Executive Summary

In August 2025, Thailand implemented a landmark policy granting work permits to over 80,000 Myanmar refugees living in border camps—many for nearly two decades. This case study examines the drivers, implementation, and implications of this historic shift in refugee policy, using the experience of workers like Tun Min Lat as a lens to understand broader humanitarian and economic dynamics.


Background Context

The Refugee Population

Thailand hosts nine border camps sheltering Myanmar refugees who have fled successive waves of conflict:

  • 1980s onwards: Ethnic armed conflict in Myanmar’s border regions
  • 2006-2007: Intensified military operations against ethnic groups
  • 2021-present: Civil war following military coup against Aung San Suu Kyi’s government

These refugees have lived in a legal grey zone—permitted to stay in camps but prohibited from formal employment, making them dependent on international humanitarian assistance.

The Labor Market Crisis

In July 2025, border clashes between Thailand and Cambodia triggered an exodus of Cambodian workers:

  • 520,000 Cambodian workers (12% of Thailand’s workforce) had been employed in Thailand
  • Mass departures created acute labor shortages in agriculture, construction, and manufacturing
  • Southeast Asia’s second-largest economy faced potential production disruptions

The Aid Crisis

Compounding refugee vulnerability, 2025 saw significant cuts to humanitarian aid:

  • United States reduced refugee assistance funding
  • Other donor nations scaled back support
  • Camps faced increased food insecurity and reduced services
  • Pressure mounted for refugees to become self-reliant

Case Profile: Tun Min Lat

Demographics:

  • Age: 42
  • Origin: Southern Myanmar
  • Time in Thailand: 19 years (arrived 2006)
  • Family: Wife and three children
  • Previous status: Entirely aid-dependent in Kanchanaburi refugee camp

Flight Narrative: Tun Min Lat and his wife fled Myanmar in 2006 to escape:

  • Forced labor conscription by Myanmar military
  • Armed conflict between government forces and ethnic armed groups
  • Economic devastation in conflict zones

Employment Transition:

  • August 2025: Applied for work permit under new policy
  • November 2025: Working at longan farm in Chanthaburi province (500 km from camp)
  • First day earnings: 1,000 baht (~$31) split among 5 workers
  • Family arrangement: Wife works at same farm; eldest daughter employed at factory in another province; two younger children (ages 14 and 10) remain in camp under neighbor care

Personal Impact:

“Now I feel like I can see a future… Even though I am tired and our family members are apart, we still feel happy. We feel hopeful.”

This quote encapsulates the trade-offs refugees face: family separation and physical hardship balanced against economic agency and long-term prospects.


Policy Analysis

Key Features of the Work Permit Program

Eligibility:

  • Myanmar nationals living in Thailand’s nine official border camps
  • Over 80,000 refugees qualify
  • First-time legal employment rights after decades in camps

Implementation:

  • Announced late August 2025
  • Described by UN as “landmark step”
  • Coordinated between Thai labor ministry, immigration, and refugee agencies

Geographic Scope:

  • Workers can travel up to 500 km from camps
  • Employment concentrated in labor-shortage regions
  • Key sectors: agriculture (longan, rubber, other crops), manufacturing, construction

Strategic Drivers

Economic Pragmatism: Thailand faced immediate labor shortages following the Cambodian worker exodus. The refugee work permit program served multiple economic functions:

  • Fill critical gaps in agricultural production during harvest seasons
  • Maintain manufacturing output in export-oriented industries
  • Sustain construction projects amid infrastructure development

Humanitarian Pressure: With aid cuts reducing camp resources, maintaining refugees in dependency became increasingly untenable. Legal employment offered a pathway to:

  • Reduce Thai government and international community financial burden
  • Improve refugee living standards and dignity
  • Address growing camp tensions over resource scarcity

Regional Dynamics: Thailand’s approach signals potential shifts in Southeast Asian refugee policy:

  • Movement from containment to limited integration
  • Recognition that protracted refugee situations require durable solutions
  • Balancing national security concerns with economic needs

Stakeholder Perspectives

Refugees

Opportunities:

  • First legal income in decades
  • Pathway to self-reliance and independence
  • Ability to support families and save for future
  • Skills development in formal labor market

Challenges:

  • Family separation (children often remain in camps)
  • Exploitative working conditions risk (long hours, low pay, dangerous work)
  • Uncertain legal status beyond work permits
  • No clear path to permanent residency or citizenship
  • Vulnerability to employer abuse without strong legal protections

Thai Government

Benefits:

  • Addresses critical labor shortages
  • Demonstrates regional leadership on humanitarian issues
  • Reduces aid dependency costs
  • Regulates previously informal refugee labor

Concerns:

  • Potential backlash from Thai workers fearing job competition
  • Security monitoring of dispersed refugee population
  • Administrative burden of work permit system
  • Long-term integration questions

Employers

Advantages:

  • Access to motivated, available workforce
  • Lower labor costs compared to recruiting from neighboring countries
  • Reduced recruitment fees and documentation complexity

Risks:

  • Navigating new regulatory framework
  • Ensuring compliance with labor standards
  • Managing culturally and linguistically diverse workforce

Humanitarian Organizations

Leon de Riedmatten, Executive Director of The Border Consortium, notes:

“It is the first time that they have an opportunity to start to be self-reliant, maybe more independent in the future, and having a more decent life in Thailand.”

Organizations see this as progress but advocate for:

  • Comprehensive labor rights protections
  • Family reunification mechanisms
  • Educational access for refugee children
  • Long-term integration pathways

Implementation Challenges

Operational Issues

Geographic Dispersion:

  • Workers traveling 500 km from camps face logistics challenges
  • Transportation costs reduce net earnings
  • Communication with families in camps difficult
  • Emergency response complicated when workers are distant

Child Welfare:

  • Significant number of children left in camps
  • Neighbor care arrangements informal and vulnerable
  • Education continuity disrupted when families separate
  • Psychosocial impact of parent-child separation

Documentation:

  • Work permit application and renewal processes
  • Maintaining legal status while mobile
  • Language barriers in navigating bureaucracy

Systemic Risks

Labor Exploitation: Without strong oversight, refugees face:

  • Wage theft and underpayment
  • Excessive working hours
  • Unsafe working conditions
  • Limited recourse for grievances
  • Employer leverage over legal status

Legal Vulnerability:

  • Work permits don’t guarantee other legal protections
  • Immigration status remains precarious
  • No pathway to permanent residence
  • Deportation risk if employment ends

Social Integration:

  • Limited interaction with Thai communities
  • Language barriers persist
  • Cultural isolation in work sites
  • Discrimination and xenophobia potential

Comparative Context

Regional Precedents

Malaysia:

  • Has periodically issued work permits to Rohingya and other refugees
  • Programs often temporary and sector-specific
  • Mixed success with labor exploitation common

Bangladesh:

  • Restricted Rohingya refugees from formal employment
  • Created parallel economy and exploitation risks
  • Recently piloting limited work programs

Indonesia:

  • Generally prohibits refugee employment
  • Reliance on UNHCR and NGO support
  • Protracted situations with no integration pathway

Thailand’s Approach: Represents middle ground:

  • More progressive than containment-only policies
  • Falls short of full integration models (e.g., Uganda’s self-reliance strategy)
  • Pragmatic response to economic realities

International Standards

UNHCR Guidelines:

  • Right to work considered essential for refugee dignity and self-reliance
  • Access to labor markets reduces protection risks
  • Economic inclusion aids long-term solutions

ILO Conventions:

  • Equal treatment in working conditions
  • Protection from forced labor and exploitation
  • Access to social security and benefits

Thailand’s Compliance: The work permit program advances some standards but gaps remain in:

  • Equal pay and working conditions enforcement
  • Social protection coverage
  • Freedom of movement restrictions
  • Permanent solution pathways

Economic Impact Assessment

Micro-Level (Individual Refugees)

Income Generation:

  • Tun Min Lat’s group earned ~200 baht ($6) per person on first day
  • Estimated monthly earnings: 4,000-6,000 baht ($123-$185) for agricultural work
  • Comparison: Thailand minimum wage 353-370 baht/day depending on province
  • Refugees likely earning below minimum wage, though above zero income in camps

Economic Agency:

  • Control over spending decisions
  • Ability to save for emergencies
  • Investment in children’s education
  • Remittances to family members in Myanmar (if possible)

Skills Development:

  • Agricultural techniques
  • Factory work experience
  • Thai language improvement
  • Employment discipline and expectations

Meso-Level (Regional Economies)

Labor Market Effects:

  • Addresses critical shortages in agriculture and manufacturing
  • Enables continued production during peak harvest seasons
  • Supports export-oriented industries in border provinces
  • May depress wages in low-skilled sectors

Chanthaburi Province Example:

  • Major longan production region
  • Harvest season labor demand peaks November-January
  • Refugee workers fill gap left by Cambodian workers
  • Local economy maintains productivity

Macro-Level (National)

GDP Impact:

  • 80,000 additional workers could contribute 0.2-0.3% to GDP growth
  • Agricultural output maintenance during labor crisis
  • Reduced irregular migration and associated costs
  • Manufacturing export continuity

Fiscal Considerations:

  • Tax revenue from employers (minimal from low-wage workers)
  • Reduced humanitarian aid expenditures
  • Administrative costs of work permit system
  • Potential savings on camp management long-term

Trade-offs:

  • Potential wage depression in low-skilled sectors
  • Thai worker displacement concerns (though likely minimal given shortages)
  • Infrastructure strain in receiving communities

Outlook and Scenarios

Short-Term Outlook (2026-2027)

Likely Developments:

Expansion Phase:

  • More refugees obtain work permits as word spreads
  • Additional sectors beyond agriculture engage refugee workers
  • Geographic dispersal increases as workers seek opportunities
  • Employers become familiar with regulatory framework

Challenges Emerge:

  • Reports of labor exploitation and abuse surface
  • Family separation strains intensify
  • Thai worker concerns about competition grow
  • Administrative bottlenecks in permit processing

Policy Adjustments:

  • Government refines work permit regulations
  • Labor inspections increase (or fail to materialize)
  • NGOs establish monitoring and support mechanisms
  • Camp populations decline as workers move out

Wild Card:

  • Myanmar conflict dynamics could drive new refugee influxes, complicating program
  • Regional economic downturn could reduce labor demand, undermining rationale

Medium-Term Outlook (2028-2030)

Scenario 1: Progressive Integration (40% probability)

Characteristics:

  • Thailand expands refugee rights beyond work permits
  • Pathways to permanent residency or citizenship emerge
  • Family reunification programs allow children to join working parents
  • Educational access improves for refugee children
  • Social protection coverage extends to refugees

Drivers:

  • Continued labor market needs
  • Positive economic impact evidence
  • International pressure and incentives
  • Successful social integration examples
  • Business lobby support

Outcomes:

  • 50,000+ refugees integrated into Thai society
  • Reduced camp populations
  • Economic contribution increases
  • Regional model for refugee integration

Scenario 2: Status Quo Maintenance (45% probability)

Characteristics:

  • Work permit program continues at current scale
  • No expansion of refugee rights beyond employment
  • Camps persist with reduced populations
  • Limited integration into Thai society
  • Temporary program remains temporary

Drivers:

  • Political resistance to further integration
  • Thai nationalist sentiments
  • Myanmar conflict continues indefinitely
  • Economic benefits insufficient to justify expansion
  • Regional instability concerns

Outcomes:

  • 30,000-40,000 refugees with work permits
  • Protracted situation persists in new form
  • Ongoing vulnerability and exploitation risks
  • No durable solution pathway

Scenario 3: Retrenchment and Restriction (15% probability)

Characteristics:

  • Work permit program scaled back or terminated
  • Return to camp-based containment model
  • Increased restrictions on refugee mobility
  • Push for repatriation to Myanmar

Drivers:

  • Economic recession reduces labor demand
  • Political backlash from Thai workers
  • Security incidents involving refugees
  • Change in government policy priorities
  • Myanmar stabilization (unlikely but possible)

Outcomes:

  • Refugees return to camps or irregular status
  • Humanitarian crisis intensifies
  • International criticism of Thailand
  • Underground economy expansion

Long-Term Outlook (2031-2035)

Key Uncertainties:

Myanmar Political Future:

  • Stabilization scenario: Military regime consolidates or democratic transition occurs → pressure for refugee repatriation
  • Continued conflict scenario: Civil war persists → protracted refugee situation continues
  • Fragmentation scenario: Myanmar effectively partitions → some regions safe for return, others not

Thai Political Economy:

  • Aging society pressure: Thailand’s demographic decline could increase openness to immigrant labor integration
  • Automation impact: Agricultural and manufacturing automation could reduce labor demand
  • Economic growth: Sustained growth maintains labor needs; stagnation reduces opportunities

Regional Dynamics:

  • ASEAN coordination on refugee policies
  • International funding for durable solutions
  • Climate change and displacement interactions
  • China’s influence on Myanmar and regional politics

Potential Pathways:

Best Case (20% probability):

  • Myanmar stabilizes, enabling safe, voluntary return for those who choose
  • Thailand offers integration pathway for long-term residents
  • International community funds reconstruction and reintegration
  • Refugees have genuine choice between return and integration

Most Likely Case (60% probability):

  • Protracted situation continues with work permit program as compromise
  • Gradual, ad-hoc integration of some refugees over decades
  • Camps eventually close but legal status remains ambiguous
  • Generational integration similar to Palestinian, Afghan models elsewhere

Worst Case (20% probability):

  • Policy reversal forces refugees back to camps or Myanmar
  • Myanmar remains unsafe, creating humanitarian catastrophe
  • Regional instability spreads, complicating all solutions
  • International community disengages, leaving refugees in limbo

Strategic Recommendations

For Thai Government

Immediate (2026):

  1. Strengthen labor protections: Establish inspection regime and complaint mechanisms for refugee workers
  2. Family reunification pilot: Allow children above certain age to join working parents
  3. Education access: Ensure refugee children can attend schools near work sites
  4. Data collection: Monitor economic impact, labor market effects, social integration

Medium-term (2027-2029):

  1. Regularization pathway: Create criteria for long-term residents to obtain permanent status
  2. Skill development: Vocational training programs to increase refugee productivity
  3. Regional coordination: Work with ASEAN partners on comprehensive refugee framework
  4. Economic zones: Designate areas for refugee integration with support services

For International Community

Support and Advocacy:

  1. Technical assistance: Help Thailand build labor inspection and protection systems
  2. Financial incentives: Provide funding tied to refugee rights expansion
  3. Third-country resettlement: Continue programs for most vulnerable refugees
  4. Myanmar engagement: Pressure for conflict resolution and safe return conditions

For Humanitarian Organizations

Protection and Support:

  1. Monitor and document: Track labor exploitation and advocate for remedies
  2. Legal assistance: Help refugees navigate work permit and labor law systems
  3. Child protection: Support families separated by employment migration
  4. Community organizing: Build refugee worker associations for collective advocacy

For Employers

Responsible Practices:

  1. Fair wages: Pay minimum wage or above, regardless of refugee status
  2. Safe conditions: Ensure workplace safety standards applied equally
  3. Contract clarity: Provide written agreements in understood languages
  4. Respect rights: Allow freedom of association and complaint without retaliation

For Refugees

Self-Advocacy:

  1. Know rights: Understand labor laws and work permit terms
  2. Document everything: Keep records of pay, hours, and conditions
  3. Community networks: Organize for mutual support and information sharing
  4. Seek assistance: Connect with NGOs and legal services when needed

Conclusion

Thailand’s decision to grant work permits to Myanmar refugees represents a significant, if incomplete, step toward addressing a protracted humanitarian situation. The case of Tun Min Lat and thousands like him illustrates both the transformative potential and inherent limitations of labor market access as a solution to refugee vulnerability.

Key Takeaways:

  1. Economic pragmatism drove policy change: Labor shortages, not purely humanitarian concerns, prompted Thailand’s shift—suggesting sustainability depends on continued economic rationale
  2. Trade-offs are substantial: Refugees gain economic agency but face family separation, exploitation risks, and continued legal precarity
  3. Durable solutions remain distant: Work permits provide survival and dignity improvements but don’t resolve fundamental questions of permanent status and belonging
  4. Regional implications: Thailand’s approach could influence Southeast Asian refugee policy, though unique circumstances may limit replicability
  5. Outlook is uncertain: Future depends on Myanmar conflict trajectory, Thai political economy, and international engagement—all highly unpredictable

Critical Question: Will Thailand’s work permit program prove a transitional step toward integration, or will it institutionalize a new form of protracted limbo—where refugees are economically useful but socially and legally marginalized?

The answer will unfold over the coming decade, shaped by political will, economic forces, and the voices of refugees themselves who, after decades in camps, are finally able to say with hope: “Now I can see a future.”


References and Further Reading

Primary Sources:

  • Reuters report, November 19, 2025
  • Thai Ministry of Labor data on Cambodian workers
  • UN statements on refugee work permits

Key Organizations:

  • The Border Consortium (refugee support in Thailand)
  • UNHCR Thailand office
  • ILO Bangkok

Background Reading:

  • Myanmar civil war developments (2021-present)
  • Thailand labor market and migration patterns
  • Southeast Asian refugee policy frameworks
  • Protracted refugee situations globally

This case study is based on information available as of November 2025. The situation remains fluid and subject to rapid change based on political, economic, and conflict dynamics in Myanmar and Thailand.