Compliance
Controversy Erupts Again Over "Golden Visa" Market

Controversy about programmes enabling HNW individuals to get citzenship and or residency in return for investments refuses to go away.
The industry group speaking for practitioners in the market for
so-called “golden visa” programmes has locked horns again with
critics of this industry, saying attacks are largely unjust.
A few days ago the
Organisation of Economic Co-operation and Development, the
Paris-headquartered “club” of wealthy industrialised nations,
said these residency programmes create “potential for misuse”.
Dozens of nations, such as Portugal, the UK, Spain and Malta,
offer passports and residency to people willing to invest into
these countries, with certain tests applied.
With several European Union states - such as Denmark, Malta and
Latvia - hit by money laundering claims and scandals, the OECD
said the programmes are a gap that crooks might exploit. The EU
Commission has also recently flagged its worries about the
matter. The IMC responded to this criticism (see
here). The market for golden visas is now big business.
The most prominent advisory firm in this space is Henley &
Partners, and recently
ranked passports around the world on how many
visa-free/visa-on-arrival benefits they give. It showed that
Japan recently overtook Singapore in opening the most doors.
However, the OECD criticism prompted a response from the Investment
Migration Council, a Geneva-headquartered group seeking to
push best practice in the space and represent the interests of
industry practitioners, such as law firms and advisors.
The IMC said only a “very small percentage of residence or
citizenship statuses legitimately obtained” through these
programmes are at issue. “For the vast majority of applicants
seeking alternative residence or citizenship through these
programmes, tax is not in fact an issue, as most applicants
either do not in fact change their tax residence or move
completely to their new place of residence and then are tax
residents there”.
The IMC added that these programmes are “only a fraction of the
immigration options available to individuals”.
“Most residence permits and citizenships are in fact obtained
under options other than investment migration programmes. For
example, while in Europe on average about 800 citizenships are
granted annually under CBI [citizenship-by-investment] provisions
(mainly in Austria, Cyprus and Malta), the 28 member states of
the European Union grant nearly one million citizenships every
year for other reasons, including ancestry, residence, special
merit, marriage, etc,” it said.
“All of these [permits, citizenships] can be equally used or
abused for circumventing CRS, while citizenships obtained through
EU CBI programmes account for less than 0.1 per cent of all the
citizenships granted in the EU. It would be good to understand
what is being done to assess the risk, and to take appropriate
measures, with regard to potential CRS abuse under other
immigration and citizenship options,” it continued.
“Of those nearly one million citizenships granted by the EU each
year (and a similar number in North America), among the top
non-EU origin countries are many high-risk nationalities, and in
far greater numbers than through CBI programmes. These include
Pakistan, Ukraine, Algeria, Russia, Nigeria, and Somalia, which
pose a much more real danger to the international community in
terms of criminal activity in the financial system, including
money laundering and terrorist financing, which in our opinion
should be the main focus of enhanced due diligence by financial
institutions,” it added.
Residency programmes also operate outside the EU, in countries
such as the US, Canada and parts of the Caribbean. In Canada’s
case, it has from time to time put its programmes on hold because
of political controversy. In 2014, Canada suspended its system,
amid protests that a heavy influx of mainland Chinese persons
hadn’t contributed much to the Canadian economy. In some cities,
such as Vancouver, high residential prices have been blamed,
unfairly or otherwise, on such an influx. Canada still operates
the the Quebec Immigrant Investor Program.
The US has its EB-5 investor visa programme and this also has
attracted demand from China, not always without controversy.
Singapore, to take another case, has a Global Investor Program.