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Thailand at a Crossroads: Challenges and Opportunities in Leveraging Migration for Development

Thailand - Over recent decades, Thailand has developed into a regional migration hub in Southeast Asia, with more than 3.5 million migrants living there — the vast majority of them workers from neighbouring countries.

Although officially considered temporary migrants, many have lived in Thailand for a decade or more. While most are low-skilled and from nearby Cambodia, Lao People's Democratic Republic and Myanmar, Thailand's relatively open economy also attracts highly skilled workers from a wide range of countries around the world. In 2010 more than 100,000 foreigners held work permits for high-skilled occupations.

In Thailand at a Crossroads: Challenges and Opportunities in Leveraging Migration for Development, authors Jerry Huguet, Aphichat Chamratrithirong and Claudia Natali examine the country's two basic approaches to regularizing labour migration: Memoranda of Understanding with migrant-sending neighbours and nationality verification as a preliminary step for work permit application by migrants who had entered irregularly.

The authors find that Thailand, given its robust and growing economy, is well positioned to take advantage of the benefits of migration. However, they add, harnessing migration's full potential would require the introduction of comprehensive, long-term migration policies that address the realities facing migrants living in Thailand, of which more than 1 million remain unregistered. Many migrants in Thailand face obstacles to decent work opportunities, access to health care and civil rights.

The Issue in Brief series is published by IOM and the Migration Policy Institute (MPI).

For more information please contact  

Joe Lowry
IOM Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific, Bangkok
Tel. +66.818708081
Email: jlowry@iom.int