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Tempests in a Thai-pot
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Sept. 4, 1999 |
The 2,000-word commentary on Thailand's prospects for economic recovery
raised eminently level-headed concerns about corruption, greed and cronyism
in the upper echelons of Thai society. The minor furor, however, erupted in reaction
to one essentially irrelevant quip, attributed to an unnamed Western
diplomat, which Newsweek's editors mined for the headline. "Thailand has two
comparative advantages," the source said: "sex and golf courses." That statement alone was enough to spark heated debate in the halls of power
and in the op-ed pages of local newspapers, and the magazine's layout added
fuel to the fire: Although the article was ostensibly devoted to serious economic
matters, the opening spread featured a three-column image of a scantily clad
Thai woman cruising Pattaya's sleazy nightlife district on a motorbike with
a Caucasian man in tow. The cover photo showed a magnificent golden stupa
with the ridiculous teaser "Thailand: If only its economy looked as good as
its temples." Huh? An important point Newsweek's reporters raised briefly, then brushed aside with another reference to "the raunchy strip bars of Pattaya," is that mainstream tourism -- not just the naughty kind -- has been the one bright spot in Thailand's ailing economy. While the manufacturing and financial sectors have stumbled, exchange rates have remained favorable, the government has remained stable, visitor arrivals are up and business is booming along the beaches of Phuket and Koh Samui. - - - - - - - - - - - - The Asian economic crisis began here in July 1997, when the baht plummeted on international currency markets and the Thais could no longer afford to pay interest on the foreign loans that had financed the nation's rapid growth in the 1980s and '90s. The baht has recovered somewhat since then, but the collapse has left its mark on Bangkok's cluttered skyline in the form of delinquent construction sites where massive erections of concrete and Rebar have been abandoned by bankrupt developers and left to fester in the tropical heat. These crumbling monuments to excessive speculation serve as a constant reminder of how far Thailand's economy has fallen, forcing laid-off construction workers to return to farms and villages in the northeast, forcing commercial and residential property owners to cope with tenants who can't pay the rent and forcing formerly high-flying executives to liquidate golf clubs, Rolexes and other icons of affluence from the boots of their beloved Mercedes. Even so, the juice has not all been sucked from the Big Mango.
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