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Home South Asia

Myanmar’s Collapse Will Have Consequences Far Beyond Asia

Mohammed Rakib Uddin by Mohammed Rakib Uddin
September 8, 2025
in South Asia
Reading Time: 5 mins read
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A Brief Introduction

Myanmar’s accelerating state collapse is no longer a “local” crisis. It is reshaping humanitarian systems, transnational crime and cyber-fraud, global commodities (tin and rare earths), and great-power competition across the Indo-Pacific—effects already visible in trade data, refugee figures, and security reporting by the UN and leading research institutes.

A Fractured State at the Heart of a Strategic Crossroads

Four years after the 2021 coup, Myanmar’s military controls a shrinking share of national territory while anti-junta forces hold large swaths of the periphery, producing a de-facto fragmentation of authority. This has pushed the conflict onto the main corridors that link the Indian and Pacific Oceans—routes China, India, and ASEAN depend on for energy and trade. International Crisis Group and the Council on Foreign Relations both highlight Myanmar as a conflict with regional knock-on effects and eroding governance capacity.

Kyaukphyu on the Bay of Bengal illustrates why the collapse matters globally: it is the terminus of twin China-Myanmar oil and gas pipelines that shorten China’s sea lines of communication and reduce reliance on the Malacca Strait. Disruption there has obvious implications for China’s energy security and regional naval calculations.

Humanitarian Shockwaves That Strain Global Response Systems

UN OCHA reports more than 3.5 million people internally displaced by the end of 2024, amid severe access constraints and under-funded relief operations—a burden now exacerbated by major disasters like the March 2025 earthquake. Such needs are pulling in donors and logistics assets from far beyond Asia, even as humanitarian budgets face competing crises worldwide.

UNHCR’s operational portal shows sustained refugee outflows to Bangladesh, India, Thailand, and beyond—flows that interact with diaspora networks and resettlement pipelines on multiple continents, not just in South and Southeast Asia. Bangladesh alone continues to host nearly one million Rohingya, underlining how Myanmar’s internal collapse burdens third countries and international agencies.

From Borderlands to the World: Crime, Cyber-Fraud, and Drugs

Weak state control has turned parts of Myanmar into hubs for transnational organized crime whose victims and laundered funds are global. UNODC’s 2025 reporting describes an “inflection point” in Mekong scam-center operations, with criminal groups relocating and expanding outward to Africa, Latin America, and Eastern Europe, trafficking workers from 50+ countries and extracting billions from victims worldwide.

At the same time, the Golden Triangle’s synthetic-drug economy—centered in Myanmar’s Shan State—reached record production and seizures in 2024, with spillovers to Australia, South Asia, and the Pacific. This is not a purely regional policing issue; it is a global public-health and financial-crime challenge that requires coordinated sanctions, AML enforcement, and cyber authorities in destination markets.

Independent investigations and rights monitors also detail linkages between scam compounds near Myawaddy and elements of the junta’s security architecture—an example of how war economies in failing states can finance repression while victimizing people far from the conflict zone.

Global Supply Chains—Tin and Rare Earths as the Clearest Barometers

Tin. The world’s solder—and by extension, semiconductors, electronics, EVs, and renewables—relies heavily on tin flows that run through Myanmar’s Wa State. Since the 2023 shutdown of the Man Maw complex, Chinese imports of tin concentrates have plunged, periodically tightening global markets and pushing up prices. Even talk of a restart jolts the London Metal Exchange and downstream manufacturers, underscoring the fragility created by Myanmar’s instability.

Rare Earths. Northern Myanmar has become a major source of heavy rare-earth feedstocks (notably dysprosium and terbium) that are critical for high-performance magnets in EVs, wind turbines, and defense systems. Fighting in Kachin State has repeatedly disrupted this trade; in early 2025, Chinese imports of rare earths from Myanmar fell sharply after Kachin forces seized key mining areas, spiking terbium prices and prompting a regional scramble. With heavy REE processing still overwhelmingly concentrated in China, shocks in Myanmar propagate through global green-tech supply chains and military procurement.

These commodity shocks are not theoretical: industry groups and market trackers document output declines and import volatility tied to events in Myanmar, translating conflict dynamics into boardroom risk and consumer-price pressure worldwide.

Great-Power Politics and Security Externalities

For Beijing, a governable Myanmar secures energy corridors, buffers Yunnan, and protects BRI investments; for New Delhi, border stability and Northeast insurgency dynamics are at stake; for Washington and allies, the conflict intersects with sanctions policy, atrocity-prevention norms, and the integrity of supply chains for critical minerals. Crisis Group warns that absent coordinated diplomacy, the conflict will deepen regional insecurity, while selective recognition of junta-run “elections” risks entrenching an ungovernable status quo.

The cumulative effect is a testing ground for international order: UN Security Council paralysis, contested humanitarian access, and competing sanctions carve-outs for critical inputs all set precedents that extend far beyond Southeast Asia. SIPRI’s annual yearbook places Myanmar among a cluster of active wars degrading global security, with rising military spend and proliferating conflict technology.

What “Beyond Asia” Looks Like in Practice

  1. Humanitarian Financing & Migration Policy – Donor reallocations from other regions to Myanmar (and to front-line host states) reduce fiscal space for crises elsewhere, while resettlement pipelines and anti-trafficking operations now involve agencies from Europe, North America, and Oceania.
  2. Financial-Crime and Cybersecurity Regimes – The Mekong scam industry exploits crypto rails and underground banking across jurisdictions; regulators and FATF partners outside Asia are being pulled into cross-border asset freezes, AML reforms, and victim-restitution frameworks.
  3. Industrial Policy & Inflation Channels – Tin tightness and rare-earth disruptions can lift input costs for solder, permanent magnets, and electronics globally, complicating central-bank disinflation and industrial-policy timelines in Europe and North America.
  4. Norms & Law – The inability to deter or prosecute mass atrocities amid conflict fragmentation erodes international human rights norms, encouraging impunity in other theaters. (See ICG’s repeated calls for more coherent international action.)

Policy Implications

Humanitarian Surge + Access Diplomacy. Scale multi-year funding tied to principled access (cross-border as needed), while coordinating sanctions carve-outs for aid and essential goods to mitigate market distortions.

Target the War Economy. Use sanctions and law-enforcement cooperation against illicit mining, rare-earth smuggling, scam compounds, and meth supply chains; pair with labor-trafficking rescue and victim support.

Supply-Chain Resilience. Diversify tin and heavy-REE supply and processing capacity (including recycling) to reduce single-point-of-failure risks evident in Myanmar-linked disruptions.

Mohammed Rakib Uddin

Mohammed Rakib Uddin

Mohammed Rakib Uddin is a Content Writer of Diplotic. He is studying at Department of English Language & Literature, National University, Bangladesh

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