Thailand THE SOCIAL SYSTEM
Central Thailand's vast network of canals serves as a
means of transportation and irrigation.
Courtesy United Nations
Homeless people living under bridge in Bangkok
Courtesy United Nations
The rural areas, where most Thai live, have been affected by
change for many decades, especially since the mid-nineteenth
century, when the impact of European economic and political
activity was first felt. The full effects of change started to
become manifest in the 1930s. Among the factors reflecting and
creating change in local social patterns was the coup of 1932,
which brought military and bureaucratic elites into power and
extended the power of the central government more effectively
than before into rural areas. More important in its cumulative
effect, however, was the rapid growth of the population and the
consequent shortage of land, which led to the development of
occupations outside agriculture and the emergence of a rural and
small-town bourgeoisie.
At the national level, society was stratified at the
beginning of the twentieth century into three classes--kin of the
reigning king and his immediate predecessors, government
officials (often nobles granted their particular status by the
king), and, by far the largest group, the peasantry. These
classes comprised a social system in which those who had
political power and status also had prestige and access to
wealth. Buddhist monks had a special status outside this system.
Also outside the system were the Chinese, who were largely
laborers and small traders in the early twentieth century.
As the twentieth century progressed, the government
bureaucracy proliferated. A growing number in the higher ranks
had their origins outside the hereditary nobility, as did the
upper ranks of the expanding armed forces. By the 1960s, the
military and the bureaucracy included persons from several levels
of the social and economic hierarchy. Directly or indirectly, the
military and bureaucratic elites disposed of power and economic
resources, the latter often in combination with those Chinese who
controlled the major business enterprises of Thailand. Hereditary
nobles retained high status, but they no longer wielded power and
did not match some of the members of the military oligarchy in
wealth. Monkhood remained a source of special status and was an
avenue of social mobility for persons of rural origin with talent
and a willingness to give part or all of their lives to the
sangha; but monkhood was less and less attractive to
urbanites or to those who had access to other avenues to power,
wealth, and status. After World War II, an incipient urban middle
class and an urban proletariat also emerged, particularly in
Bangkok, partly in response to a commercial and tourist boom
generated by the presence of large numbers of foreigners,
particularly Americans.
Still outside the social system, in the sense that their
direct access to political power was restricted and that their
sense of a worthwhile career differed from that of most Thai,
were the Chinese. Members of other non-Thai ethnic groups could
occasionally make a place for themselves in the middle or upper
reaches of Thai society by assimilating Thai culture. The Chinese
were less able to do so until the 1960s and 1970s, when they
began to move into the upper bureaucracy in larger numbers.
More significant in the daily life of many Thai than
differences in status was the relationship between patron and
client. This link between two specific persons required the
client to render services and other kinds of support in return
for protection, the use of the patron's influence on the client's
behalf, and occasional favors or financial aid. The basic pattern
was old, but the relationship had evolved from a social one with
economic overtones to one in which economic transactions and
political support were more important.
Data as of September 1987
|