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Search Result for “CLMTV”

Showing 1 - 8 of 8

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OPINION

Post-Covid headwinds hit the region

Oped, Thitinan Pongsudhirak, Published on 14/10/2022

» As the five economies in mainland Southeast Asia re-emerge from the Covid-19 pandemic, their prospects for recovery and return to growth and development appear challenged, characterised by deteriorating balance of payments, fiscal weaknesses, currency depreciations, and rising inflation amidst global monetary tightening and recession risks.

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OPINION

China-US rivalry on Mekong mainland

Oped, Thitinan Pongsudhirak, Published on 27/11/2020

» Unlike other key foreign policy areas where President-elect Joe Biden will likely change the course left behind by outgoing President Donald Trump, the Mekong River region in mainland Southeast Asia represents a low-hanging fruit where continuity from Washington carries consensus. As China has dominated the Mekong space by operating a string of upstream dams and controlling downstream river resources, Cambodia, Laos, Thailand, and Vietnam as adversely affected riparian countries have looked for ways and means to mitigate and counterbalance Beijing's aggressive freshwater offensive. All the incoming Biden administration has to do is to keep its eye on the Mekong and work with like-minded partners to keep mainland Southeast Asian countries from becoming Beijing's uncontested front yard.

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OPINION

China's Belt & Road needs to listen more

News, Thitinan Pongsudhirak, Published on 30/11/2018

» In the aftermath of a tense Asean-led summit season, it is clear now that the United States and China are engaged in a great-power competition not seen since the Cold War. The US-China trade war, irrespective of negotiated talks in Buenos Aires between President Donald Trump and President Xi Jinping, is set to deteriorate over the next two years and probably longer. The two superpowers may have fundamental and structural differences that cannot be resolved without a sweeping deal that realigns their geopolitical status and geoeconomic interests in a way that is acceptable to both, an unlikely prospect. So the confrontation will likely intensify.

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BUSINESS

Thailand: the Human Resource Hub of CLMTV?

Christopher Bruton, Published on 13/12/2017

» With the rapid expansion of political, economic and social relationships between the countries of what is now becoming known as CLMTV (Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam), this sub-region of ASEAN is beginning to become recognised as the mainstay of Thailand’s international relations.

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THAILAND

Mekong mainland coalesces after Asean rift

News, Thitinan Pongsudhirak, Published on 29/07/2016

» Although it was established 49 years ago, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) as we know it has been around only since 1999 when Cambodia joined Southeast Asia's premier regional organisation as its 10th member state after Laos and Myanmar had entered two years earlier. Asean was originally set up on different rationales and for different purposes than what it has become today as a loosely structured grouping of a diplomatic community with ambitious regionalisation plans that require a central strategic role in Asia.

THAILAND

Migrant workers’ kin face ban in 2017

News, Published on 05/09/2015

» Migrant workers will be barred from bringing their relatives into Thailand from the beginning of 2017, according to Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha.

THAILAND

Migrants 'need help finding legal work'

News, Penchan Charoensuthipan, Published on 03/09/2015

» Five Asean countries are exploring ways to draw immigrant labourers toward finding legal channels for working abroad, to prevent human trafficking in the region.

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WORLD

Real integration action in mainland SE Asia

News, Thitinan Pongsudhirak, Published on 15/05/2015

» Those caught up in the hype over the Asean Community (AC) and its three pillars of political-security (APSC), economic (AEC) and socio-cultural (ASCC) by end 2015 are fixated on the wrong places. Integration from connectivity, where borders are proving increasingly irrelevant, is happening less on paper and more on the ground in mainland of Southeast Asia. Beyond the agreements and scorecards of the AC, mainland Southeast Asia is where real integration will take place.