© 2020 Springer Nature Switzerland AG.
), Below-Replacement Fertility in Industrial Societies: Causes, Consequences, Policies, Supplement to Vol. Siamwalla, A., Setboonsarng, S. & Patamasiriwat, D. (1993). ), Human Resources in Development Along the Asia-Pacific Rim, Singapore: Oxford University Press. The Thai Economy in Transition, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 2. pp. The population is distributed along the horizontal axis, with males shown on the left and females on the right.
81–117}. Mason, A. Archavanitkul, K., Chamratrithirong, A., Guest, P. & Richter, K. (1993). (1992). The Thai Economy in Transition, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. & de Guibert-Lantoine, C. (1992). The Fear of Population Decline, Orlando: Academic Press. Bangkok's environmental problems - what hope is there for change?, paper presented at Asian Studies of Australia Conference, Murdoch University, Perth. (1971). Leibenstein, H. (1971). Ashakul, T. & Ashakul, C. (1988). h�bbd```b``���/��&��r0�i�L���L�� Agriculture, in Peter Warr (ed. ), Economic Factors in Population Growth, London: Macmillan. Report prepared for US Agency for International Development, Population Technical Assistance Project, DUAL & Associates, Inc. and International Science and Technology Institute, Inc., Arlington, VA. Berelson, B. Jones, G. W. (1984), Population policies in Southeast Asia and Australia: the international relevance of domestic affairs, Journal of the Australian Population Association 1: 109–120. ), Fertility Transitions, Family Structure, & Population Policy, Westview Press, pp. Douglass, C. M. (1990). ), The Economic Impact of Demographic Change in Thailand, 1980–2015, East-West Center, Honolulu, pp. Robinson, W. C. & Rachapaetayakom, Y.
Thai Official religion none Monetary unit baht (THB) Currency Exchange Rate 1 USD equals 31.076 Thai baht Population (2019 est.) Fertility transition in Asia: the statistical evidence, in R. Leete & I. Alam (eds. 3–1, National Urban Development Policy Framework, Bangkok: Thailand Development Research Institute Foundation. Sign in|Recent Site Activity|Report Abuse|Print Page|Powered By Google Sites. Bauer, J. Leoprapai, B., Susangkran, C., Soonthorndhada, K., Hutaserani, S., Thongthai, V., Harnchanpannich, K., Pituckmahaket, O. 1970. Studies on Consequences of Population Change in Asia: Thailand, Asian Population Studies Series No. Population policy in Thailand since 1970 has had two major planks: to reduce fertility through an active family planning program, and to distribute population away from the large primate city of Bangkok. The table below indicates the effectiveness of the policy through the time it was in place; cit. ���*:�. The impact of population growth on economic welfare: nontraditional. Population Projections for Thailand 1982–2015, NESDB, Office of the Prime Minister: Bangkok. (1993). ), op. New York: McGraw-Hill. Teitelbaum, M. S. & Winter, J. M. (1985). Thailand reached replacement-level fertility almost a decade ago, although there has been a lag in measuring and recognising the implications of this benchmark event. ), Urbanization and Urban Policies in Pacific Asia, Boulder, Westview Press, pp. The Survey of Population Change 1991, National Statistical Office, Office of the Prime Minister, Bangkok.
Honolulu: East-West Center. Leete, R. & Alam, I. Population Projection Review. Thailand's Reproductive Revolution. (1990).
12, Population and Development Review. Guest, P., Jones, G.W. Fertility could well sink still lower. (eds), Below-Replacement Fertility in Industrial Societies: Causes, Consequences, Policies, Supplement to Vol. Guest, P. (1994).
0 Thailand, officially the Kingdom of Thailand and formerly known as Siam, is a country in Southeast Asia.Located at the centre of the Indochinese Peninsula, it is composed of 76 provinces, and covers an area of 513,120 square kilometres (198,120 sq mi), and a population of over 66 million people. The future of international migration within Asia, Asian and Pacific Migration Journal 1(2): 250–276. Jones, G. W. (1991), Urbanization issues in the Asian Pacific region, Asian Pacific Economic Literature 5(2): 5–33. & Panfueng, A. Ashakul, T., Tirasawat, P. & Kruavan, J.
Demographic change and the Thai economy: An overview, in B. Campbell, A. Mason & E. Pernia (eds. Mahidol University, Institute for Population and Social Research, Nakhorn Pathom, Thailand, Division of Demography & Sociology, Australian National University, Canberra, ACT, Australia, You can also search for this author in 119, United Nations, New York.
Urban and regional development policy for the 7th Five-Year Plan in Thailand, Background Report No.
Pardthaisong, T. (1991), Population policy and the national future: should we go forward or reverse course in reducing the fertility rate, in Population and Development Newsletter, Institute for Population and Social Research, Mahidol University, Bangkok, Vol. Keyfitz, N. (1993), Review of Herve Le Bras, Marianne et les lapins: l'obsession Demographique, Population and Development Review 19(2): 365–374. ; Thailand population is equivalent to 0.9% of the total world population. ), Is There an Optimum Level of Population?
Occasional Paper No. The paper discusses whether these policies may need to be modified as a result of the major demographic and socio economic changes that have been taking place. Part of Springer Nature. In 2013, the population growth rate was 0.3% which is a acceptable level to remain at. Fertility Transition in Malaysia: An Analysis by State and Ethnic Group, PhD thesis, University of London. Tonguthai, P. (1987). The influence of demographic variables on development via their impact on education, in Ansley J. Coale (ed.
Introduction, in Naohiro Ogawa, Gavin W. Jones & Jeffrey G. Williamson (eds. Thailand.
Singer, S. F. (1971), Is There an Optimum Level of Population? ), op. Shah, N. M. (1994). Population distribution in Asia, a region of contrasts, in United Nations, Population Distribution and Migration, proceedings of the United Nations Expert Meeting on Population Distribution and Migration, Santa Cruz, Bolivia, 18–22 January 1993 (ESA/P/WP.126). McIntoch, C. A. Ogawa, N., Jones, G. W. & Williamson, J. G. (1993). Warr, P. G. Sources of Data on Migration and Urbanization in Thailand: Reflections on Data Collection Techniques, Definitions and Results. PubMed Google Scholar.
cit. cit. ), Human Resources in Development Along the Asia-Pacific Rim, Singapore: Oxford University Press. ; Thailand 2020 population is estimated at 69,799,978 people at mid year according to UN data. The momentum of population growth will ensure substantial further increase before the population levels off, but this is not true in all regions. Population policy.
A growing problem. Learn more about Institutional subscriptions. Vasuprasat, P. (1994).
1957 0 obj <>stream Toward a policy for an optimum population, in S. Fred Singer (ed. Rele, J. R. & Alam, I. National Statistical Office NSO, (1993a). h�b```��,��@���� �9V`q�aq���p$���ʮ&����C�� �)��;�����Wn1Ƿ �5�������x!��x�XÌ��3�gN[V�f� j���@�y]JJ'8�ǴE��1�$ތ��8q���ln7$ʢ�*%JNl��(�SŐR��^�� ��%ʦ7���SR:��)I�I6ق I�$C��k��r1L� ����������`�f� �LA�@�f r��. & Guest, P. (1994). (1990). - 51.158.67.180. 8–9 July, Pattaya.
Demographic change and Asian labour markets in the 1990s, Population and Development Review 16(4): 615–645. Park, Y. in Naohiro Ogawa, Gavin W. Jones & Jeffrey G. Williamson (eds. Bennett, A., Frisen, C., Kamnuansilpa, P. & McWilliam, J.