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Asked: January 9, 20262026-01-09T10:58:51+07:00 2026-01-09T10:58:51+07:00In: Money

What Cambodia should prioritise in 2026?

As we start 2026, Cambodia is facing a reality we haven’t seen in decades. While the government continues its “Phase 2” transition toward high-tech growth, the country is actually in the middle of a massive rescue mission. If 2025 was the year of the “border shock,” 2026 must be the year we bring our people home—not just to their villages, but back into the economy.

To succeed this year, Cambodia cannot just talk about 5G and AI. We must prioritise three urgent, human-centred goals.

What Cambodia should prioritise in 2026?

Immediate priority: Reintegrating the million

The most pressing issue for 2026 is the nearly one million people who fled the border or returned from Thailand during the 2025 conflict. As of January, more than 400,000 remain internally displaced, and hundreds of thousands more are back in their home villages with no way to pay their debts.

Our top priority this year must be economic reintegration. We cannot simply tell these workers to “go back to farming.” The government needs to fast-track “TVET 2.0”—a massive, emergency training programme to enable these manual labourers to have more job opportunities. But training takes time; in the short term, we need immediate debt relief and job-matching platforms that connect returnees with new job opportunies in Phnom Penh, Sihanoukville and other provinces.

Cambodians salvage their possessions from homes destroyed by shelling and airstrikes in Prey Chan village, Banteay Meanchey province, while parts of the village remain illegally occupied by Thai forces. KT/Khem Sovannara

Economic priority: Filling the $5 billion trade gap

With political tensions likely to linger through the 2026 Thai election cycle, the border will not return to normality soon. The paralysis of nearly $5 billion in annual border trade is a massive blow, but it is also a forced opportunity to diversify.

To prevent a permanent economic slide, our 2026 priority must be supply chain realignment. We are already seeing Vietnamese buyers replace Thai ones for our agricultural exports, and through the RCEP agreement, we must aggressively pivot our electronics and automotive parts toward more stable markets in Japan, South Korea, and China.

However, finding new buyers is only half the battle; we also have to stop being “import-addicted.” For years, we relied on Thailand for 45% of our essential goods and 30% of our fuel, Cambodia needs to prioritise domestic resilience by incentivising local food processing and the production of agriculture inputs and construction materials right here at home.

Survival priority: Digital skills

The 2025 crisis was a wake-up call: an economy built on physical borders and manual migration is inherently fragile. This is why the shift to high-tech growth isn’t a luxury. It’s a survival tactic.

While the 5G rollout and new data centres provide the skeleton of a digital economy, we must now provide the muscle: human capital. By training workers for tech-enabled roles—such as e-commerce entrepreneurship, digital logistics, and remote service work— we can protect our workers from the geopolitical shocks of the future.

Beyond individual job security, a digitally literate workforce is the engine for national economic sovereignty. It allows Cambodia to move up the value chain, attracting high-quality foreign investment that seeks more than just cheap labour.

The bottom line

In 2026, Cambodia’s true priority isn’t a “Pentagonal Strategy” on a piece of paper. It is the people behind the numbers. If we can reintegrate our displaced workers, diversify our trade, and train our people with digital skills to contribute to our digital economy, Cambodia will be remembered as a nation that not only endured but also thrived in the face of challenges. The path forward requires a difficult but necessary transition: we must evolve from a nation that exports labour and imports essentials to one that builds value and creates opportunity within its own borders.

Source: Khmer Times

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