The History of Debt Enforcement in Thai Society



Author Information

Passakorn Yeenang, Chiang Mai University, Thailand

Abstract

This study traces the evolution of debt enforcement in Thai legal history and argues that cultural norms, moral expectations, and hierarchical social structures have long influenced the characteristics of legal enforcement in Thailand today. The central hypothesis is that traditional Thai conceptions of debt as both a legal and moral obligation persist into the present, where loan debtors may still face criminal sanctions through fraud accusations, turning civil obligations into criminal matters. The research scope is limited to debt arising from loan contracts to highlight the moral foundations of credit relations. Using historical analysis, the study draws on pre-modern sources such as the Three Seals Code and the Mangraisat Law, situated within the Nakhonban legal order prior to the Civil and Commercial Code and Civil Procedure Code reforms (1923–1935). The analytical framework is based on the “morality of debt,” which views indebtedness not only as a contractual relationship but also as a moral duty, requiring debtors to remain loyal to creditors within the patron–client hierarchy. The findings show that creditors historically exercised power over both debtors’ assets and bodies, imposing punishments such as flogging, humiliation, and even self-sale into slavery. Although modern law rests on principles of contractual freedom and equality, continuities remain in contemporary judicial practice, where civil default can still be criminalized. By comparing pre-modern rules with modern case law, the study demonstrates how cultural values and historical legacies continue to influence the enforcement of debt in Thailand today.


Paper Information

Conference: IICAH2026
Stream: Humanities - History, Historiography

This paper is part of the IICAH2026 Conference Proceedings (View)
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To cite this article:
Yeenang P. (2026) The History of Debt Enforcement in Thai Society ISSN: 2432-4604 – The IAFOR International Conference on Arts & Humanities – Hawaii 2026 Official Conference Proceedings (pp. 355-366) https://doi.org/10.22492/issn.2432-4604.2026.30
To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.22492/issn.2432-4604.2026.30


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Posted by James Alexander Gordon