Compliance
UK Mulls Ending Tier 1 Investor Scheme Amid Russia Tensions – Media

In the past, claims that the Tier 1 investor regime – aka "golden visa" – was being abused by Russians and others have been largely dismissed. A cluster of UK private client law firms and wealth managers earn fees from serving this market, so a ban or partial suspension would be unwelcome.
The UK’s Tier 1 investor regime, a channel of business used by
wealth managers to onboard high net worth clients, could be shut
down as soon as this week as the government seeks to turn the
screws on Russia, media reports have said.
Sky News reported – citing government sources – that the
visa scheme is to be shut down by Priti Patel, the Home
Secretary. Other media networks carried similar reports.
Those who invest at least £2 million ($2.72 million) in the UK
are offered residency through the scheme. The programme, which
has run for more than 25 years, has been adjusted, sometimes in
response to criticisms that it allows the rich to fast-track
entry into the UK unfairly, or that it enables money laundering.
Such “golden visa” regimes operate in a variety of countries,
such as Spain, Portugal, Malta and islands of the
Caribbean.
The reports that the UK programme will possibly
be scrubbed come at a time when the UK government says
that it is putting pressure on Russian president Vladimir Putin
as Russian military forces assemble on the borders of Ukraine. In
recent years HNW Russians have been among the principal
applicants for Tier 1 visas. Chinese citizens have also been
prominent applicants.
Sky News quoted a government source as saying: "There
are security concerns about this route and we have been
considering closing it for some time. The Home Secretary is
very conscious of the effects of money-laundering and dirty money
in the UK and that's why she's pushing to close it. Legitimate
applicants will be able to apply to come to the UK through other
routes."
Kingsley
Napley immigration partner Katie Newbury, said of the news
stories: "We are clearly monitoring the situation in light of
today's reports. Whilst the timing suggests any reforms might be
politically motivated and designed to impact Russian investors
using the scheme, in fact Tier 1 visas are used by many
nationalities. We assist many US and EU-origin investors for
example. The concern is that unless there is a ready functioning
alternative for these entrepreneurs with money to invest, the UK
will lose out in the long run. So we await Home Office guidance
with interest."
Boodle
Hatfield, the London-based law firm, said the investor
programme has brought in more than £17 billion to the UK over the
past 10 years.
“We ought to be trying to attract more such foreign investors not
driving them away,” Kyra Motley, Partner of Boodle Hatfield, said
in a note.
“It seems odd for the Home Office to shut the scheme, even
temporarily, before any consultation and without publishing any
statistics or other evidence of the misuse of scheme. Suggesting
that the investor visa scheme is synonymous with corruption,
money laundering and fraud is not at all accurate. Nor does it
seem accurate to suggest that the Investor Visa scheme undermines
national security,” Motley said.
Claims that Russian oligarchs and those with illicit funds to
spend have misued the visa programme have been dismissed. See a
guest article here about the subject.
(Editor's note: The market for such visa programmes waxes and
wanes, but remains substantial. A number of jurisdictions, such
as Canada, have mothballed their schemes in response to
political pressures. In the European Union, member states such as
Malta – it operates a golden visa programme – have come under
fire for allowing a programme that is not allegedly tough enough
on rogue players. Defenders say that they give small countries a
useful revenue source, and provide a measure of protection
for the kind of wealthy people who are targeted in their
home countries. Some advisors on these schemes, such as Henley &
Partners, have become significant wealth industry organisations
as a result. One question in this fast-moving situation, which
is unclear, is whether the UK will freeze the system
for Russians, or for all applicants. We intend to update this
story as more information comes in.)