Cambodia sits on an untapped wealth of resources—fertile land, hard-working farmers, and a youthful population eager to contribute to the country’s development. For years, the nation has been known for exporting raw agricultural products: fragrant rice, golden mangoes, rich cashews, and more. But beyond the farms and fields, there is a crucial question Cambodia must now answer: Why are we still sending our raw goods away, only to buy them back at a higher price?
It is time for Cambodia to step into a new era—not as a supplier of raw materials, but as a proud manufacturer of finished goods. This is more than an economic imperative. It is a matter of sovereignty, dignity, and national strength.
Across Southeast Asia, demand for high-quality, responsibly produced food is on the rise. Cambodia can meet that demand—not by expanding its exports of raw rice and fruit, but by building its own agro-processing industries. Cambodia must become the food basket of the region. This is not a slogan. It is a strategy waiting to be implemented.
The country has every advantage needed to lead in this space:
- Land that produces multiple harvests per year.
- A young, trainable workforce.
- Access to regional trade agreements.
- A stable environment for business.
What has been missing is coordination, investment, and national focus.
We must now launch a Cambodian Agro-Industrial Revolution.
This means building fruit drying facilities in Battambang. Establishing cashew processing plants in Kampong Thom. Launching spice packaging units in Kampot. And creating seafood value-addition hubs along the southern coast. These factories should not be foreign-owned warehouses—they should be locally run, employing Cambodian workers, and returning profits to Cambodian communities.
Let us not wait for foreign investors to define our agricultural destiny. Cambodia must take the lead.
But this requires more than infrastructure. It demands people-centered planning. Youth training programs must align with the needs of food processing industries—machine operators, quality controllers, packaging designers, export managers. This is how jobs are created not just in Phnom Penh, but in every province.
We must reimagine rural Cambodia—not as a place people leave in search of work, but as a place where work and purpose begin. Let factories come to the farms. Let young Cambodians build futures near their families, not across borders.
Equally important is the culture of consumption. Every school in Cambodia should serve food grown and processed domestically. Uniforms should be made from local textiles. Government procurement should prioritize Cambodian products.
This is how we grow the economy from within. This is how we say with action—not words—that we believe in our own potential.
Across the country, thousands of smallholder farmers produce crops with care, but sell them at low prices because there are no local buyers. Agro-processing changes this. It brings stability to farm incomes and resilience to the entire food system.
The benefits ripple outward. Processed foods travel better. They last longer. They open doors to international markets. And they raise the profile of Cambodian products abroad. It is time for the world to see “Made in Cambodia” not only as a source of pride—but as a mark of quality.
Cambodia can also lead in ethical and sustainable food production. Organic farming, fair wages, community ownership—these are not foreign concepts. They are Cambodian values waiting to be scaled.
To make this future possible, we need clear national goals. Let us aim for:
- One agro-processing hub in every province within the next five years.
- At least 50% of agricultural exports to be value-added products by 2030.
- Youth employment in agro-industry to double in the next three years.
These are ambitious, but achievable targets. And they are necessary.
Over the past decades, Samdech Akka Moha Sena Padei Techo Hun Sen, former Prime Minister of the Kingdom of Cambodia, laid the strong foundations for peace, stability, and economic growth after years of hardship. His visionary leadership transformed Cambodia from a post-conflict nation into one of the fastest-growing economies in Southeast Asia. Today, that legacy is being carried forward by Samdech Moha Borvor Thipadei Hun Manet, the current Prime Minister, whose modern, inclusive, and development-driven approach is inspiring a new generation. With a deep commitment to national sovereignty, agricultural advancement, and human capital development, Prime Minister Hun Manet is guiding Cambodia into a new era of self-reliance, industrialization, and international respect. Together, their leadership represents the continuity of progress, unity, and national pride.
Let us remember: food security is national security. When a country can feed itself and build its economy on the strength of its own soil, it becomes stronger, safer, and more respected.
Cambodia’s identity is rooted in agriculture. But identity must evolve. Let us now build a new image—one of factories alongside farms, of exports that carry our brands, of villages where opportunity is not a visitor but a resident.
The world is watching Cambodia. The region is hungry for reliable suppliers. And our people are ready to work, build, and lead.
What we need now is direction. Determination. And the belief that our future does not depend on others. It depends on us.
Let Cambodia feed itself.
Let Cambodia feed the region.
Let Cambodia feed the future.