Thailand - BEGINNING OF THE CONSTITUTIONAL ERA

Tax Planning   Risk Management   Convertible Bonds   Technical Analysis   Stock Charting   Financial Planning   Getting Rich   Billionare   

Unavailable

Figure 6. Siam in the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries.

[JPEG]

Ruins of Khmer city of Phimai (thirteenth century) in northeÍÍÍÍastern Thailand
Courtesy Tourism Authority of Thailand

Early in his reign, King Prajadhipok (Rama VII, 1925-35) showed a tendency to share responsibility for political decision making with his ministers. He also appointed an advisory council to study the possibility of providing the country with a constitution, but its royalist members advised against such a measure. The civil bureaucracy, by contrast, considered the time ripe for such a move. Siam faced severe economic problems because of the world depression, which had caused a sharp drop in the price of rice. Discontent among the political elite grew in reaction to retrenchment in government spending, which necessitated severe cutbacks in the numbers of civil servants and military personnel, the demotion in rank of others, and the cancellation of government programs.

Data as of September 1987


Next Page    Prev Page    Index Page    

Other Links:  MarketSigns.com  IRS Procedures  IRS FAQ's  IRS Tax Info  Employer's Guide for Tax  Individual Federal Tax  Tax for Small Business    
Countries  Iran  Iraq  Israel  IvoryCoast  Japan  Jordan  Kuwait  Latvia  Laos