The Decline of Property Rights in Man in Thailand, 1800–1913
David Feeny
The Journal of Economic History, 1989, vol. 49, issue 2, 285-296
Abstract:
Like many land-abundant, labor-scarce economies, Thailand had a well-developed system of property rights in man. Over the nineteenth century corvée and slavery were abolished and replaced by military conscription, a head tax, and more precise property rights in land. Concomitant trends included extensive commercialization, the growth of international trade, imperialist threats to Thai sovereignty, and the growth of a centralized unitary state. Both domestic and international political motives influenced monarchs in the abolition of human-property rights. Economic change greatly facilitated these institutional changes.
Date: 1989
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