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New Bangkok Rules Limit Street Vendors to Designated Zones


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The Bangkok Metropolitan Administration (BMA) has introduced new rules to regulate street vendors, aiming to clear pavements and create more organised, hawker-centre-style areas. The policy restricts vendor activities to specific zones, part of a larger scheme to improve public space management in the Thai capital.

 

Under these rules, only "poor Thais" are permitted to be vendors, with restrictions on employing migrants. To qualify, applicants must be Thai citizens meeting at least one criterion: possessing a state welfare card, participating in the Baan Mankong housing scheme, or receiving aid from the Ministry of Social Development and Human Security.

 

Vendors can acquire a one-year permit to operate, but must later prove their annual income does not exceed 300,000 baht via income tax filings. First-time filers are given a grace period to begin compliance. Those earning above this threshold will forfeit the right to operate unless the BMA revises the income cap.


Approval falls under district offices' purview, prioritising vendors already in the tax system. In crowded areas, a lottery will determine vendor selection. The BMA will routinely assess vending zones' suitability to prevent disruption of street and traffic flow, maintaining pedestrian safety.

 

Stall guidelines prohibit obstruction of public areas like footbridges or bus stops, ensuring a clear path of 1.5 to 2 metres for pedestrians. Each stall is limited to three square metres and must not block street-side pavements, with an emergency exit every ten stalls.

 

Bangkok Governor Chadchart Sittipunt aspires to eventually relocate vendors to dedicated hawker centres, akin to Singapore. While current vending zones won't expand, some 10,000 streets traders have already moved, with efforts towards establishing these centres ongoing.

 

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-- 2024-10-11


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Sp, 24,000 a month is "poor"people? When the average working wage is around 15,000 and I think minimum wage is around 12,000 

Seems like the government thinks the majority of the population are "poor " and that's no restriction at all then on who can sell food.

 

Don't make sense as usual !

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7 hours ago, GammaGlobulin said:

Someday, with too many vendor rules....

 

BKK and CM will become almost as sterile as today's OSAKA, Japan.

 

Many years ago, Japan had street food.

 

Now, don't even think about it.

 

Is this what we wish for Thailand?

 

 

 

Make the pavements bigger and ban all non-electric vehicles........😀

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Singapore did the same in the '70s. Moved the street sellers into designated enclaves. Remember as a kid the bussel and hussel of the hawker stalls. Luckily traffic was thinner in those days, so not much of an issue, but roads were narrower, so similar congestion to today. 

Back in the days before 'Elf and Safety, remember the monkey brain stalls. 

 

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8 hours ago, GammaGlobulin said:

Someday, with too many vendor rules....

 

BKK and CM will become almost as sterile as today's OSAKA, Japan.

 

Many years ago, Japan had street food.

 

Now, don't even think about it.

 

Is this what we wish for Thailand?

 

 

Yes

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2 minutes ago, Marco51 said:

Trying hard to remove all that made Bangkok charming and unique and all that made one feel freer that elsewhere will not turn it into a new organised and fair Singapore. The corruption, the pigheadedness, the xenophobia, the pollution and dysfunctions, taxi and meth criminality and bureaucracy especially for expats remain and will always................now simply without charm compensation.................soon all bargirls will be banned to brothels and taxed (never forget the mulah!) , CCTV will be stuck to every corner including automatic reports to the Chinese embassy and China will demand more market for casinos and cars (with automatic reports back to the embassy) and triads and dumped bads, sorry, goods,  and and and......

 

Well I guess I sort of understand this......Not a bad effort for a non English speaker....

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7 hours ago, redwood1 said:

They want to create a barren. soulless, sterile urban landscape similar to Singapore...

Which has excellent cuisine sold in a multitude of venues by all manner of ethinicities and all clean.

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I will bet no street Vendors anywhere will ever pay tax - nobody keeps records they will divulge to the Tax office. Any customer ever got a receipt for anything?? Same goes for most businesses in the markets - very little accountability - and not just in Bangkok!

 

The only accounting going on is counting the takings!

 

The Tax department need some sort of accounts to show outgoings and income!

 

Street food can be encouraged with proper management by the Authorities to ensure quality hygiene practices, enforced by regular inspections. Will corruption hamper theses ideals? Sorry to say, I think so!

 

I think many street vendors make a pile and have got away with little overheads that restaurants have for example!

 

About time time they were reined in and started paying their dues.

 

By the way, I like Street food!

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9 hours ago, GammaGlobulin said:

Someday, with too many vendor rules....

 

BKK and CM will become almost as sterile as today's OSAKA, Japan.

 

Many years ago, Japan had street food.

 

Now, don't even think about it.

 

Is this what we wish for Thailand?

 

 

Maybe one step closer to cashless society, there are people everywhere selling fruit sweetcorn from the back of pickups, changing location every day, I dont think this is going to happen in the jungle, maybe in BK but not in the back streets.

And how are they going to collect tax if they have no clue how much they turned over, ruining Thailand everyday, soon just chinese and Russians coming here and Indians to BK.

Maybe an influx of hippie culture smoking dope and backpacking around, spending zilch.

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