Double pricing system in Thailand
Re: Double pricing system in Thailand
The simplified answer to those who consistently complain is that you can go home. When you choose to live in a country you choose to abide by their laws and customs, you do not expect them to convert to your expectations. Certainly there are many frustrations, I experience them all the time. But that is the price I pay to live and work here. You would not stay if it were too much for you. Pretty simple equation, staying in Thailand is a conscious choice.
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tucson - Posts: 1
- Joined: Wed Nov 24, 2010 4:18 pm
Re: Double pricing system in Thailand
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amazedat - Posts: 1
- Joined: Thu Nov 25, 2010 5:39 am
Re: Double pricing system in Thailand
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cspat64 - Posts: 2
- Joined: Fri Nov 26, 2010 10:22 am
Re: Double pricing system in Thailand
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Ian Wensor - Posts: 49
- Joined: Thu Jan 01, 1970 7:00 am
Re: Double pricing system in Thailand
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alpha - Posts: 10
- Joined: Thu Jan 01, 1970 7:00 am
- Location: Thailand
Re: Double pricing system in Thailand
Why have I never seen foreigners stand up for us on this? Do any of you care about our plight? Where is my advocate? Are any of you willing to take it up with my boss? After I talked to him about the unjust salary discrepancies, his reply was that whites needed more money because "they had a lot to pay for at home." What if I wanted to move to the States? Wouldn't I need the money as well? Grrr.. Double standards everywhere.
ps. even with my complaining, I do believe everyone should be charged equally.
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thailand - Posts: 2
- Joined: Mon Nov 29, 2010 7:28 am
Re: Double pricing system in Thailand
2. The ones who usually charge you extra are probably those who make a LOT less than you do. All they're trying to do is get out of the "unfavorable" circumstances there were born into. Born as a poor Thai --> cannot afford good education --> still poor and trying to make a living driving taxis and selling stuff to tourists, hoping that someday they will have 1/5th or 1/10th of what "farangs" have. 7000 baht versus 30,000 or even 70,000 baht.
When you come to Thailand, what do you do with your money? How many of you have NEVER tipped a girl in a bar? If you gave that same tip to a food vendor or a taxi driver, maybe they won't charge you extra.
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thailand - Posts: 2
- Joined: Mon Nov 29, 2010 7:28 am
Re: Double pricing system in Thailand
I am an American and came here to manage a large industrial construction project for an American company.
We paid Thais who were fluent in English twice as much as Thais who were not for positions that had to interface with foreignors.
However, the largest salary was the project manager, and I can tell you it was a lot more than 70,000 THB.
Inclusive of expat benefits, like a house on the beach, car, driver, maid, local income taxes company paid, etc. it was about 1 million THB per month.
Why???
The company wanted top quality construction that can only be achieved when there is no corruption.
Once the management is putting project money in their pocket, the contractors are then free to substitute lower quality materials and labor and to dream-up all kinds of cost add-ons.
Management can no longer manage for fear of being revealed.
The company also wanted safety, and we worked 580,000 hours without a lost time injury compared to the construction industry average of a fatality on average for every 173,000 hours worked, and that number probably involves serious under-reporting.
I cost less than 1% of the total project cost, and everyone involved believed it was well spent.
You seem to think that is discriminatory.
Read the news.
Who can a foreign company trust here????????????
I am not going to complain about paying a couple hundred baht extra at a park.
However, if you are going to complain about expats here making higher salaries than Thais, maybe you should ask why they are getting paid more.
Farang in Korat
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faranginkorat - Posts: 17
- Joined: Thu Jan 01, 1970 7:00 am
Re: Double pricing system in Thailand
I do not put much faith in the survey, however, as they appear to have measured everything except what people learned.
It is possible to spend a small amount of GDP on education, start when kids are 7, have 30 to 1 student-teacher ratios, and have excelkent results, as Finland does, but it takes parental support and participation.
Farang in Korat
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faranginkorat - Posts: 17
- Joined: Thu Jan 01, 1970 7:00 am
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