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what do you think about future of phuket re. recent world events?


stevehaigh

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Due to internet interference, I tried editing my post above and was unable to, and because I spent time trying to fight the internet disruption (due to my local WiFi connection) that put so much of what I had written into a shortened version of what I'd like to add to the post, I'm going to repost--I see that I cannot even delete what I had written above, but I feel determined. I also want to add that I used to live in Miami, in the area called South Beach. I witnessed what was a more quiet but tourist-based economy become an international party scene investment community, which has proven to be a bonanza for some investors, but for the people who used to enjoy peaceful quiet mornings on the beach and a more unique and interesting scene, it turned into a corporate venture that has made that area lose it's former charm. I see the tell-tale signs here in Phuket, so from the many recent developments I read of, I see emerging the same sort of pattern. The world is turning into a global corporate enterprise, or I see it's tentacles reaching here. So, I repost with a few additional flourishes to my two paragraphs above:

Phuket is going to become a much more expensive place to live for both ex-pats living here as well as the local Thai population. As emphasis shifts from attracting a volatile and unstable short-term tourist market to high-end corporate and Real Estate investment and development, focus will concentrate on long-term investment strategies with the aim of bringing in these corporate entities to settle and operate in Phuket. Accordingly, property prices will exponentially soar (this might take a few more years to go into effect). The demographic might shift, as the local Thai population who cannot keep up with inflated prices move out, and more well-off ex-pats and other more affluent nationals will move in with their operations based out, or partially out of, Phuket.

I further predict that the fantastic, relatively new string of luxury hotels lining the beach cliff areas of Phuket will host conferences by some of these corporate concerns. There might be international expos, or other global marketing conferences. There may be a shift to attracting high tech operations into Phuket to form a new Asian high-tech sector. Much more of the newly built beach-front property that lines the Andaman Coast from Nai Harn to Surin will acquire a high-end retail and business office look and feel. This has already begun many years ago, but I believe the shift from tourism to corporate and high-end Real Estate will hold precedence. I think this transition from a middle-value tourist market to high-end corporate investment has been a coveted goal for a while now in the inner circles of those who plan such transitions in the Phuket economy. It seems apparent when I observe how local poorer entrepreneurs who had run family businesses along the beaches are now deemed an eye-sore, as they lose their former livelihoods so the beaches can become pristine and devoid of unsightly shacks and umbrellas. This will make reclining on the beach after a days' work at the new corporate structures for the upcoming long-term corporate investors more attractive. The now disenfranchised or slowly deteriorating local economy which has enjoyed operating on beaches will be superceded by the much more lucrative corporate structure. I can see many changes in the political and local government offices such as the police, as some offices are being shifted to specialized units or other merging into a larger more centralized structural form. This will make for a more efficient corporate structure, albeit I think labor laws will somehow be pushed to the outer rim of concern as centralization for profit will be the prime focus. All will be partially run or controlled in other partnerships by a more tight corporate group widely dispersed within the ASEAN community.

I agree in most of your thoughts, but your prediction are a lo.........ng time into the future and low oil prices and sanctions against Russia are decades behind us by that time.

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Me313, I would agree to your first paragraph,but not with the second. To accommodate high end tourists and international congress events, Phuket would have to change radically.they would first have to clean the island up, re design the drainage systems that stink to high heaven, the roads and pavements that are dangerous, the power lines above ground that must make Phuket one of the ugliest tourist venues around, and also find the qualified staff to work here. Speaking of staff, one would have to re educate all the students so that they could speak at least some understandable English, and also teach them manners and how to behave in public, and towards the public. Walk into any shopping mall, bank, restaurant, hotel reception , office, and see what the staff are doing. Using their smart phones, looking into mirrors, picking their faces and noses, and even sleeping ! Last but not least, the rampant corruption that exists on Phuket. I rather doubt that any high class visitors to the island appreciate all this, right? I have friends who used to go to Surin to lovely 5 star hotels. They all said the same things I've mentioned here ! They also said it was such a shame that the shops sold so much imported rubbish, and they wondered who on earth buys it. Having a look at what's on offer, I have to say it's true, stall after stall of awful things, it's quite shaming. So, to climb higher up,the tourist ladder Phuket, you'll have to get your show together fast !

,

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