Thai Jobs for Myanmar Refugees Could Show Way Forward for Asian Nations, UN Says

BANGKOK, June 9 (Reuters) – More than 5,500 ⁠Myanmar ⁠refugees living in camps along ⁠Thailand’s border have found jobs since Bangkok eased employment curbs last ​year, an approach that offers a regional example, a senior U.N. refugee official told Reuters.

The step ‌came in response to a ‌sharp decline in global humanitarian funding, in part as U.S. President Donald Trump slashed ⁠foreign aid ⁠and Thailand battled growing labour shortages worsened by armed clashes with ​Cambodia.

As a result, Thailand allow about 80,000 refugees from Myanmar to work legally, in a policy change significant for a population that has lived for decades dependent on humanitarian aid in nine shelters ​along the shared border.

Raouf Mazou, UNHCR assistant high commissioner for operations, said Thailand’s efforts ⁠could ⁠become a model for other ⁠countries in ​Southeast Asia grappling with the problem of protracted displacement.

The approach could offer lessons for ​countries such as Bangladesh ⁠and Malaysia that host large refugee populations, showing how they can contribute to the economy while remaining under legal protections and government oversight.

“If it works here, it will have an impact on the region,” Mazou said in an interview.

Since the programme’s launch in October, Thai ⁠authorities have worked with employers to ensure refugee workers receive legal protections, healthcare ⁠coverage and at least the minimum wage, Mazou said.

As part of the initiative, refugees are receiving special identity cards to open bank accounts, obtain mobile SIM cards and verify their legal status, steps Mazou said were critical to integrating them into Thailand’s formal economy.

U.N. officials estimate from current trends that between 10,000 and 20,000 refugees stand to get jobs over the next year, although the pace of expansion hinges on administrative processes and practical access to jobs.

Refugees still face ⁠challenges such as restrictions on freedom of movement and finding ways to adapt to life after decades spent dependent on aid in camps, Mazou said.

“Self-reliance prepares people to be part of the country they’re from… helps them if they ​are resettled elsewhere, or helps them integrate where they are,” he added.

(Reporting ​by Panu Wongcha-um; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

Photos You Should See – June 2026

TOPSHOT - Hindu devotees of the Tengger community are seen through low-lying clouds at sunrise as they ascend the active Mount Bromo volcano to present offerings of rice, fruit, livestock and other items as part of the Yadnya Kasada festival near Probolinggo, East Java province on June 1, 2026. The Yadnya Kasada ceremony is a ritual of the Tenggerese people, a sub-ethnic group of Javanese in eastern Java, in which offerings are thrown into the crater of Mount Bromo as a form of gratitude, prayer for safety, and fulfillment of a legendary vow to the mountain's deity. (Photo by JUNI KRISWANTO / AFP via Getty Images)

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