Thailand [+]Compare [E]dit [H]istory

Aliases: Kingdom of Thailand, Prathet Thai, Ratcha Anachak Thai, Siam

Object «Thailand» was created due to

Add new object to «Thailand» or move existing objects here.


Object «Thailand» has attributes

Attribute Value
Geography
Area 513,120 km²
Continent Asia
Land area 510,890 km²
Water area 2,230 km²
Land boundaries 5,673 km
Border countries
  • Burma
  • Cambodia
  • Laos
  • Malaysia
Coastline 3,219 km
Mean elevation 287 m
Lowest point 0 m
Highest point 2,565 m
People
Population 68,977,400
Official languages
  • Thai
Religion Buddhist
Government
Long country name Kingdom of Thailand
Short country name Thailand
Long local name Ratcha Anachak Thai
Short local name Prathet Thai
Former name
  • Siam
Government type Constitutional monarchy
Capital Bangkok
Economy
GDP (PPP) 1,236,000,000,000 USD
GDP (OER) 455,400,000,000 USD
GDP (real growth rate) 3.9 %
GDP - per capita (PPP) 17,900 USD
Gross national saving 34.1 % of GDP
Labor force 38,370,000
Unemployment rate 0.7 %
Population below poverty line 7.2 %
Budget revenues 69,230,000,000 USD
Budget expenditures 85,120,000,000 USD
Military expenditures 1.33 % of GDP
Taxes and other revenues 15.2 % of GDP
Budget surplus or deficit -3.5 % of GDP
Public debt 41.9 % of GDP
Inflation rate 0.7 %
Central bank discount rate 1.5 %
Commercial bank prime lending rate 4.42 %
Stock of narrow money 62,390,000,000 USD
Stock of broad money 62,390,000,000 USD
Stock of domestic credit 584,900,000,000 USD
Market value of publicly traded shares 348,800,000,000 USD
Current account balance 51,080,000,000 USD
Exports 235,100,000,000 USD
Imports 203,200,000,000 USD
Reserves of foreign exchange and gold 202,600,000,000 USD
External debt 132,000,000,000 USD
National currency bath
National currency (code) THB
National currency (symbol) ฿
National currency rate to USD 34.34

A unified Thai kingdom was established in the mid-14th century. Known as Siam until 1939, Thailand is the only Southeast Asian country never to have been colonized by a European power. A bloodless revolution in 1932 led to the establishment of a constitutional monarchy. After the Japanese invaded Thailand in 1941, the government split into a pro-Japan faction and a pro-Ally faction backed by the King. Following the war, Thailand became a US treaty ally in 1954 after sending troops to Korea and later fighting alongside the US in Vietnam. Thailand since 2005 has experienced several rounds of political turmoil including a military coup in 2006 that ousted then Prime Minister THAKSIN Chinnawat, followed by large-scale street protests by competing political factions in 2008, 2009, and 2010. THAKSIN's youngest sister, YINGLAK Chinnawat, in 2011 led the Puea Thai Party to an electoral win and assumed control of the government. In early May 2014, after months of large-scale anti-government protests in Bangkok beginning in November 2013, YINGLAK was removed from office by the Constitutional Court and in late May 2014 the Royal Thai Army, led by Royal Thai Army Gen. PRAYUT Chan-ocha, staged a coup against the caretaker government. PRAYUT was appointed prime minister in August 2014. PRAYUT also serves as the head of the National Council for Peace and Order (NCPO), a military-affiliated body that oversees the interim government. This body created several interim institutions to promote reform and draft a new constitution, which was passed in a national referendum in August 2016. In late 2017, PRAYUT announced elections would be held by November 2018; he has subsequently suggested they might occur in February 2019. As of mid-December 2018, a previoulsy held ban on campaigning and political activity has been lifted and per parliamentary laws, an election must be held within 150 days. King PHUMIPHON Adunyadet passed away in October 2016 after 70 years on the throne; his only son, WACHIRALONGKON Bodinthrathepphayawarangkun, ascended the throne in December 2016. He signed the new constitution in April 2017. Thailand has also experienced violence associated with the ethno-nationalist insurgency in its southern Malay-Muslim majority provinces. Since January 2004, thousands have been killed and wounded in the insurgency.

Similar objects


Most often compared with


Everyone can something to edit or add.
There were 3 edits, no edits waiting approval. Last edited by Guest_1198(-47), May 26, 2020 (51 fields were changed)
[C]ompare » ×


Help · Contact us · Disclaimer · Contributors · Developers · Donate