State agencies of Thailand explained
The state agencies (Thai: หน่วยงานของรัฐ) that form Thailand's public sector consist of several types of functioning bodies. While some agencies established by mandate of the constitution are independent, others are directly or indirectly answerable to the executive of the Royal Thai Government. The majority of these are government agencies, which employ the civil service as well as the military. Others include public organizations and state enterprises.
Constitutional organizations
In addition to the constituents of the three branches of government, the (now-repealed) 2007 constitution provided for certain regulatory and advisory bodies. For further details, see Constitutional organizations of Thailand.
Agencies under executive regulation
Government agencies under direct control of the ministries are the oldest type of state agency. They date to the establishment of the modern bureaucracy by King Chulalongkorn in the 19th century, while state enterprises were introduced in the first half of the 20th century.
By the 1990s, the bureaucratic structure of government agencies had become recognized as a source of inefficiency, and administrative reforms begun in 1997 sought to ameliorate the issue by creating new forms of state agencies with greater autonomy and operational flexibility.[1] Thailand's state agencies now fall into the following types, as classified by the Office of the Public Sector Development Commission:[2]
- Government agencies
- State enterprises
- Public organizations
- New state agency forms
- Independent administrative organizations
- Legal-entity funds
- Service delivery units
Government agencies
Government agencies (Thai: ส่วนราชการ) make up the majority of the machinery of government. They serve the basic functions of government, providing administrative public services, and follow the policies of the executive. Their operation is based on the laws and regulations of the civil service and the military.
Within the central administration, government agencies include the ministries (Thai: กระทรวง) and sub-ministries (Thai: ทบวง), and their constituent departments (Thai: กรม) or equivalent agencies. Within the provincial administration, they include the provinces and their districts. Within the local administration, they include the administrative organizations of local governments, including provincial administration organizations, municipalities and subdistrict administration organizations.
State enterprises
State enterprises (Thai: รัฐวิสาหกิจ) provide industrial and commercial public services. They exist both as purpose-established organizations (e.g., the State Railway of Thailand) and limited companies in which the government is the majority shareholder (e.g., Krung Thai Bank PLC).
Public organizations
Public organizations (Thai: องค์การมหาชน), also known as autonomous public organizations, were introduced in 1999. They provide social and cultural public services, and operate under supervision of the government, while maintaining a greater degree of administrative independence.
Most newer public organizations are established under the Public Organization Act, B.E. 2542 (1999 CE), the first being Banphaeo Hospital in 2000. Others, such as the National Science and Technology Development Agency, are established by respective acts of parliament, and are also referred to as autonomous agencies. Autonomous universities (as opposed to those that function as government agencies) also fall under this category.
Independent administrative organizations
Independent administrative organizations (Thai: หน่วยธุรการขององค์การของรัฐที่เป็นอิสระ) serve the operations of regulatory bodies (e.g., the Office of the National Broadcasting and Telecommunications Commission) or other public agencies whose independence is in the public interest (e.g., the Thai Public Broadcasting Service).
Legal-entity funds
Legal-entity funds (Thai: กองทุนที่เป็นนิติบุคคล) are established by acts of parliament to serve certain economic purposes that are of public benefit.
Service delivery units
Service delivery units (Thai: หน่วยบริการรูปแบบพิเศษ) were introduced in 2005. They are service-oriented, quasi-autonomous units operating under government departments, but have a more flexible internal management system. Their services are primarily aimed for their mother agency.
List of state agencies of Thailand
Constitutional organizations
Governmental agencies
- Office of the Prime Minister
- Departments:
- Office of the Permanent Secretary
- Government Public Relations Department
- Office of the Consumer Protection Board
- Departments directly reporting to the prime minister:
- Ministry of Defence
- Office of the Minister
- Office of the Permanent Secretary
- Royal Aide-de-Camp Department
- Royal Security Command
- Royal Thai Armed Forces
- Ministry of Finance
- Ministry of Foreign Affairs
- Office of the Minister
- Office of the Permanent Secretary
- Department of Consular Affairs
- Department of International Cooperation
- Department of Protocol
- Department of European Affairs
- Department of Technical and Economic Cooperation
- Department of International Economic Affairs
- Department of Treaties and Legal Affairs
- Department of Information
- Department of International Organizations
- Department of American and South Pacific Affairs
- Department of ASEAN Affairs
- Department of East Asian Affairs
- Department of South Asian, Middle East and African Affairs
- Ministry of Tourism and Sports
- Office of the Minister
- Office of the Permanent Secretary
- Department of Physical Education
- Department of Tourism
- Ministry of Social Development and Human Security
- Office of the Minister
- Office of the Permanent Secretary
- Department of Social Development and Welfare
- Office of Women's Affairs and Family Development
- National Office for Empowerment of Persons with Disabilities
- Office of Welfare Promotion, Protection and Empowerment of Vulnerable Groups
- Ministry of Agriculture and Cooperatives
- Office of the Minister
- Office of the Permanent Secretary
- Rice Department
- Royal Irrigation Department
- Cooperative Auditing Department
- Department of Fisheries
- Department of Livestock Development
- Department of Royal Rainmaking and Agricultural Aviation
- Land Development Department
- Department of Agriculture
- Department of Agricultural Extension
- Cooperative Promotion Department
- Queen Sirikit Department of Sericulture
- Agricultural Land Reform Office
- National Bureau of Agricultural Commodity and Food Standards
- Office of Agricultural Economics
- Ministry of Transport
- Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment
- Ministry of Information and Communication Technology
- Ministry of Energy
- Ministry of Commerce
- Office of the Minister
- Office of the Permanent Secretary
- Department of Foreign Trade
- Department of Internal Trade
- Department of Trade Negotiations
- Department of Intellectual Property
- Department of Business Development
- Department of International Trade Promotion
- Trade Policy and Strategy Office
- Ministry of Interior
- Office of the Minister
- Office of the Permanent Secretary
- Department of Provincial Administration
- Community Development Department
- Department of Lands
- Department of Disaster Prevention and Mitigation
- Department of Public Works and Town & Country Planning
- Department of Local Administration
- Ministry of Justice
- Office of the Minister
- Departments:
- Office of the Permanent Secretary
- Department of Probation
- Rights and Liberties Protection Department
- Legal Execution Department
- Department of Juvenile Observation and Protection
- Department of Corrections
- Department of Special Investigation
- Office of Justice Affairs
- Central Institute of Forensic Science
- Departments reporting directly to the minister:
- Office of the Narcotics Control Board
- Ministry of Labour
- Office of the Minister
- Office of the Permanent Secretary
- Department of Employment
- Department of Skill Development
- Department of Labour Protection and Welfare
- Social Security Office
- Ministry of Culture
- Office of the Minister
- Office of the Permanent Secretary
- Religious Affairs Department
- Fine Arts Department
- Department of Cultural Promotion
- Office of Contemporary Art and Culture
- Ministry of Higher Education, Science, Research and Innovation
- Ministry of Education
- Ministry of Public Health
- Office of the Minister
- Office of the Permanent Secretary
- Department of Medical Services
- Department of Disease Control
- Department for Development of Thai Traditional and Alternative Medicine
- Department of Medical Sciences
- Department of Health Service Support
- Department of Mental Health
- Department of Health
- Food and Drug Administration
- Ministry of Industry
- Office of the Minister
- Office of the Permanent Secretary
- Department of Industrial Works
- Department of Industrial Promotion
- Department of Primary Industries and Mines
- Office of the Cane and Sugar Board
- Thai Industrial Standards Institute
- Office of Industrial Economics
- Departments independent of ministries:
State enterprises
See also: List of state enterprises of Thailand.
Public organizations
- Public organizations established under the Public Organizations Act
- Public organizations established under specific acts
Independent administrative organizations
Service delivery units
- Institute for Good Governance Promotion
- Cabinet and Royal Gazette Publishing Office
Former state agencies
Royal agencies
In 2017, several government agencies were transferred to the direct control of the king, and ceased to be considered state agencies. They were the Bureau of the Royal Household (previously a ministry-independent department) and its subsidiary the Office of His Majesty's Principal Private Secretary, the Royal Aide de Camp Department and the Royal Guard Command (previously under the Ministry of Defence), and the Royal Court Security Police (previously under the Royal Thai Police).[5]
See also
Notes and References
- Book: Berman. Evan M.. Public Administration in Southeast Asia: Thailand, Philippines, Malaysia, Hong Kong, and Macao. limited. 2010. CRC Press. 9781420064773. 99–102.
- Book: Office of the Public Sector Development Commission. การจัดการโครงสร้างหน่วยงานของรัฐในกำกับของฝ่ายบริหาร. 2008 . 978-974-499-754-8. 14–32.
- News: Rail Department established after royal endorsement . 9 June 2019 . Bangkok Post . 15 April 2019.
- Web site: OTCC, Ministry of Commerce. Office of Trade Competition Commission. 24 April 2018.
- พระราชบัญญัติระเบียบบริหารราชการในพระองค์ พ.ศ. 2560 . Royal Thai Government Gazette . 1 May 2017 . 134 . 48A . 1–5 . 14 October 2019.