is lower than the rental benefit. This implies that some farm lands will eventually remain vacant, affecting future food supply. Had there been no restrictions in the current land tenancy market, many small absentee holders would have rented their land to capable and entrepreneurial farmers, boosting the total productivity of the agricultural sector. 82 INCREASING THE EFFICIENCY AND SUSTAINABILITY OF IRRIGATION INVESTMENTS WOULD ALSO HELP BOOST AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY NOW AND MAINTAIN THE GROWTH IN THE FUTURE. As noted earlier, agriculture accounts for two-thirds of total water use, and the demand for water from farmers is projected to grow. Yet, Thailand has increasingly been facing water shortages and water conflicts, posing challenges to the agricultural growth outlook. Some of the problems can be resolved by modernizing the existing irrigation systems, but most issues require strategic comprehensive reforms. Recognizing this challenge, the Government has been drafting a new water law, which would need to address issues related to: (i) a water rights allocation and conflict resolution framework; (ii) decentralization of water resource management to River Basin Committees; (iii) strengthening of the capacity of water user groups; and (iv) establishment of market-based incentives or incentive-based systems for more efficient management of water demand, for example through water use fees and tradable water rights. POLICY PRIORITIES Getting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All12 8 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps FUNDING FOR PUBLIC AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH AND EXTENSION, WHICH HAVE PLAYED AN IMPORTANT ROLE IN HELPING THE AGRICULTURE SECTOR INCREASE COMPETITIVENESS AND PRODUCTIVITY IN THE PAST, NEEDS TO BE INCREASED. Suphannachart and Warr (2011) estimate that a 1 percent increase in domestic public agricultural research spending in Thailand leads to agricultural TFP growth of 0.16 percent in the short run and 0.07 percent in the long run.83 Yet in the past decade, funding for agricultural research and extension declined, while the quality of programs worsened. At the same time, spending for commodity support programs such as rice and rubber increased significantly, which has crowded out public spending on research and extension thereby worsening the level and quality of agricultural growth, driving agricultural production up without a correspondent increase in productivity. Going forward, public funds for agricultural research and extension need to be increased, preferably to 2 percent of agricultural GDO in the next 10 years, which would be compatible with Thailand’s main competitors such as Brazil, Malaysia, and China. In addition, the research and extension programs require improvements such as complementing project-based research funding with core funding, encouraging innovative technology transfer mechanisms by non-government actors, and promoting more inclusive value chains by helping smallholders through producer companies and contract farming. THE LATTER IS PARTICULARLY IMPORTANT IN THE POVERTY HOTSPOTS IN THE NORTH AND DEEP SOUTH OF THE COUNTRY. In these areas, more targeted and concerted support from extension, credit, agribusiness, and other services are needed to help smallholders benefit from the development of regional food value chains. Where the local governments have appreciated needs and constraints of local farmers and NGOs/civil society was invited to help, national programs have a large impact on poverty reduction. In Surin province, for example, the orientation of the programs to the needs of small farmers through promotion of organic rice, rural tourism, and handicrafts (OTOP), with the support of NGOs, helped reduce poverty from 73.8 percent in 2000 to 17.5 percent 83 Suphannachart Waleerat and Peter Warr (2011). Research and productivity in Thai agriculture. The Australian Journal of Agricultural and Resource Economics, 55, pp. 35–52. 84 Joel Moore and John Donaldson (2016). Human-Scale Economics: Economic Growth and Poverty Reduction in Northeastern Thailand. World Development, 55, pp. 1-15. 85 E.g. all of the “structural peers” selected for comparison purposes throughout this report have such generalized social safety nets targeted at poor people. in 2010 (see “Annex 3: Example of pathways out of poverty: a locally led development approach” for more details).84 On the other hand, in the neighboring Si-Saket province, which shares similar characteristics for agriculture with Surin, the poverty dropped only marginally, from 62.2 percent to 55.9 percent. The difference was that while Si-Saket focused on implementation of general farm commodity programs, which usually benefit the larger, more commercial farmers, Surin proactively focused on addressing market failures of smallholder agriculture such as helping to link small local farmers with powerful international buyers, overcome collective action problems, and establish social and financial resources to take advantage of market opportunities and national programs. The experience of Surin province would need to be scaled up to other provinces of Thailand to leverage agriculture for poverty reduction. B U I L D S M A R T E R S O C I A L P R O T E C T I O N SYSTEMS, FOCUSING ON PROVIDING A SAFETY NET FOR POOR PEOPLE THAILAND’S SMALL SOCIAL PROTECTION SYSTEM PROVIDES AN OPPORTUNITY TO BUILD A SMART, EFFICIENT, AND EFFECTIVE SYSTEM FROM THE GROUND UP. Thailand stands out in contrast to many upper middle income countries by not having a generalized safety net program for the poor.85 Developing a backbone national social safety program for the poor – incorporating design lessons from international experience – would go a long way in terms of providing support to vulnerable groups and, likely, help reduce social tension. POLICY PRIORITIES Thailand Systematic Country Diagnostic 12 9 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps A NUMBER OF KEY MEASURES ARE NEEDED TO ENSURE THAT PROGRAMS REACH THE POOR AND VULNERABLE AND ARE SUSTAINABLE. First, a social registry is required to identify who the poor (and near poor) are and what their needs are. Ensuring inter-operability among program-specific data will allow policymakers to identify holes and avoid duplications in the social assistance and social insurance programs. Second, poverty-targeted (rather than demographic-targeted) programs that are tailored to promoting sustainable income generation and risk reduction could be developed, supplemented by pure social assistance for the most excluded groups. Finally, the financing structure behind the largest social insurance programs (pensions, health) could be revisited to enhance fiscal sustainability in the face of a growing middle class. IN THE FACE OF THAILAND’S RAPIDLY AGING POPULATION, PROVIDING APPROPRIATE FINANCIAL AND SOCIAL SUPPORT TO THE ELDERLY WILL BE A PARTICULAR CHALLENGE IN THE COMING DECADES. In Thailand, the family has typically borne primary responsibility for care of the elderly, both economically and socially. Private transfers are thus the major source of funding for old-age support, with the elderly being more likely to depend on private transfers and assets than on public transfers. With rising dependency ratios, Thai workers will need to utilize a variety of financial products to help prepare for their own retirement, including savings, insurance, pensions, and other diversified financial products. The role of the state may also need to increase in order to support those elderly in need, so putting in place a household targeting system will be vitally important. One key issue is the distributional question of relative spending on formal sector pension schemes versus the social pension. For the social pension, there is also the question of whether to target, and if so, how tightly. With rapid aging, the coverage/adequacy tradeoff for the social pension will start to become more acute in the coming years. THAILAND CAN TAKE STEPS TO ADDRESS THESE CHALLENGES, BUT NONE OF THOSE STEPS WILL BE EASY. As discussed in World Bank (2015c), such steps include raising the participation rates of women and the elderly, raising the quality of the workforce (through more and better education, provided throughout life), and having more accommodating migration policies. Pension schemes will also need tweaking to ensure that living longer will not imply becoming poor, and the health care system will need an overhaul to support a different disease burden and needs of the elderly. As the experiences of several OECD countries show, none of the reforms are easy to implement. Thailand will have to implement them from a much weaker starting point (in terms of its income level and level of capacity) and at a much more rapid speed. ONE PROMISING RECENT INITIATIVE IS THE INTRODUCTION OF A CHILD SUPPORT GRANT IN 2015. Observing the higher poverty rates for children (see Figure 37), in October 2015, the government started implementing a new scheme to support poor families with small children. The scheme uses a combination of a Proxy Means Test and a Community-based Targeting to identify needy families.86 Under the scheme, and during the first year of implementation, poor and near-poor families with children (age 0 to 1 years of age) received a monthly allowance of THB 400 baht per child. Specifically, during the first year of implementation, cash assistance was provided to parents and caretakers of children born from October 2015 to September 2016.87 About 128,000 young children in Thailand were expected to receive the benefit during this first year of implementation, and the uptake as of end August 2016 is reported to be close to 100 percent. Additionally, in March 2016, the Cabinet voted an expansion of the policy to cover young children 0-3 from poor and near poor families. As such, the scheme will gradually be expanded in the coming years and is expected to cover approximately 100,000 children from each age cohort. 86 The proxy means test uses a combination of income test and additional criteria, including: (A) Family dependency, including: i) elderly; ii) people with disabilities; iii) child under 15 years old; iv) an unemployed family member at the age of 15-65; (B) No car; (C) Not more than 1 Rai of land for agriculture; and (D) Housing structure and components. 87 The transfer is unconditional, but during delivery process, there are information sessions around key issues, like ECD and the relevance of breastfeeding. POLICY PRIORITIES Getting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All13 0 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps C . M A K E G R O W T H G R E E N E R A N D M O R E R E S I L I E N T ENSURING THE SUSTAINABILITY OF GROWTH AND THE LIVELIHOODS OF THE BOTTOM 40 PERCENT WILL DEPEND TO A LARGE EXTENT ON THAILAND’S ABILITY TO MAKE GROWTH GREENER AND MORE RESILIENT. Green growth decouples growth from heavy dependence on resource use, carbon emissions, and environmental damage. It also promotes growth through the creation of new green product markets, technologies, investments, and changes in consumption and conservation behavior. Greater resilience to natural disasters and climate change will help reduce the vulnerability of agricultural workers—who comprise the majority of the bottom 40 percent—and businesses to potentially devastating shocks. At the same time, greener growth will be critical for ensuring the availability of resources to power future growth while protecting Thailand’s wealth of natural resources for future generations and preserving the places upon which Thailand’s tourism industry relies. THAILAND IS ON THE RIGHT TRACK IN ADDRESSING ITS KEY ENERGY CHALLENGES. The new integrated energy plans provide a solid pathway for implementation, and Thailand’s capacity and leadership commitment to implement the required actions is high. Implementation progress toward achieving the multiple targets could be reviewed systematically. As positive progress is made in improving energy efficiency, expanding alternative energy, increasing regional energy cooperation, and effectively contributing to the NDC target, the need for environmentally or socially sensitive energy options such as coal or nuclear power projects on the planning horizon may be reduced. MANAGE THAILAND’S NATURAL RESOURCES AND ENVIRONMENT REVERSING FOREST AND FISHERIES DEPLETION WILL REQUIRE IMPLEMENTING PROPOSED PLANS AND AVOIDING CONFLICTING POLICIES. Improved forest management requires accelerated identification and clarification of forest boundaries and greater use of economic instruments as incentives for conservation, such as payment of environmental services as proposed by the National Reform Council in 2014, as well as adjustments in conflicting policies promoting rubber and other large-scale plantations. In its National Environmental Quality Management Plan (2012-2016), Thailand targets to increase forest coverage area to 40 percent. National policy documents also state that the government will protect and conserve marine and coastal resources through limits and bans on the use of destructive fishing gear, enhanced maritime security, seasonal fishing bans, fishing stock assessment, and promotion of the role of village fishing in coastal resources conservation. TO MANAGE “BROWN” ENVIRONMENT (AIR, WATER, WASTE) PROBLEMS,THAILAND NEEDS TO IMPLEMENT THE PLANS AND REGULATIONS IT ALREADY HAS IN PLACE. Thailand has comprehensive regulations and policies to manage air pollution, but enforcement of these regulations needs to be strengthened. Additionally, environmental concerns should be kept in mind when making policy decisions in seemingly unrelated areas that may nevertheless have negative environmental concerns. An example is introducing tax incentives to encourage car ownership, which may increase emission of air pollutants. Regarding water pollution, enforcement of the more stringent regulations announced in 2012 that stipulate more detailed effluent standards by source, wastewater quality collection, and reporting would likely lead to improvements. Similarly, enforcement of waste management regulations issued in the past few years (including the Electrical and Electronics Waste POLICY PRIORITIES Thailand Systematic Country Diagnostic 13 1 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps 88 The Nationally Determined Contributions (NDC) or Intended Nationally Determined Contributions are Thailand’s commitments made under the UN Framework Convention for Climate Change for reductions in greenhouse gas emissions as well as its undertakings for adaptation planning. As part of its INDC declaration in October 2015, Thailand made the commitment to reduce green house gas emissions by 20 percent from the projected business-as-usual level by 2030 sessions around key issues, like ECD and the relevance of breastfeeding. Management and National Waste Management Acts and provincial waste management plans) will be a key step in addressing waste problems effectively. MOREOVER, UNDERSTANDING AND MITIGATING THE POTENTIAL ENVIRONMENTAL AND HEALTH IMPACTS ARISING FROM NECESSARY LARGE-SCALE PUBLIC INVESTMENTS IN AN INCLUSIVE MANNER WILL BE IMPORTANT TO ENSURE THE VIABILITY AND SUSTAINABILITY OF SUCH INVESTMENTS. Stronger involvement of the public in the EIA process as well as in monitoring and evaluation of EMP implementation is a key component of good governance, as acknowledged by the National Environmental Quality Management Plan (2012-2016). Enhanced coordination among different sector public agencies and the public would also improve policy and investment planning and implementation. Furthermore, the cumulative impacts of multiple large-scale development projects should be taken into account, possibly through strategic impact assessments. REDUCE VULNERABILITY TO NATURAL DISASTERS AND CLIMATE CHANGE BY FOCUSING ON BETTER LAND ZONING AND MANAGEMENT TO REDUCE THE FLOOD-DROUGHT PRONE AREAS. BETTER LAND ZONING AND MANAGEMENT IS NEEDED TO REDUCE THE FLOOD-DROUGHT PRONE AREAS. Specifically, deforestation in the upper reaches increases the risk of flash floods and sediment loads in rivers, while reducing storage and drainage capacity. Lack of careful planning for public infrastructure (roads, floodways, etc.) and urban/industrial areas exacerbate the risk of flooding. Flood and drought risk management has regional implications, too. As Thailand suffers from frequent and severe droughts, the government has drawn up and floated plans to divert water from the Mekong River into the Chao Phraya basin as well as the northeast of Thailand. These proposals have created considerable tension within the Mekong riparian countries, including Lao PDR, Cambodia, and Vietnam which rely on dry season flows from the Mekong River. The Mekong countries still need to reach agreement on equitable use of water resources. TO ACHIEVE ITS NATIONALLY DETERMINED CONTRIBUTIONS (NDC), TIMELY AND EFFECTIVE POLICIES, MARKET-BASED INSTRUMENTS, AND COOPERATION WITH THE PRIVATE SECTOR WILL ALL BE IMPORTANT.88 The government is studying several policy options (market- and non-market-based mechanisms) for reducing emissions and their suitability to the Thai context. In the NDC, the government adopted the use of market-based mechanisms to enhance the cost-effectiveness of mitigation actions. The government has made progress in developing the voluntary domestic market and is exploring the use of market instruments to promote energy efficiency improvement among large energy consumers in the industry and building sectors and low-carbon urban development. International experiences show that putting a price on carbon (through emission trading and carbon tax) is one of the key policies to help countries meet their climate targets effectively and has the potential to drive innovation and investment in clean technologies. Climate policies and market-based instruments could be designed to effectively align with and complement renewable energy and energy efficiency initiatives as well as land use and urban development and transport policies. Implementing coordinated green growth strategies will help Thai companies develop business models that take advantage of low carbon opportunities. Given Thailand’s success in renewable energy and energy efficiency, the private sector could also be mobilized to further drive green growth and contribute to meeting NDC targets. POLICY PRIORITIES Getting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All13 2 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps PROMOTE ENERGY EFFICIENCY AND CLEAN ENERGY BY FOCUSING ON IMPLEMENTING THAILAND’S PLANS AND COMMITMENTS FOR ENERGY EFFICIENCY AND ALTERNATIVE ENERGY THE GOVERNMENT HAS SET AN AMBITIOUS TARGET TO IMPROVE ENERGY EFFICIENCY IN ALL SECTORS, WHICH IF IMPLEMENTED SUCCESSFULLY COULD HELP SHIFT THE COUNTRY TOWARD A HIGH-EFFICIENCY GROWTH PATH, BUT THE CHALLENGES LIE IN IMPLEMENTATION. Thailand pledged at the UNFCCC COP 21 meeting in 2015 to reduce its carbon emissions by 20-25 percent from their 2005 levels by 2030. This international commitment is underpinned by the government’s Power Development Plan (PDP) for 2015-2036 which pledges to increase renewable energy so it comprises up to 20 percent of overall power generation from its current level of 10 percent. The challenge now is implementing these commitments. SEVERAL CONCRETE EFFORTS COULD ACCELERATE THE SHIFT TOWARD MORE ENERGY EFFICIENCY AND CLEANER ENERGY. First, targeted efforts in the major energy-consuming sectors, i.e. manufacturing and transport, could contribute significantly to the government’s goal. In the transport sector, key measures will involve improving vehicle fuel efficiency and expanding infrastructure investment to promote greater use of rail transport. Other efforts will include more stringent regulations of large factories and buildings, strengthening the capacity of the industry to adopt low global warming and energy efficient technologies, improving energy efficiency standards for buildings and appliances and their enforcement, and greater use of demand side management measures. Moreover, adopting new and innovative measures – such as energy efficiency resource standards among power producers, performance-based EE incentives – will also help induce new investment and adoption of new and more efficient technology. Second, avoiding energy price and demand distor tion by maintaining the current pricing/ subsidies policies. By March 2016, subsidies for most petroleum products have been lifted, excise taxes have been largely reinstated for petroleum products, subsidies for electricity are limited to ver y small “life line” consumption for households. Third, given that Thailand will increasingly have to impor t its electricity, Thailand could take a leading role in power grid code harmonization and take a leading initiative in the design of power market rules to facilitate commercialization of power trade both bilaterally and multilaterally in the Greater Mekong Subregion and ASEAN. Similarly, for natural gas, Thailand energy authorities could take an active role in optimizing and collaborating on natural gas procurement among the current regional gas trading countries such as China, Malaysia, Myanmar, Singapore and Thailand. Thailand can also help bring global good practice in developing power infrastructure projects in countries with less experience than Thailand. POLICY PRIORITIES Thailand Systematic Country Diagnostic 13 3 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps STRENGTHEN THE INSTITUTIONAL CAPABILITY OF THE PUBLIC SECTOR TO IMPLEMENT REFORM PRIORITIES. ALL REFORM PRIORITIES IDENTIFIED IN THE SCD WOULD REQUIRE SIGNIFICANT IMPLEMENTATION CAPACITY IN THE PUBLIC SECTOR. The World Bank’s forthcoming WDR 2017 proposes three principles to guide those thinking about improving governance for development. First, it is important to think not only about what form BOX 9 : Applying the World Development Report 2017 Framework to Thailand Source: Adapted from the World Development Report 2017 The SCD has applied this framework by focusing on: • Specific functions rather than forms, that fiscal institutions could undertake to implement the 8 year infrastructure plan. • Reflecting current realities in terms of power asymmetries, the SCD recommends deregulation for improving competitiveness and promoting private enterprise to improve the role of law. • Making suggestions on implementing ASEAN Economic Community agreements on skilled labor This approach means that governance reforms proposed by the SCD are calibrated to solve problems identified by stakeholders during countrywide consultations and promotes economic development for all by strengthening functions, reducing power asymmetries and enhancing the role of law. institutions should have, but about the functions that institutions must perform: “Think not only about the form of institutions, but about their functions.” Second, while capacity building matters, how to use the capacity and where to invest in capacity depends on the relative bargaining powers of actors: “Think not only about capacity building, but about power asymmetries.” Third, in order to achieve the rule of law, countries could focus on first strengthen the different roles of law to enhance contestability, change incentives, and reshape preferences: “Think not only about the rule of law, but about the role of law”. Box 9 provides more details on the approach and outlines how it has been applied to this report. Three principles for rethinking governance for development Traditional approach The WDR 2017 outlines three principles for rethinking governance for development POLICY PRIORITIES Getting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All13 4 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps STRENGTHENING THE INSTITUTIONAL CAPABILITY TO CREATE MORE AND BETTER JOBS IN ORDER TO BOOST INVESTMENTS IN INFRASTRUCTURE, IT WOULD BE CRITICAL FOR CENTRAL FISCAL AGENCIES – THE BOB, NESDB, AND THE MINISTRY OF FINANCE TO: • Develop and Publish detailed project appraisals for all infrastructure projects under the Governments THB 1.796 trillion (USD 51.3 billion equivalent) Logistics Infrastructure Investment Program FY2015-2023. Currently Thailand does not publish project appraisal information for projects beyond a short feasibility study. Project appraisals could include cost benefit analysis, social and environmental safeguard assessments along with mitigation measures, and detailed procurement and implementation plans. • Introduce multiyear budgeting and hardwire it to projects that have been fully appraised and commence implementation. Currently investment projects do not have detailed costings and the single year budget system makes implementation of multi-year projects cumbersome and ineffective. In order for Thailand to implement this 8 year investment program, it would be important that there is corresponding multiyear budgetary commitment approved by the Parliament. • Implement a procurement system that mandates transparent international bidding for all mega projects (projects above THB 1 billion). When firms compete the government wins. By requiring transparent international bidding, domestic firms will be able to compete with international firms and in doing so the government will get internationally competitive prices while domestic firms will have the incentive to improve standards – which will allow them to also compete for contracts internationally. • Involve citizens in monitoring of public projects through use of innovative technologies. This can be done by geo-tagging projects and inviting the public to send in pictures and feedback on project progress. At the same time provide citizens with information on implementation stage of the project. This would enhance transparency and provide a platform for collaborative governance. SIMILARLY, TO INCREASE COMPETITIVENESS, THAILAND COULD BENEFIT FROM IMPLEMENTING EXISTING AEC-2015 COMMITMENTS AND DEREGULATION. IN THIS REGARD THE NATIONAL COMPETITIVENESS DEVELOPMENT COMMITTEE (NCDC) ESTABLISHED IN DECEMBER 2015 UNDER THE PRIME MINISTER’S OFFICE COULD CONSIDER: • Fast-tracking Mutual Recognition Agreements for services liberalized under the AEC-2016. This would help address the skills gap identified by firms, enhance firm level competitiveness. • Deregulation through the Guillotine Approach. At this time the government is collaborating with the private sector to identify approximately 6,000 laws, rules and regulations that are outdated, overlapping or unclear. By eliminating rules and regulations that are essentially redundant or overlapping, the government will be able to increase efficiency. And by publicizing all rules and regulations, including those that have been abolished, the government will enhance transparency. • Improve ease of doing business. Currently, it takes 103 days for agencies to consider and grant construction permits in Thailand. By comparison, this can be done in only 26 days in Singapore. Similarly, it takes 440 days to enforce contracts in Thailand, while it only takes 150 days in Singapore. And finally it takes 264 hours to file taxes in Thailand while taxpayers take only 118 hours in Malaysia. As Thailand competes for investments, it does so with the likes of Singapore and Malaysia. Therefore it is important that the regulatory capability is enhanced so that Thailand can reclaim its position POLICY PRIORITIES Thailand Systematic Country Diagnostic 13 5 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps within top 20 economies in the Ease of Doing Business. Global rankings matter to global investors. In this regard, the NCDC may consider a implementing an action plan of regulatory modernization that would reduce time, minimize costs to private sector, and improve quality of government’s regulatory functions for private enterprise. • Being a small open economy, Thailand would benefit from proactive adoption and implementation of international standards. Two standards are important in the current state of play. These are: (i) international labour standards pertaining to fisheries – due to the importance of export markets; and (ii) international civil aviation organization standards – due to importance of air transport links for tourism, medical hubs, and logistics services. STRENGTHENING THE INSTITUTIONAL CAPABILITY TO PROVIDE MORE SUPPORT TO THE BOTTOM 40 PERCENT AND TO MAKE GROWTH GREENER AND MORE RESILIENT AS THE COUNTRY IMPLEMENTS ITS PLANNED “4.0 ECONOMIC GROWTH MODEL” FOR REVIVING GROWTH AND BOOSTING SHARED PROSPERITY, INSTITUTIONAL CAPACITY TO PROVIDE AN EFFECTIVE SOCIAL PROTECTION SYSTEM, BOOSTING AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY, AND IMPROVING EDUCATION AND SKILLS WILL BE PARAMOUNT. In this regard some considerations for improving institutional capability include: • Defragmenting the institutional arrangements for water management. Currently there is no single agency that has the responsibility and accountability for managing water resources in a manner that prevents floods and droughts. Currently there are more than 10 agencies that are working on narrow water management issues without having an overall agency that can effectively manage water resources nationwide. This institutional fragmentation was a key reason why the Government’s 2011 THB 350 billion National Water Management scheme never got off the ground – as no agency could actually manage the upstream, mid-stream, and downstream systems. The government may consider administrative mergers of organizations in order to have a capability endowed organization that has the mandate and capacity to plan and implement transformative water management systems to avoid the perennial floods and drought issues. This will be a boon not just for the agriculture sector, but also make it more resilient to climate change. • Restructuring the agency mandates on social protection. Having a functioning social protection system would require the MOF, NESDB and the Bureau of the Budget to plan and budget component elements of the social protection system and to drive implementation. This is because by its nature, a social protection system spans different administrative structures (local authorities, pensions, child care, social insurance) and requires central fiscal agencies to play a key role. Current institutional fragmentation across these central fiscal agencies does not allow each agency to take a clear lead role. It does not matter which agency is assigned the role to develop and execute the social protection program, what matters is that institutional collaboration is strong, budgets are allocated and spent through implementing agencies in a programmatic manner. POLICY PRIORITIES KNOWLEDGE GAPS KNOWLEDGE GAPS KNOWLEDGE GAPS Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps KNOWLEDGE GAPS Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps Getting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All WHILE THAILAND HAS GOOD DATA IN MOST AREAS (ESPECIALLY FOR THE POST-1997 CRISIS PERIOD), DATA ARE WEAK IN SOME AREAS. For example, very little is known about the approximately 3.7 million migrant workers estimated to be living in Thailand, including their exact number, the sectors in which they work, and their well-being and needs. Similarly, lack of sex-disaggregated quantitative data among key sectors as well as limited reporting of violence against LGBTI people limits effective policy dialogue. For instance, the true extent of economic development outcomes— from housing to education to health care—is largely unknown. The impact of discrimination and violence on socio-economic status and/or essential assets is another largely unexamined issue. The true extent, nature, and consequences of SOGI-motivated violence are also largely unknown, limiting effective policy development. In addition, the research available tends to focus on LGBTI individuals within cities (mostly Bangkok), so there is a dearth of data on sexual and gender minorities in poor and rural areas (Crehan, 2015). Furthermore, the impact of climate change on different development scenarios and on the poor needs to be examined in more detail. Relatedly, ways to enhance social protection in a way that mitigates the adverse impacts of climate change and natural disasters need to be examined. A N OT H E R G A P I S T H E L AC K O F T I M E S E R I E S O F D I S AG G R E G AT E D P U B L I C S P E N D I N G , A N D A C O N S I S T E N T T I M E S E R I E S O N P U B L I C E X P E N D I T U R E B Y F U N C T I O N A L U S E O N LY S TA RT S I N 2 0 0 5 . 8 9 The former means that there is no research on the impact of public spending on provincial-level outcomes (e.g., poverty, job creation). The latter means that it is difficult to decipher how government priorities have shifted over time (e.g., from defense to social sectors). IDENTIFIED DATA AND KNOWLEDGE GAPS WHILE A GREAT DEAL IS KNOWN ABOUT HOUSEHOLDS OVER TIME, LESS IS KNOWN ABOUT THE COMMUNITIES IN WHICH THEY LIVE BECAUSE THAILAND DOES NOT ACCOMPANY THE HOUSEHOLD QUESTIONNAIRE WITH A COMMUNITY QUESTIONNAIRE. Again, this makes it difficult to gauge the impact that government actions (e.g., building roads, marketplaces) might have had in improving livelihoods. THAILAND SHOULD MAKE IT A PRIORITY THAT ITS SURVEY DATA, SUCH AS THE LABOR FORCE SURVEY (LFS), ARE CONSISTENT AND COMPARABLE ACROSS TIME TO ENABLE EFFECTIVE MONITORING OF THE ECONOMIC CONDITIONS. The LFS undertaken by the National Statistical Office (NSO) since 1963 is the primary source of data on the country’s labor market and are among the most timely and important economic data series produced. Beginning in 1971, two rounds of the LFS were collected each year. Another round 89 As the World Bank 2009 PEFA assessment notes: “Local governments receive approximately 25 percent of total revenues but there is little systematic reporting/consolidation of their operations and financial performance, […] their accounts are not consistently presented to central government, and no comprehensive information has been produced about the functional distribution of their expenditure since 1996.” Thailand Systematic Country Diagnostic 13 7 KNOWLEDGE GAPS KNOWLEDGE GAPS Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps Getting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All13 8 CHALLENGES Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps was added during the 1984-1997 period, while a fourth round was included in 1998. This has allowed researchers to measure the performance of the Thai economy at a quarterly frequency ever since. In addition to enabling investigation of short-run fluctuations, the comparability and long time series of the survey data mean that statistics on long-run labor market trends can also be analyzed. These characteristics render the LFS extremely valuable for researchers and policymakers alike. However, beginning in 2014 there was a major update in the sampling frame based on the new series of Population Projection for Thailand, 2010-2040. Unfortunately, no attempt has been made by the NSO to retrospectively revise the sampling weights for the survey data collected prior to 2014 to correspond with the new sampling frame. This effectively means that the long-run effects on the labor market of, say, the new minimum wage policy implemented during 2011-2012 or the recent fall in the global agricultural prices cannot be evaluated.90 ANOTHER KNOWLEDGE GAP RELATES TO DETAILED RISK VULNERABILITY INFORMATION WHICH IS ARE NEEDED TO INTEGRATED CLIMATE RESILIENCE ACROSS SECTORS AND SUPPORT THE IMPLEMENTATION OF INDC AND THE NATIONAL ADAPTATION PLAN. Although the data and information needed for the climate risk assessment are mostly available through international and national sources, they are currently not systematically evaluated, nor forwarded/translated to the stakeholders and considered actionable to guide the prioritization of resilience measures across key sectors. Development of national and subnational climate services that include effective early warning system and long term monitoring of multi-hazard risks are needed to enhance the adaptive planning capacity of national agencies and local decision makers. 90 The seriousness of the problem can be gauged by considering the number of employed workers in the third quarter in 2013 and 2014. Over this one year period, if one is to believe the currently available numbers, the total number of employed persons declined from 39.1 million to 38.4 million. The number of agricultural and fishery workers fell from 16.4 million (42 percent) to 13.5 million (35 percent) while the number of manufacturing workers increased from 5.4 million (14 percent) to 6.3 million (16 percent). REFERENCES Alesina, Alberto, Sule Ozler, Nouriel Roubini, and Phillip Swagel. 1996. “Political instability and economic growth.” Journal of Econom- ic Growth 1(2): 189-211. 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THE DEEP SOUTH IS AMONG THE PROVINCES WITH THE HIGHEST POVERTY RATES AND A LARGE NUMBER OF POOR POPULATIONS. Pattani and Narathiwat had the 2nd and 3rd highest poverty rates, respectively, in Thailand in 2013 with the 7th and 8th highest number of poor, respectively. In more details, the Deep South provinces cover only 2.6 percent of the total of population but their 0.57 million poor people account for 7.8 percent of the total number of poor people in Thailand. In addition, 0.83 million (or 48 percent) of their total population (of 1.73 million) are vulnerable to falling into poverty. 91 Poverty decomposition is performed with a counterfactual unconditional distribution as a Shapley decomposition approach proposed by Azevedo, Sanfelice and Nguyen (2012). POVERTY IN THE DEEP SOUTH HAS BEEN DECLINED SUBSTANTIALLY OVER THE LAST TWO DECADES BUT RATES REMAINS SUBSTANTIALLY ABOVE THE NATIONAL AVERAGE. Poverty fell from 69 percent in 1994 to 33 percent in 2013. While the decline is depressive, the rate remains substantially above the national average (11 percent). The total numbers of poor fell from 1.1 to 0.6 million in between 1994-2013. BOOMING RUBBER PRICES AND THE SOCIAL PENSION HAVE PLAYED A CRITICALLY IMPORTANT ROLE IN REDUCING POVERTY RATES IN THE DEEP SOUTH. Analysis of the drivers of poverty reduction suggest that farm income and government transfers have increasingly dominated other income sources to alleviate poverty between 2006 and 2013, reflecting the role of rising agricultural prices and the social pension for the elderly. 91 Percent of population who are poor (national poverty line) Source: World Bank staff calculations using SES ANNEXES Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps Thailand Systematic Country DiagnosticGetting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All 14 5 14 4 KEY GROUPS ARE MORE VULNERABLE IN THE DEEP SOUTH AND OR THEIR SHARE OF THE POPULATION IS LARGER. There are higher poverty rates in disadvantaged household categories such as households headed by an elderly or households headed by those who speak a non-Thai language at home. A very large group of poor households is households which head speaks a non-Thai language at home. This household category covers 71 percent of total households in the Deep South, and their poverty rate is 33 percent of households. LANGUAGE IS AN IMPORTANT CONSTRAINT FOR THE DEEP SOUTH. Pattani Malay or Yawi (in Thai) or Jawi (in Pattani) is the primary spoken language in the neighboring southernmost provinces of Thailand. It is a highly divergent dialect of Malay including the standard Bahasa Malaysia, because of its geographical isolation. Therefore, those who cannot speak Thai or English find themselves struggling to get access to higher education or advanced employment opportunities. According to the SES 2013, individuals who do not speak Thai at home tend to be much poorer when compared within other individuals within the same socio-economic classes. EDUCATIONAL OUTCOMES LOOK PARTICULARLY POOR IN THE DEEP SOUTH. All three Deep Southern provinces are at the bottom of the national standardized test scores, according to the Ordinary National Educational Test (ONET) 2012 (for grades 6, 9, and 12). The problem is more severe for schools in small villages that have less than one teacher per class room and no adequate educational resources to provide quality education to the disadvantaged students. One-third or 310 from 920 schools in the Deep South under the Office of Basic Education Commission (OBEC) have less than 20 students per class (defined as small school - see Lathapipat and Sondergaard, 2015) and could be integrated or sharing education resources with another same-type schools within the same sub-district (e.g. providing same primary education level in the same local community). With a declining student-age population 92, the number of small schools in the Deep South is expected to increase over the coming years. LABOR FORCE INACTIVITY RATES ARE PARTICULARLY WORRISOMEIN THE DEEP SOUTH. The inactivity defined as neither working nor studying in the Deep South provinces is among highest in the country. According to SES 2013, 18.54 percent of population age 15-65 was inactive. For youth (age 15-25), 18.52 percent of them were not studying or working, which reflecting their detachment from the labor market. Instead of staying in education or training to invest in skills that improve their future employability, these youth’s economically inactivity risk both labor market and social exclusion. Male youth inactivity is among highest in the country, and this group could be targeted for recruitment into insurgency involvement. In addition, inactivity in female working age population is also among the highest in Thailand. A FUNDAMENTAL CHALLENGES FOR THE DEEP SOUTH IS THAT IT HAS NOT ENJOYED THE SAME LEVEL OF “STRUCTURAL TRANSFORMATION” AS OTHER PARTS OF THAILAND. Percentages of both the non-agricultural gross provincial product (GPP) and the GPP per person employed in non- agricultural sectors are among lowest in the country. While the share of GPP of the “modern sectors” (i.e. the economy, excluding agriculture, fishing, mining, and construction) increased from 56.1 to 60.5 percent in 2001- 2013, this is still far lower than elsewhere: the GPP shares of modern sectors for Bangkok Metropolitan Area (included Samut Prakan, Nonthaburi, and Pathum Thani), Northeast, and South are 97.9, 74.8, and 71.9 percents in 2013. Equally troubling, productivity growth in the modern sectors (measured as the GPP per person employed in modern sectors) have been stagnant, hovering around 100,000 THB (constant 2002 THB) for more than a decade (2001-2013). By contrast, productivity (again measured as GPP per person employed in modern sectors) grew at a brisk pace in other regions: by 4.3 percent per year (during this period) in Bangkok Metropolitan area, by 2.7 percent in the Northeast, and by 1.6 percent in the South, respectively. 92 According to NESDB’s population and projection for 2015-2030, the population ages 5-19 in the Deep South will decrease by 30,000, or from 0.47 to 0.44 million. Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps Thailand Systematic Country DiagnosticGetting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All 14 5 14 4 Poverty decomposition at the national level for sub-periods ANNEX 2 : INCLUSIVENESS OF GROWTH THIS ANNEX INVESTIGATE THE INCLUSIVENESS OF GROWTH IN MORE DETAILS. Specifically, the annex provides disaggregation over time and geographic regions (for information on the methodology and data used see Badiani-Magnusson et al., 2016). Moreover, the annex provides details on the income traits of the bottom 40 percent versus the rest of the population, including statistics on income generation by skill groups. Lastly, we report some key demographic indicators and their link to poverty reduction. BETWEEN 1988 AND 1996 LABOR INCOME AND NON-FARM INCOME WERE MAJOR CONTRIBUTORS TO POVERTY REDUCTION, AND IN THE 2000’s THIS WAS LED BY FARM REVENUE. Labor income played an essential role in reducing poverty for the 1986-1992 period, supplemented by farm-income and private transfers for the 1992-1996 period (see figure below). Between 2000-2002 and 2002-2006 reduced poverty is associated with greater farm, labor and non-farm income. The rising role of farm income over the period is associated with greater diversification from paddy into other outputs (e.g. perennials, fisheries or livestock), the increased farm commercialization and integration in global food value chains, and the increased share of processed and high quality food in exports. Between 2006 and 2013 farm income and government transfers have outstayed other income sources to alleviate poverty, reflecting the role played by rising global agricultural prices and the agricultural price support schemes on one side, and the introduction of the social pension for the elderly on the other. Note: Poverty decomposition (based on Azevedo et al., 2013) is performed with consumption as welfare measure, population weights and ranking for all components. Source: SES 1988, 1992, 1996; 2000, 2002, 2006, 2013. Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps Thailand Systematic Country DiagnosticGetting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All 14 7 14 6 LOOKING AT THE CONTRIBUTIONS TO POVERTY REDUCTION BY REGION, IT APPEARS THAT WHILE LABOR INCOME PLAYED THE LARGEST ROLE IN POVERTY REDUCTION THROUGHOUT THE FIVE REGIONS IN 1988-96, ITS ROLE WAS SURPASSED BY FARM INCOME IN ALL FOUR REGIONS EXCEPT BMR IN 2000-2013. By 1996, the reduction in the number of poor in the North and Northeast regions is associated with growing contributions from non-farm income (around 12 percent contribution) and private transfers (11 and 16 percent contribution in each province) in addition to labor income which contributed to 40 percent of reduced poverty. In 2013, the contribution of farm income reaches around 60 percent in the North and 50 in the Northeast. Poverty decomposition at regional level (1988-1996 and 2000-2013) Note: Poverty decomposition (based on Azevedo et al., 2013) is performed at regional level with consumption as welfare measure, population weights and ranking for all components. Source: SES 1988, 1996; 2000, 2013. Additionally, around 10 percent contribution is accounted to public transfers in the two regions. Central and South regions display reduced poverty to be associated to farm income (around 40 percent) and labor income (around 18 percent). As the figure below clearly shows, Bangkok has been an outlier in terms of pathways out of poverty in the 2000s, where predominance of nonfarm and labor income accounted for more than 50 and 35 percent respectively in the reduction in poverty rates. Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps Thailand Systematic Country DiagnosticGetting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All 14 7 14 6 Note: World Bank staff calculations using SES 1988-2013. Income shares are calculated using household weights. THE POOR AND BOTTOM 40 PERCENT OF THE POPULATION RELY MORE ON FARM INCOME AND LABOR INCOME COMPARED TO THE NON-POOR AND HAVE A GROWING RELIANCE ON TRANSFERS. As shown in the figure below which compares the evolution of the income profile for the bottom 40 percent and the top 60 percent of the population 93, the bottom 40 percent has relied more heavily on farm and in-kind income. Notably, the income profiles differed between the early period (1988-96) and the recent period (2000-13). In 1988-1996 when the economy was characterized by rapid growth with significant job creation in the secondary sectors, for the bottom 40 percent, farm income fell from 23 to 21 percent of the total income. The share of labor income to total income increased from 20 to 27 percent, in addition to in-kind income and private transfers which, in 1996, accounted respectively for 35 percent and 11 percent of the bottom 40 income. In contrast, the top 60 percent relied more heavily on labor income (more than 35 percent) and non-farm income (around 15 percent). In 2000-2013 as the structural transformation slowed down, the trend of the rising share of labor income slowed down for the bottom 40 percent with an average of 27 percent of Evolution of the income profile of the bottom 40 percent and top 60 percent of the population (1988-2013) 93 Bottom 40 and top 60 percentiles are based on consumption per capita, and the means are drawn using household weights. household income being sourced by labor income over the period, but this is on average 15 percent lower than the top 60. At the same time, in-kind income reduced its shares for the bottom 40 percent, while the share of private transfers increased from 11 percent in 2000 to 13 percent in 2013, and the share of public transfers increased sharply from 1 to 6 percent. CLOSER EXAMINATION OF THE DIFFERENT TYPES OF INCOME REVEALS THAT THE BOTTOM 40 PERCENT RECEIVES INCOME FROM VERY DIFFERENT OCCUPATIONS THAN THE TOP 60 PERCENT. For the bottom 40 percent, labor income is mostly comprised of income generated from occupations as laborers (e.g., workers in crafts and related trades, plant and machines operators, skilled agricultural work and elementary occupations), although the share of labor income generated from clerical occupations has increased slightly for this group from 9 percent in 2006 to 16 percent in 2013. In contrast, the top 60 percent Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps Thailand Systematic Country DiagnosticGetting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All 14 9 14 8 have gained income shares from professional occupations over the last decade, with a much stronger role of professional income and clerical income (see figure below). These trends point to possible labormarket segmentation, although the increase in labor income from clerical work for the bottom 40 percent also reflects a potential for gradually diversifying income toward higher-skilled and highest-paid occupations. THE DEMOGRAPHIC COMPOSITION OF THE HOUSEHOLD HAS CHANGED OVER TIME, REDUCING ITS SIZE AND INCREASING THE NUMBER OF ADULTS WHICH COMPOSE IT. The reduction in the average household size reflects a typical demographic transition in developing economies that experience economic advancements. During the period 1988 to 2013 the number of working-age adults (15-65) as a share of household size has increased. Looking at employment contribution to the household, the trend in the share of employed working-age members over total household size shows increasing trends, especially in the 2000s. This may suggest that demographic changes have positively contributed to the production capacity of the Shares of labor income by occupation type for the poor, bottom 40 percent, and top 60 percent (2006 and 2013) Note: World Bank staff calculations using SES 2006, 2013. The shares are calculated based on total labor income for households receiving this source of income. household, due to a greater share of household members actively contributing to household income. Among the working-age adults in the household, the share of those which are employed has decreased during the 1990s and stabilized afterwards (on average during the 2000s the 79.9 percent of the working-age members of the household conducted an occupation). These trends coincide with a big increase in secondary net enrolment experienced during 1990s with more modest increases thereafter. Overall, the table below suggests that the change in the age structure and the growing number of people employed per household could have had important consequences on income generation and thus to poverty alleviation. Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps Thailand Systematic Country DiagnosticGetting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All 14 9 14 8 Key household demographic indicators 1988-2013 Note: World Bank staff calculations using SES 1988-2013. The statistics at average household level are calculated using household weights. Working-age adults share is the yearly average of the proportion of individuals aged 15-65 over total household size. The share of employed working-age individuals is expressed as a mean share over total household size (column 5) or as a mean share over total number of working-age individuals (column 6). ANNEX 3 : EXAMPLE OF PATHWAYS OUT OF POVERTY: A LOCALLY LED DEVELOPMENT APPROACH Based on Moore and Donaldson (2016) this box reports the experience of the Northeastern provinces of Surin and Si-Saket in their pathways out of poverty. Despite similar geographic, demographic and production traits as well as GPP growth rates, they experienced marked differences in poverty reduction over the first decade of the 2000s (see figure to the right). What explains the marked poverty reduction in Surin? The authors find that the formation of a strong and active civil society has harmonized small-scale, low tech industries to multi-actors’ initiatives, thus generating shared prosperity within multiple channels. Three proximate factors are example of the different approach applied: organic farming, the One Tambon One Product initiative (OTOP) and rural-based tourism. How do these provinces compare? Note: Figure:“Growth and poverty reduction in Surin and Si-Saket”, reproduction of Moore and Donaldson (2016, p.2). GPP p.c. expressed in 2002 prices. Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps Thailand Systematic Country DiagnosticGetting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All 15 1 15 0 B. THE OTOP INITIATIVE in Si-Saket, as in many other areas of the country, benefited only few already established producers. Instead in Surin the synergies among small producers, larger enterprises and the sponsorship of local authorities via festivals and events made the OTOP a source of market and finances for small producers, and a profitable off-season activity for farmers. C. RURAL-BASED TOURISM has seen in Surin a strong synergy among entrepreneurs, local governments and NGOs in promoting participation of local residents (including ethnic minorities) in tourism-related attractions in several small-scale sites, from eco-friendly tourism to homestay, with festivals and events attracting visitors to discover local productions and culture. To a different extent, Si-Saket has developed its local attractions, but with greater shares of revenue catered in hotel and restaurants from day- visitors rather than tourists, thus being not structured to benefit local residents. Despite similar growth characteristics, Surin has outperformed its neighboring province Si-Saket. Local institutions and the active involvement of communities have had a central role to create synergies and induce economic activity to better serve the poor (Moore and Donaldson, 2016). Having these pathways as example, a locally led development approach may support many parts of Thailand to soon get back on track. A. COOPERATIVE ORGANIC RICE PRODUCTION became less profitable in Si-Saket than Surin due to lack of province-wide organization and coordination, with fewer options to certify products and promote them along the local and tourist markets. Instead, the transition to organic farming in Surin has seen since the 1980’s the formation of collective groups, organizations and province-wide establishments encouraging producers in numerous ways. First, with education and best farming practices, smallholder farmers developed better tools in organic farming processes and organic fertilizers. Second, the organizations helped in reducing imbalances between farmers and larger market actors in the agricultural supply chain, by either acting as intermediaries in reducing conflicts or by forming collective groups to directly operate parts of the output processing such as milling. Third, the network of local NGOs enhanced farmers to engage with international NGOs in the export of Fair Trade products and in the compliance with standards certification bodies. As early as in 2000, the Surin provincial governor advocated the organic agriculture cause to official state level involvement, with the integration of provincial agencies to secure funds, to coordinate activities and use of infrastructures, complementing the projects of local NGOs. The additional involvement of local “development monks” led by Surin’s Abbot Nan increased the spread of information and practices across the communities. Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps Thailand Systematic Country DiagnosticGetting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All 15 1 15 0 FIGURE The causal mechanisms behind Surin’s success Source: Moore and Donaldson (2016, p.3). Note: SMM stands for Small, Medium and Micro enterprises. ANNEX 4 : DETAILS ON THE LABOR MARKET MILLIONS OF NEW AND BETTER JOBS WERE CREATED IN THE PAST FEW DECADES. Specifically, 11.2 million new jobs were created between 1988 and 2013, benefitting both men and women (albeit men benefitted slightly more – 54 percent of the new jobs were taken by men). These new jobs were higher paid (and higher productivity) jobs in Thailand’s growing industrial and service sector. Notably, women were far more likely to take up service sector jobs: the fractions of services sector employment rose from 26 to 45 for women and 25 to 35 for men during this period. GENDER INEQUITIES REMAINS IN TERMS OF FEMALE LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION. Women’s participation rates are nearly 16 percentage points below that of males (71 percent versus 87 percent in 2013). The gap and participation rates are quite steady at this level since 2006 which reflects that additional jobs have been created for the increasing population at the same growth rates. In 2013, women accounted for 51 percent of the labor force and they hold 46 percent of jobs. Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps Thailand Systematic Country DiagnosticGetting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All 15 3 15 2 THESE LABOR MARKET INEQUITIES HAVE PERSISTED, DESPITE THE FACT THAT WOMEN’S EDUCATIONAL OUTCOMES ARE SUPERIOR TO MEN’S. Specifically, the education level of young female workers is higher than young male workers. In 2013, young female wage workers (aged 15-24) have significantly higher proportions of upper secondary or university graduated than male wage workers within the same age cohort. And, more broadly,, female workers aged 15-64 already have achieved greater levels of schooling (from an average of 4.9 years in 1986 to 8.6 years in 2013), exceeding male employees (from an average of 5.4 years of schooling in 1986 to 8.4 years in 2013). Wage premia by education level ALTHOUGH THE SITUATION IS IMPROVING, WOMEN’S PAY CONTINUE TO LAG BEHIND MEN (BY APPROXIMATELY 16 PERCENT IN 2013). The faster wage growth for female workers could be contributed to some convergence in wages, and this could be related to the increase in their skill level. But this does not translate into the equal earnings per hour. After controlling for all other socioeconomic and geographic characteristics, women continue to earn less than men – by an estimated 16 percent in 2013. SOME WOMEN ARE WORSE OFF THAN OTHERS IN TERMS OF BEING PAID LESS. Women with a higher education seem to suffer the biggest gap. Female wage workers have lower hourly earnings across all educational levels. Highest wage inequality occurs at top educational level positions, even though there are more female wage workers than male among wage workers at occupations with higher education. Note: World Bank staff calculations using LFS 2013. Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps Thailand Systematic Country DiagnosticGetting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All 15 3 15 2 Conditional hourly wage and wage gap by firm size Conditional hourly wage and wage gap by experience WOMEN WORKING IN SMALL FIRMS FACE THE BIGGEST GAP IN WAGES. On the other hand, wage inequality is lower in large firms which tend to have more standardized approach on remuneration and job promotion. Unfortunately, most wage workers are in small enterprises with less than 20 employees, which tend to have high wage gender gaps. In particular, 55 percent of female wage workers are in enterprises with hiring between 1 and 19 employees. Note: World Bank staff calculations using LFS 2013. Note: World Bank staff calculations using LFS 2013. FURTHERMORE, WOMEN WITH LOTS OF EXPERIENCE ALSO SUFFER A LARGE GAP. Other things being equal, women have lower wage earnings than men at all levels of experience. The wage gender gap is getting worse for the higher years of work experience which could be from inequality in career development or motherhood and housewife contribution. Given lower job participation rate for female, female shared 20 percent of wage workers which their occupations are classified as managerial positions in 2013. Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps Thailand Systematic Country DiagnosticGetting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All 15 5 15 4 ANNEX TABLE 1 : Detailed breakdown of employment Unit: thousands Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps Thailand Systematic Country DiagnosticGetting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All 15 5 15 4 Note: Based on the average of all rounds of the LFS Note: Based on the average of all rounds of the LFS ANNEX TABLE 2 : Annualized growth of employment Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps Thailand Systematic Country DiagnosticGetting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All 15 7 15 6 • Reconciliation across social and political divisions • High quality, expert government bureaucracy and central and local administrations • Clean and transparent taxation and government spending, without corruption • Access to quality education • Access to quality health services • Effective transport services – roads, rail, public transport • Access to clean water and sanitation • Energy efficiency (Thailand’s economy has remained very energy intensive until now) • A business friendly environment for the private sector, including small and medium enterprises • Effective competition, with a level playing field and equal opportunities among private sector firms • Access to financial services – bank accounts, credits for individuals or firms, mobile financial services, investment products, consumer financial education • The balance of economic activity across Thailand’s regions and the extent of economic concentration in Greater Bangkok Area • Increasing productivity and incomes in agriculture, including through access to irrigation • Social protection for the poor 1. IN YOUR VIEW, WHAT ARE THE BIGGEST AND MOST IMPORTANT DEVELOPMENT AREAS FOR THAILAND WHERE PROGRAMS SHOULD BE FOCUSED TO END POVERTY AND SHARE PROSPERITY WIDELY AMONG PEOPLE THROUGHOUT THE COUNTRY? (PLEASE PICK MAX. 5) SHARE YOUR VIEWS! THAILAND: HOW TO END POVERTY AND SHARE PROSPERITY MORE WIDELY? ANNEX 5: QUESTIONNAIRE USED FOR CONSULTATIONS The World Bank Group (WBG) is undertaking engagements with stakeholders in Thailand on the country’s development opportunities, pressing challenges and ways to address them. The schedule of these meetings is posted on the World Bank Thailand website. We are using this survey to get feedback from as many stakeholders as possible. Please take a few minutes to fill out this short survey. The feedback we get will not be attributed to any individual but will be reflected and posted on the website, through a collective summary of feedback from all engagements. Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps Thailand Systematic Country DiagnosticGetting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All 15 7 15 6 • The rapid ageing of Thai society, including care for the elderly (list continues on the next page) • Preventing and protecting against the impact from natural disasters – such as floods, droughts, earthquakes • Protection of Thailand’s environment and natural resources • Equality and no discrimination among genders, including LGBTI (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Intersex people) • Foreign language skills • Foreign labor (please see below) • Others 1:______________________________________________________________________ • Others 2:______________________________________________________________________ If you identify “foreign labor” as one of the top 5 priority development areas for Thailand, please indicate whether, in your view, there: • There should be more foreign labor, and it should be easier for businesses in Thailand to hire foreign workers and for foreign workers to work in Thailand • There should be less foreign labor, and regulation should be more strict for businesses in Thailand to hire foreign workers and for foreign workers to work in Thailand 2. WOULD YOU LIKE TO SHARE ANY OTHER IDEAS, SUGGESTIONS, OR QUESTIONS ABOUT DEVELOPMENT OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES FOR YOURSELF, YOUR FAMILY, OR OTHER PEOPLE IN THAILAND? ________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________ 3. WHAT IS YOUR GENDER:_____________________________________________________________ 4. IF YOU WORK, FOR WHAT TYPE OF ORGANIZATION DO YOU WORK? • Government Agency Civil Society • Academia Private Sector • Development Partner Other: _____________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps Thailand Systematic Country DiagnosticGetting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All 15 9 15 8 Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth IntroductionSustainability Knowledge Gaps Country Context Inclusion and Poverty Policy Priorities Growth Introduction Sustainability Knowledge Gaps Thailand Systematic Country DiagnosticGetting Back on Track: Reviving Growth and Securing Prosperity for All 15 9 15 8 World Bank Thailand 30th Floor, Siam Piwat Tower 989 Rama I Road, Pathumwan Bangkok 10330 Tel: +662 686-8300 Email: thailand@worldbank.org www.worldbank.org/thailand facebook.com/worldbankthailand

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