
Rob Browder
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Everything posted by Rob Browder
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You cannot do it at some entry points, where an agent-service is required to pay the corrupt. I am not seeing rejected-entry at any of the known "safe" entry points. Of course, this can always change - and by that, I mean that the "agent fee" needed, and what entry-points are corrupted can change, as we saw happen at Poipet/Aranyaprathet, some years ago.
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Mai Sai border run
Rob Browder replied to thirsty21's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
Those being locations where millions of Thais from other parts of the country travel to live and get better employment opportunities. With exports / manufacturing slowing - another sector where rural Thais have historically sought a higher standard of living - the authorities are relaxing the rules, to allow more foreigners to stay / spend money here, to make up the lost opportunities in other sectors. That said, I am a huge fan of King IX's work to make self-sustaining lives possible in rural areas. It is a beautiful thing to see people able to preserve their livelihoods in their local communities. I hope development in this area is increased, to provide another option for rural Thai people. In this effort, Farangs are also often contributing partners - providing experience in agricultural / livestock sciences and marketing, together with local Thai partners. -
There is no reason those doing visa runs should not be encouraged to stay and keep spending money in Thailand. They are violating no law by doing so. This Stockholm Syndrome thinking is pathetic. The IOs at those borders want "tribute" payments, through their agent-partners, from those who stay in Thailand a considerable period of time, and their bosses allow this behavior. That is ALL this is about - the same as with changing the requirements/hassles for extensions of stay in the country.
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Advice Sought About House Rental in Thailand
Rob Browder replied to Mick T's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
Most higher-end property agencies tend to focus on Bangkok / Pattaya / Phukhet and similar. You can check this site for provincial rentals - though quality varies widely: https://www.renthub.in.th/en/apartment/roi-et Also, regarding the TM-30 - even if the landlord will not report for you, if they will supply signed copies of their ID, the Housebook for the property, and Chanote for the property, you should be able to file the TM-30 yourself. This can be verified with your local Immigration Office, to be sure that is all they want. You were wise to inquire on the TM-30 issues with the landlord in-advance of signing a lease. -
I would agree with this sentiment, in many cases - but not this case. There was an international ruling on China's made-up "dash line" claims - which extend far beyond any reasonable territorial limits. The PI is in the right, on this one. The USA engaging in bad foreign-policy in other cases, does not make the PI the bad guy, in this case.
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Big Thailand visa changes from June 1
Rob Browder replied to snoop1130's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
Last report I see is May of last year - but may still be available. That guy used a pension-letter - though I don't see why a bank-book + bank-letter + statement would not work - IF they still offer the 1-Year ME based on Retirement, at all. -
A tale of two cities...
Rob Browder replied to 1happykamper's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
There is no "law" - but some IOs want to see a 1-year lease. They consider "retired" to mean glued to one spot, basically. Though, if you use their "agents," they will not create these obstructions. Best option is to file early - before you leave - as others have suggested. If that is not possible, I would go back "home" to file the annual extension. In either case, when you get back to CM, be sure to re-report your TM-30, since some hotel(s) elsewhere may have "updated it" to a different address. -
You say "massive issues" - with Koreans and Russians? Yes, I saw a few news reports of a few cases of such illegal workers - and they were busted, which is good. We used to see the occasional "dive instructor" from the West busted. The joke was using this to pretend every border-bouncer from the West was an "illegal dive-instructor." Compare/contrast to the millions of illegal-workers from neighboring countries, in addition to those allowed in en-masse on L1 Visas (like the H2B in the USA) to keep wages down for Thais. They even use the same "don't want those jobs" sales-pitch, when "... at the low-wage a foreign worker will accept," is left off the statement. As to how it would affect costs, if those companies had to hire Thais - what is the "labor cost" in the retail-price of the products/services? For example, if a condo building had to pay 2x more for the maid who cleans the public areas - how much per condo-unit in annual fees? Repeat with condo-construction per sq-meter with well-paid Thai workers. And how much per KG of shrimp or rice (consider the volume per-worker per-hour)? It is trivial for all but a few edge-cases, and those higher-paid citizen-workers become productive taxpayers instead of an economic net-loss to the country. The tiny difference isn't passed to the consumer, anyway - only "adds up" to significant money on the meta-scale - passed-on via stock-dividends and board-member bonuses. Returning to the DTV - yes, I hope the enforce the provisions for application, which should reduce the number of people from lower-wage nations using it to get access to working illegally in the Thai market - though that is flooded and not being enforced often, regardless. Yes, you can border-bounce on the DTV, every 180 days, for 5 years. Whether some "grease" will be needed at some border-crossings, has yet to be seen - but that would not change the equation.
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There is no exception for 90-day reporting in the published (Gazette) information. One could "avoid" doing it, by doing exclusively border/airplane in/outs every 180 days - thus never having to visit immigration in Thailand. But, at some point in the future, they could start checking for 90-day compliance at exit-points.
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Why "questionable"? They have money, or they would be sleeping outdoors and not eating. They would not be here "working illegally," as an under-the-table job here pays for six 10-hr days what one day pays back home at McDonalds. I definitely would NOT want "more strict" requirements for those with passports from higher-wage nations,, because I care about the Thais who benefit from our spending - some being friends and family. However, I would be throwing every Thai-company employer in prison who hires illegal foreign labor, which undercuts Thai's wages and opportunities. I also wish they did that in my passport-country, like they did in the past. Elite is a complete and total rip-off. "Investment" is set unreasonasbly high. Fortunately, there is now the DTV, and I expect many will switch to this, as the terms are better. "Abused" how? Competing with immigrants from neighboring countries to mop-floors and work on fishing boats? If Westerners are working here, they have a work-permit and appropriate-visa included. With local-extensions, the govt makes money, people stay longer and spend - and their money is spent in Thailand, vs in neighboring countries on "visa-runs."
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Non-imm "O" 1 yr ME visa from Laos
Rob Browder replied to catinthehat's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
Yes, you can apply at immigration in Thailand for a 12-mo extension, on any of the entries, in the last 30-45 days (depending on the office), with 2-mo seasoned 400K. Also, you can get a single Non-O with no money in Savannakhet. Only the multiple-entry requires funds.