Wanderlust wrote:SJ,
While I broadly agree with your last post, I think the main real issue here is how and why the immigration rules are changed
Maybe the answer to this is they are constantly having to react to foreigners bending or abusing the rules, a large proportion of these being neighbouring migrant workers, Africans bringing in South American 'products' and the like.
The other question I would like to ask is what actual difference does it make to Thailand if a foreigner is living here courtesy of his wife's income?
I'd would say they have no problem with it as they introduced it afterall, but IMO the problem was that farangs were fabricating their Thai wives income which is simple to do, and then by paying just 4k a month in tax you have your magic 40k income from one partner. Question then is should they employ an army to investigate the employment sourse, or do they just say f*** it we tried to help you and you threw it back in our faces, you can go back to foreigners income only now.
I agree that we have to live and work within the system in place but that does not mean we shouldn't point out its inequities and failings, and it really does suggest that the Thai authorities 'have it in' for us, with no solid reason for it otherwise.
I think there is solid reason, many foreigners (incl myself) have not always worked within their system, instead exploit every loopholle there is in what is an imperfect system. There's plenty of examples of foreigners doing this dating back to the 90's and early 2000's where it's estimated that 50,000 illegal visas were issued via agents sending passports overseas without the person going. We had the 30 day visa runs by people staying long term, many people working illegally on the wrong visas, people passing round the bank 'show money' to friends just before extension time, farangs fabricating wives incomes and whatever else. It's human nature to bend the system but it would be a bit of a stretch not to associate this with their neccessity to ammend the rules often, in many cases, not all though.
IMO if they really 'had it in' for us, they could very easily and perfectly legitimately make it harder for us (and only attract the more wealthy) by increasing the money criteria for extensions every year in line with inflation, then it might look something like this:
- Retirement Visa show money today would be 1.6M instead of 800k, and income 95k/month not 65k. Don't think they've increased this since 2001!?
- Marriage Visa show money today would be 500k not 400k, and income 50k/month not 40k. Not increased since July 2004.
Cheers,
SJ