That is why there was NEVER a Scramble for EUROPE! The WORLD runs on AFRIKA!
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That is why there was NEVER a Scramble for EUROPE! The WORLD runs on AFRIKA!
Thailand Board of Investment
In the competitive arena of global foreign direct investment (FDI), nations vie for capital, technology, and talent through a complex blend of policy, promotion, and incentives. At the forefront of Thailand's strategy stands the Board of Investment (BOI), a powerful governmental agency that operates not merely as a regulatory body, but as the primary architect and facilitator of the kingdomâs industrial and technological advancement. For discerning investors, understanding the BOI transcends basic incentive discovery; it is about comprehending a dynamic, state-driven partnership designed to align private capital with national strategic ambitions.
Historical Evolution: From Import-Substitution to Innovation-Led Growth
Established in 1966 under the Investment Promotion Act, the BOIâs mandate has evolved in lockstep with Thailandâs economic journey. Its initial focus was on import-substitution industrialization, encouraging local production to reduce foreign dependency. The 1980s and 90s saw a pivot toward export-oriented growth, leveraging Thailandâs competitive labor and positioning it as a regional manufacturing hub, particularly for automotive and electronics.
Today, the BOI is the engine of "Thailand 4.0," the national agenda to transition to a value-based, innovation-driven economy. This represents a fundamental shift from promoting any investment to strategically curating investments in targeted, high-value sectors. The BOI is now tasked with attracting industries that enhance Thailandâs technological depth, regional connectivity, and sustainable development.
The BOI's Dual Mandate: Promotion and Strategic Gatekeeping
The agency operates with a dual, interconnected function:
Investment Promotion:Â This is its most visible roleâoffering a package of substantial tax and non-tax incentives to qualified projects. It acts as a "one-stop service" to streamline regulatory processes for approved investors.
Strategic Industrial Policy Implementation: Less visible but more critical, the BOI serves as the operational arm for executing national industrial policy. It does this by meticulously defining which activities are eligible for promotion, thereby channeling FDI into sectors deemed crucial for the nation's future. This makes the BOI a powerful tool for economic engineering.
Decoding the Incentive Structure: A Tiered System of Privileges
The BOIâs incentive package is not one-size-fits-all. It is a sophisticated, merit-based system where the level of benefit correlates directly with a project's perceived contribution to national goals. The current framework categorizes activities into groups with corresponding privilege tiers:
A-Series: Core Activities (No Corporate Income Tax (CIT) Exemption). These are essential but less technology-intensive activities, receiving non-tax benefits like permission to own land, bring in skilled foreign workers, and remit foreign currency.
B-Series: Merit-Based CIT Exemption. This is the core of the tax incentive model. The number of years of CIT exemption (up to 13 years) is determined by a points-based system that evaluates a project's merits across several dimensions:
Competitiveness Enhancement:Â Does it introduce advanced technology, R&D, or engineering design?
Decentralization:Â Is the project located in prioritized industrial estates or poorer provinces (Zone 3)?
Industrial Linkage & Cluster Development:Â Does it strengthen existing supply chains (e.g., an auto parts maker supplying to promoted EV manufacturers)?
Sustainability & ESG:Â Does it incorporate energy efficiency, waste management, or circular economy principles?
This points system is pivotal. It transparently quantifies how a project aligns with national strategy and rewards that alignment proportionally.
The "Target Industries": Where Thailand Aims to Lead
The BOIâs published list of promoted activities is a clear blueprint of national priority. Current key thrusts include:
Next-Generation Automotive: Especially Electric Vehicles (EVs), encompassing the entire supply chain from cell manufacturing to EV production and charging stations.
Smart Electronics and Advanced ICT:Â Focus on upstream components, IoT, AI, and embedded software.
Biotechnology, Bio-Circular-Green (BCG) Industries:Â Agro-industry, biofuels, bioplastics, and medical device manufacturing.
Digital and Creative Services:Â Software development, digital platforms, and content creation.
Regional Headquarters and International Business Centers (IBCs):Â Aiming to make Thailand the business and services hub for ASEAN.
The Application Journey: From Proposal to Certificate
Securing BOI promotion is a formal, multi-stage process:
Pre-Consultation:Â A strongly advised first step where investors present project outlines for preliminary feedback on eligibility and potential incentive levels.
Submission of Application:Â A detailed application, including a business plan, financial projections, technology transfer agreements, and environmental impact assessments (if required).
BOI Analysis & Due Diligence:Â The BOI scrutinizes the applicationâs technical, financial, and strategic merits. This can involve site visits and requests for additional information.
BOI Committee Approval:Â Applications above a certain value threshold are reviewed by the BOI Board, chaired by the Prime Minister. This underscores the project's national significance.
Issuance of the Promotion Certificate:Â The legal document granting the specified incentives, contingent on the project meeting its stated conditions.
Post-Approval Compliance: Investors must submit periodic progress reports. The full incentives, particularly CIT exemption, are only claimable after the project files an "Application for Granting Benefits" and passes a BOI verification that it has commenced commercial operation as approved.
Beyond Tax Holidays: The Critical Non-Tax Advantages
While tax breaks are attractive, the non-tax privileges often provide more decisive operational advantages:
Land Ownership Rights:Â Permission for a promoted entity to own land for its operations, circumventing standard foreign land ownership restrictions.
Foreign Expertise Provision:Â Expedited visa and work permit facilitation for skilled foreign technicians, experts, and managementâa vital tool for technology transfer and management control.
Repatriation of Funds:Â Guaranteed ability to remit foreign currency abroad for loan repayments, royalties, and dividends.
Import Duty Exemption:Â On imported machinery and raw materials not available locally.
Strategic Considerations and Evolving Challenges
Engaging with the BOI requires a strategic mindset:
A Partnership, Not a Permit:Â The most successful investors view the BOI as a long-term strategic partner within the Thai government, not just a permit office.
The Compliance Imperative:Â Failure to implement the project as approvedâwhether in timeline, scale, or technologyâcan lead to revocation of privileges and repayment of tax benefits.
Regional Competition:Â The BOI is in constant competition with investment promotion agencies in Vietnam, Malaysia, and Indonesia. Its evolving policies are a direct response to this, aiming to move Thailand up the value chain.
The SME Question:Â While focused on large-scale FDI, the BOI also has programs for Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs), though the benefits are typically less extensive.
Conclusion: The Gateway to Strategic Integration
The Thailand Board of Investment is far more than a catalogue of incentives. It is the central node in a comprehensive national strategy to reshape the Thai economy. For an investor, securing BOI promotion is not just about reducing costs; it is about securing a formal alignment with national priorities, which translates into smoother operations, greater government support, and long-term strategic positioning within ASEAN. The process is rigorous, reflecting its significance. In a world where capital is mobile but strategic partnerships are priceless, the BOI certificate represents Thailandâs stamp of approval, offering a uniquely integrated pathway for businesses to grow while contributing to the kingdomâs ambitious vision for its future. It remains the most authoritative gateway for foreign investment seeking deep, sustainable roots in the Thai economy.
The Thailand Board of Investment (BOI) stands as a cornerstone of the nation's economic strategy, serving as the primary government agency t
The Thailand Board of Investment (BOI) is the countryâs principal government agency responsible for promoting domestic and foreign investmen
The Thailand Board of Investment (BOI) is the primary government agency responsible for promoting foreign and domestic investment in the Kin
A few months ago, I was invited to develop a CANVASxDetroit branded creative experience for the @GehlInstitute and their annual conference; I said yes! Because city planning/development experts from around the world would be visiting Detroit to learn abt our innovative use of public space, it seemed obvious to incorporate and invoke Motown's rich creative legacies. We named the project #CityCanvas and designed it to help participants explore the ways that a city and its public spaces can become the citizens' canvas! We had an awesome time working on the project and building with the good folks from @gehl_citiesforpeople! Here are a few shots from the #kickoff event @mocadetroit! From equity to inclusion! ***in each of us, an artist*** #Detroit #Motown #equity #equality #canvas #chalkart #play #citylife #connect #building #justdoit #artlife #development #politics #economicdevelopment #civic #bettertogether #pdx18 #gehl #gehlarchitects #planning #goodlife (at Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit - MOCAD) https://www.instagram.com/p/BoPYC6RA_qE/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=16mzbg7svt96b
It was an honor and I am extremely grateful to the French Embassy of Japan French Economic Delegation during their visit and Orange Institute of France for inviting me to give a presentation on on Wednesday on Innovation in Japan, Economic development, Blockchain business model use across industry sectors and itâs potential. An awesome and inquisitive audience which led to a truly amazing experience for which I am humbled...... #french #tokyo #economicdevelopment #blockchain #innovation
Day Two of the #kindnesschallenge on the way to speak at the NY State Economic Development Conference youth sports panel. #youthsports #economicdevelopment #business #startup #realestate #developer #developers #entrepreneur #sportsdreamjobs
Another morning walk. I could smell freshly cooked food and tea, and incense from the temple. Construction projects are scattered around the city. At dawn, people clean the dust from their doors and prepare for work. I could guess many occupations without asking. It is much like home, and a beautiful place to paint in. Global businesses are the future. . . . . . #digitalnomad #india #amazingindia #foodporn #economicdevelopment #economics #business #smallbusiness #locallygrown #lifestyle #travel #dailylife #artist #startup #global #globalization #startuplife #future #thefutureisnow #success (at India)
I need help and committed civic activists who want to see something actually come of an innovation district and have real community input: It was a well attended RAILmesa: Retail, Arts, Innovation & Livability monthly meeting as always. People are hungry for knowledge about what plans and happenings are in process and electeds on all levels have never made it easy to participate in public processes. The innovation district is great in theory but we need more community members at the table. If you are willing to give a little Time working on this from a community standpoint, I and a few other community members are willing to be the organizer of a coordinated effort make this happen in a way that benefits the community. ââââââ-my opinion zoneââââââ- My personal opinion (not any other group I am associated with) on the innovation district in Downtown Mesa, Arizona as presented by The Brookings Institution: - City Officials have no clear plan. - There is no clear way for the community to be involved. - This is another top down âideaâ that is not backed by any infrastructural coordination. - There is no plan to lead in diversity or inclusionary practices. - There is no viable economic development plan to support programs to uplift small businesses, start-ups and entrepreneurs, no real community outreach plan. - There is no dedicated funding to make any of the above even start to happen. Brookings guiding principles for an innovation district: https://www.brookings.edu/blog/metropolitan-revolution/2017/09/08/12-principles-guiding-innovation-districts-2/ We have great talent pools like HeatSync Labs, #yesphx, Mesa Community College networking academy and entrepreneurs group, East Valley Institute of Technology, EVIT entrepreneurs as well as Creative Catalysts artist entrepreneurs who are not at the table. Add this âplanâ to the graveyard of unfunded and unplanned dreams that city officials use as leverage to push their own political agendas. (Cough Cough giving ASU buildings was already voted down Giles, stop your consistent effort to undermine the voters) #iheartmesa #commUNITY #innovationdistrict #economicdevelopment #entrepreneur #communityquarterback (at The Nile)
Economic Power of #blackgirlmagic (Pt. 2)
Over the years, I have experienced a transformation in thought, behavior, and emotion. Iâve had the chance to learn about my hair, my ancestral traditions, and grown in conviction about my body being mine to portray as I see fit. I have now understood that the male gaze doesnât define who I am and how I present myself to the world. In truth, along with many young women, I placed an immense value on how males viewed my body in my formative years. After ten years within the Natural Hair Movement, I increasingly have developed my self-image independent from othersâ perception of me. I felt the freedom to change my appearance, the way the hair on my head and body grow, the different ways I express my style and personality. No one has enough influence to change the way I see myself. I also accept that others will do as they please with their own body and with their own hair. Over the years, there has also been a fluctuation in how I have been perceived by the people around me; I allowed myself to subconsciously connect with my ancestors and accept the certain attributes I chose not to change. There were many unexpected changes within my story from the movement being considered a more obscure âAfro-centricâ trend of natural beauty to a very striking mainstay and economic powerhouse. I found that one of the objectives that I inadvertently learned during my stake in the Natural Hair Movement is my influence within a collective of other black women and our very own economic power.
My progress in self-knowledge accelerated in the summer of 2008. A few months after my âbig chopâ, I had more time to explore my hair â hair Iâve always had but never learned how to care for it. Gone were the days of multiple ponytail braids, barrettes, and ribbons I sported in Haiti as a little girl. I no longer wore a perm and felt a bit uneasy about the learning curve of taking care of my hair unaltered by chemicals. Without the corrosive chemicals, I slowly found that I began to limit other very toxic products in my life. I looked up âhow to take care of ânatural hairâ online. In one of the very few links, Nappturality members shared scores of knowledge on African-derived concoctions. I became aware of raw African black Soap. This soap made washing my short hair an ease. After living in dorms for two years, I had sublet an apartment that summer, my first time living alone. I took some of that opportunity to experiment with homemade recipes of fair trade shea butter I ordered online. The products were made in Ghana by other black women that have known about it all of their lives. I felt that I had missed out on this common knowledge and was purposefully miseducated. I had part of my childhood in Haiti and some in the States; in both spaces, I used petroleum-laden hair grease, pomade, Pink Lotion, and Mane nâ Tail products marketed to black women with problematic and toxic ingredients. I realized that my mother and aunts might have been miseducated as well. I then found âHair Story: Untangling the Roots of Black Hair in Americaâ. This book on black hair history opened my eyes to the amalgamation of African hair tradition, compartmentalized European ideal standards of beauty, and the politics of simply existing with a black body. It sickened me to know how experiences of self-hate entrenched expectations in my family and culture without my peopleâs knowledge or full awareness.
While perusing message boards and online forums, I learned of other recipes derived from West Africa. I later learned of Whitney Whiteâs YouTube page, Naptural85, she shared simple recipes with oils, raw African black soap, and raw unrefined shea butter. Raw African black soap was now my body wash and sometimes face wash after finishing the last bits of my bottled liquid soaps. My face glistened when I followed a wash with a drop of vitamin e oil and any acne began to dry up. My skin loved this ancestral treatment. I felt free; I was no longer a victim of basic elements of nature. Like many black girls, I was forbidden to go out in the rain, even with an umbrella, if I had just gotten my hair permed. As a child, maintenance in chlorinated water was covering my head with a swim cap over a heaping handful of conditioner streamed through my hair by my mother. At last, I could let the sudden Florida rainfall on my hair without my mood and especially my motherâs mood changing sour. As I learned more, I purchased mostly indie brands. I used the money I saved little by little to travel in the summer of 2009. I no longer needed plenty and regular supply of plastic bottles for shampoos and body washes. I became accustomed to cutting small blocks of raw African black soap from a large brown speckled loaf. With the new knowledge I had acquired, I would quickly put back on the shelf those products I used ritualistically since childhood after one quick reading of the label.
Over time, I began to learn that many products specifically formulated to be marketed to black women have toxic chemicals. I used the internet as a constant resource for information on chemical compounds included in the beauty products that I used regularly. As I read more, I aimed to pick up products that reflected simplicity. I actively avoided over-produced and loaded items in hair products and body care. I began to use tea rinses and heavy oils to replace the moisturizing effects of conditioners. I washed my hair with raw African black soap, rinsed my hair with cooled tea, then used heavy raw unrefined shea butter and oils to keep my damp hair soft and supple for days. I adopted this reductionist routine and sought simplification.
I now understand that women, in particular, have been sold to the huge campaign of commercial beauty products (not to mention apparel, toiletries, seasonal home decor, and even menstrual products). In 2008, While searching for natural products that fit my values, it had been really difficult to find items that werenât full of artificial ingredients. When I looked up the toxic ingredients, many were correlated with cancer. There were products that claimed to moisturize on its label, yet, the second ingredient on the back was alcohol. Increasingly, the market has improved on the quantity and quality of natural hair products. These products are marketed to women with natural hair that seek natural ingredients in what they use on their skin and hair. I have divorced the idea that I need to be a âproduct junkieâ, well-stocked with hair and skin goods, to be deemed beautiful. I have challenged my role in my assigned gender that dictates that I should have long straight hair that fits with what media deems as standard beauty. Many other black women experienced this with me and many did before me online on sites like Nappturality, with books, and through fellowship with other black women. Through my research, Iâve been introduced to women creating content for other black women who seek it. Women such as Nikisha Brunson of Urban Bush Babes, Dawn Michelle of Minimalist Beauty, Francheska Medina of Hey Fran Hey contribute their recipes and opinions.
Before Instagram sponsored content, natural beauties, black natural hair conferences, and Youtube product giveaways, there were black women sharing recipes and traditions solely for the purpose of sharing knowledge within our community. Though the variety of options now are astounding, helpful, and useful, I prefer simplicity. When in need of convenience and specific styles, I support quality indie brands products free of animal ingredients often from Quemet Biologics and Oyin Handmade. I reflect back on how my mother found good hair stylists; she simply asked other black women with beautiful hair whoâs work it was. And as we have done before, in this interwoven network of black womanhood, I want to continue to support my own. These include black hair salons, black womenâs hair bundle businesses (if hair sources are ethical), black-owned indie hair care. Black women have immense purchasing power. We not only need to be aware of this power but also realize that supporting other black women is supporting ourselves. Economic power is often misunderstood as solely wealth accumulated through corporate work, stock exchange and trading. I claim economic power as being aware of simply the exchange of resources. I often ask myself, for what purpose is my money being used for? I have been doing this throughout my life as Iâve become aware of the socio-economic power I have in my pocket. When it comes to natural hair and the many products on the shelves, I choose what I want as a consumer with every single dollar as one vote. I want products that do not have ingredients that have parabens. I also do not want those products to replace those parabens they advertise on the front with other detrimental items on the ingredients list that I donât yet understand as harmful. I do not want products that put me at risk of any adverse health effects. I want products that are safe, effective for what I am using it for, and improve the health of my hair and skin. I want to know that I am supporting my community and fueling my belief that #blacklivesmatter by including the edict that black entrepreneurs matter, black business matters, black independent livelihoods matter, black women matter, and black bodies matter. I want #blackgirlmagic to not only encompass the physical beauty of black womanhood but the holistic power of black women in all aspects of life.
Contrastingly, advertisers of large white-owned corporations are increasingly responding to this growing self-love and knowledge by including black women in their advertisements. The intention is not empowerment but tapping into a market that spends a lot on hair. Black women too can support each other though exercising purchasing power for the benefit of other black women and the black community as a whole. Instead of benefiting large white-owned corporations marketing to black women, we can generate more economic solidarity within our community by investing in black people and their creations. How beautiful is empowering than supporting oneâs own community of women through a self-love movement? We all know that supporting black women means that weâre supporting black community as a whole. According to an IMF profile, women in general âmake institutions more representative of a range of voicesâ and women provide benefits for children âas a result of more spending on food and educationâ. Over all, women with economic power provide âgreater provision of public goodsâ. Black women entrepreneurs are sure to spread the wealth to the black men and children in their lives may it be their fathers, mothers, partners, brothers, and their kin.
Furthermore, power also translates to autonomy and self-expression. Self-named âNaturalistasâ such as Mahogany Curls, creates beautiful hairstyle ideas for other black women. Meanwhile, Fro Girl Ginnyâs âNia the Lightâ social media influencing gathers black women in different parts of the world to create unity and to sustain the Natural Hair Movement. This movement is beyond a trend. With the recent media troubles of Dove and Nivea, it is known that corporations often falter in including women of color in a good light. Corporations join in on the movement solely for profit and hardly for the health, wellness, and unity of black women. These corporations also exploit the buying power of black women. Even SheaMoisture, a brand originally created by a black woman has encountered scandal with a lack of representation in a recent ad. Many black women on social media commented on the lack of tact and representation in the brandâs shift to a wider white market. With $1.2 Trillion in spending power for black people over-all, women have purchasing power (including influence) of 70â80%. Influence in the sense that when a woman isnât paying for a product with her own dollars, she is often the influence behind someone elseâs purchase. This means black women as a community have approximately $960 billion at their disposal. Nielsenâs research breaks down the statistics thoroughly. With this purchasing power, we are able to change how products are made, what we spend on, how much money is directed towards the community resources that matter to us the most, and if the owners of the products we use are black-owned.
Before many corporations joined into the Natural Hair Movement and the #blackgirlmagic that ensued, we were here as black women with more knowledge of our roots. I have experienced an overwhelming transformation of thought and behavior from a seemingly trivial decision. I discovered that I could save on financial resources on the things that mattered more to me by making my own recipes with bulk West African ingredients and now supporting many favorite local brands such as Beijaflor Naturals and Soul Ingredients. Once again, here I am, 10 years after beginning my journey within the Natural Hair Movement. As other black women are repeatedly disenfranchised, we are also notoriously resourceful in fulfilling our own needs. We are able to change what we consume as a whole. No matter the restrictions, despite passing trends, we can build each other and our entire community up.