Comparing and contrasting Israel and Thailand – two countries with similar GDPs – Techsauce Summit 2016’s “big four” panel which united Thailand’s former Minister of Finance, as well as the current head of the Economic and Trade Mission for the Israeli Embassy in Thailand and the president of True Corporation PLC., together concluded that Thailand has all that Israel has in terms of natural resources, and more – but when it comes to leveraging those resources, the Golden Axe still lags far behind and the key to growth will be a shift in mentality to working smarter and creating more value-added products.
It’s worth noting that despite being a very young country and having a population of only 8 million people – only a little over one-tenth of Thailand’s population – Israel shares a similar GDP, worth approximately 305 billion US dollars in 2015 to Thailand’s 395.28 billion US dollars in the same year. [Source: Tradingeconomics.com] Not only that; Israel has the highest density of startups in the world, and in terms of venture capital, Tel Aviv is number two in the world after Silicon Valley. Is there a possibly a high correlation between having a very low population, yet high startup density and a high GDP to boot?
“Thailand has a lot of potential as the 23rd largest producer of the world,” said Mr. Barak Sharabi, head of the Economic and Trade Mission for the Israeli Embassy in Thailand.
“I believe that Thailand should take certain things from Israel, in terms of inventive capacity and creativity. You have amazing universities in Thailand – Chulalongkorn, Thammasat and others. You just need to see how to promote these people.
In Israel, we call it the Golden Triangle of government, private sector, and academia - basically these three should collaborate to support the startup ecosystem,” he said.
In the year 1993, when Israel’s cost of labor started to increase, Israel’s government established a VC fund called Yozma as an initiative and diversion for its population. With the government’s support, guidance, and finance for the private sector, a massive shift occurred. “In the 1980s, 20% of our population in Israel were agricultural workers. Today only between 1 and 1.5% of our population are in agriculture, and they produce, with their technology, three times higher the amount that we used to produce with 20%. Thailand will have to go through a shift like that. You have approximately 40% of your population working in agriculture. You need to create more value-added products and value crops. This is the food for Thailand, but you have to compete with others,” he emphasized. “You need to create more value added products, especially when Vietnam, Myanmar are creating similar products on a lower cost of labor – even if it’s not the same quality, it’s still competition.”
Thailand faces a serious aging problem. Right now the dependency ratio, or ratio between Thais of working age and those of retirement age is 4:1 which makes us one of the more aging societies in Asia – not only that; this ratio will collapse to 2:1 in less than 20 years.
Thailand doesn’t have a lot of time left. “The math indicates you’ll either have to work twice as hard, or twice as smart – and there’s no way around it,” said Mr. Korn Chatikavanij, Former Minister of Finance for the Royal Thai Government. “I’d rather you work twice as smart, because even if you work twice as hard, that means you’ll be paying twice as much taxes because you’ll have to be looking after more elderly people. So the only way is to be smarter, increase productivity – and use technology to do it.”
Mr. Korn mentioned two other statistics of note:
To Mr. Korn, these indicate a lot of gaps that are just the right size for startups – particularly fintech startups, who could do much to improve the economic landscape of Thailand as well as potentially mitigate the Thailand’s impending age crisis.
“I think FinTech is revolutionary,” said Mr. Korn, the former Minister of Finance, Royal Thai Government and founder of Thailand’s first FinTech club (The FinTech Club of Thailand). “In a country with millions without bank accounts, still dependent on loan sharks – there is so much that startups & FinTechs can do in reducing the cost of quality and improving quality of financing.”
He calls FinTech a very important factor for social and economic development. Though our excellent telecommunications infrastructure and high smartphone penetration have allowed better access to information, what FinTech can do is to monetize that information.
“The next step up from that is to create value from that data; that’s what Alibaba has been doing. They see all the trade through e-commerce in their system. And what they have been able to do with that is pinpoint small firms who have collected a small series of trading data and structured financial data; now, they propose microloans to SMEs – and they can be very comfortable doing that because they’ve seen payment through their systems. So they have access to this kind of personalized financing that they didn’t have before; from Alibaba’s perspective, what they’ve done is monetize that data. Part of the reason we launched the Thai FinTech club is because the data is out there, but it’s not been pulled together in a way that is accessible for those who can monetize that data.”
Can Thailand also become a startup nation like Israel? What will it take to do so? Our panelists suggested that Thailand already is on the verge of becoming a startup nation, but that the following components could help to springboard the country forward more quickly.
Finally, Mr. Barak left a couple of words of wisdom to the Thai startup community, and an invitation to visit Israel’s startup ecosystem and grow from it: “Israel is always here we are very good friends of Thailand, we will collaborate and support Thai startups – even if it’s with mentoring – come to Israel, we have an ecosystem. Take a chance in life, dare to do,” he said. “Finally, the government needs to make policies that will attract foreign portfolio investors (FPIs). This is the next generation of Thailand; we need to see how we can support them. Startups will help to share lot of the economic burden, so they need support.”
ลงทะเบียนเข้าสู่ระบบ เพื่ออ่านบทความฟรีไม่จำกัด