Women migrant numbers high in Thai construction
BANGKOK — They toil high on scaffolding, pouring concrete and twisting iron bars. At night, they squeeze into shipping containers with their husbands by the dozens to get some rest.
They are female migrant construction workers, a rarity in most parts of the world, but not in Thailand. The International Labor Organization said in a report released Tuesday that more than 200,000 women from Cambodia, Myanmar and Laos work in Thailand, accounting for almost 40 per cent of the migrant construction workers in the country.
By comparison, less than 9 per cent of construction workers in the U.S. are women, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, and a 1990 survey found that among 49 developing countries Thailand was the only one where women made up more than 10 per cent of the construction workforce.
They work alongside men to smooth walls, lay bricks, and carry bags of cement on Bangkok’s high rises and railway digs.

