A year after Cambodia’s border conflict with Thailand forced nearly a million migrant workers to return home, the country is still struggling to absorb the shock. By December 2025, at least 900,000 Cambodians had crossed back, many with no jobs to go to and debts they could no longer repay. Before the war, remittances from Thailand kept rural households afloat, covering school fees, healthcare and microfinance loans. That lifeline collapsed almost overnight. Total remittances fell 37 percent in 2025, from nearly US$3 billion to US$1.86 billion. For families whose breadwinners came back, the average income plunged from over US$2,000 to barely US$110. The UN now warns of a looming crisis of landlessness and household debt that could undo years of development gains. The numbers are sobering. A March 2026 assessment found 71 percent of returnees in debt, averaging US$5,500 per household. More than half said they planned to remigrate as soon as possible, while others were pushed into informal work or grey economies along the border. Only a third received any assistance, mostly short‑term food aid. The scale dwarfs previous shocks. During COVID‑19, 260,000 migrants returned and institutions struggled even then. This wave is three and a half times larger, arriving in provinces where construction and agricultural skills do not match the limited manufacturing jobs available. The Ministry of Labour reported just 190,000 vacancies in mid‑2025, far short of demand. Prime Minister Hun Manet has sought investment abroad to reduce dependence on Thailand, while job‑matching and training schemes have been announced. Yet the UN’s warning is blunt: without targeted intervention, families will be forced into distress sales of land, a generational loss that rarely reverses. This is not just a humanitarian story. It is a security one. More than half of returnees intend to leave again, many back to Thailand once the ceasefire allows, others into informal economies where scam compounds and weak governance thrive. A state unable to absorb its own workforce risks fragility that outlasts any border skirmish. The ceasefire may settle territorial disputes, but the debt crisis, landlessness and absence of services remain. What happens to the 900,000 Cambodians who came home to nothing will shape the country’s future far more than the war itself. -2026-07-10
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