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Paradise Lost

Working for tourism

This lesson looks at who is working in the tourist industry in Thailand, the people that make or break a holiday for our passengers either working in the hospitality sector of the ‘invisible' migrant workers.

Key question:

  • Who works in Thailand's tourist industry and what do they do?

Key Concepts:
Interdependence
Physical and human processes
Cultural understanding and diversity

Who works in Thailand's tourist industry and what do they do?
Hundreds of thousands of Thais and migrant workers are employed in the Thai tourist industry which contributes tourism contributes over 5% of the Thai economy's GDP. As Thailand has become more prosperous, fewer Thai people are willing to work in jobs which are commonly known as "dirty, dangerous, and demeaning", and Burmese nationals have arrived in Thailand in increasing numbers to fill the labour shortage. The Royal Thai Government has recognized this need by establishing a series of registration processes which, although have had problems associated with them have been a good faith attempt to establish a legal framework and regularize the flow of migrants across porous borders with Myanmar (Burma) , Laos, and Cambodia. Many of the young people come to work in Thailand in order to send money back to their families.

Burmese migrant workers make up approximately 80% of migrant workers in Thailand; Lao and Cambodian workers are the other two largest groups of migrant workers there. In addition there are over 143,000 Burmese refugees in Thai camps near the border, who are not permitted by the Thai authorities to work. Tens of thousands of Shan refugees are also in Thailand, but they are not allowed by the government to live in refugee camps. Most of the Shan refugees are migrant workers, many of whom would be at risk of serious human rights violations were they to be returned to Myanmar (Burma).

The 26 December 2004 tsunami affected Satun, Trang, Krabi, Phang Nga, Phuket, and Ranong provinces in Thailand, killing an unknown number of Burmese and other migrant workers, who had been employed in the hospitality, agricultural, construction, and fishery industries there.

The rapid reconstruction of many of the resorts devastated by the tsunami, including Phuket, was partly owing to a plentiful supply of cheap and flexible migrant labour form across Thailand's borders.

A growing sector of Thailand's tourism industry is medical tourism. Lower labour costs mean large cost savings on operations and procedures compared to private hospitals in countries such as the United States and arguably a higher level of care than many westerners are accustomed to receiving in hospitals back home. Over one million people per year travel to Thailand for everything from cosmetic surgery, hip replacements to cutting edge treatment. One patient who received a coronary artery bypass surgery at Bumrungrad International hospital in Bangkok said the operation cost him US$12,000, as opposed to the $100,000 he estimated the operation would have cost him at home. In 2006, medical tourism was projected to earn the country 36.4 billion baht.

Click on an activity:
Starter
Main activity

Plenary

Downloads:

Ao mystery cards

Ao mystery solution

After the tsunami - winners and losers

Body Beautiful - the rise of ‘Medical Tourism'


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