Citizen-By-Investment numbers up in Caribbean

BRIDGETOWN, Barbados–The number of high net worth individuals in the Caribbean is reported to be increasing, based partly on the availability of programmes that incentivise real estate investment, offering residency permits and citizenship in the Caribbean.

That’s according to the Royal Bank of Canada (RBC) Caribbean newsletter, written and edited by RBC Group Economist Marla Dukharan.
Citing an International Monetary Fund (IMF) working paper, she notes that St. Kitts and Nevis launched the first Citizenship-by-Investment (CBI) programme nearly 30 years ago, and offered immediate citizenship to immigrant investors. She says the programme has transformed the island’s economy in recent years, and as a result, Antigua and Barbuda, Dominica and Grenada have since launched their own CBI programmes.
If you would like to learn more about Dominica CBI that will give you a second passport, go to https://www.dominicacitizenship.com.
The schemes, with some variations, revolve around the granting of citizenship and a passport for an investment of around US $400,000 in property, government bonds, or by way of a donation, plus fees, says Dukharan. It is estimated that Antigua and Barbuda as well as St. Kitts and Nevis passports provide visa-free travel to 132 countries and territories including all 26 European countries in the Schengen zone. Meanwhile, Dominica and Grenada passports provide visa-free travel to 111 countries and territories including those in the Schengen zone.
But who wants to buy Caribbean citizenship, asks Dukharan. Well, she notes, according to Fortune Magazine, applicants include wealthy Chinese entrepreneurs seeking to flee from concerns about their Government’s anti-corruption drive, or seeking to provide an international education for their children. In addition, wealthy Russians also commonly cite the desire to avoid the growing suppression of dissent, the expropriation of businesses, and high organised crime in their country.
Also, a growing number of Arab citizens, unsettled by instability and US embargos or sanctions, and a significant number of US entrepreneurs seeking to escape the US’ ever widening tax net, have also been applying.
The economist points out that if the UK pursues an exit from the European Union (EU) in keeping with the Brexit referendum results, there may be what she terms “implications” for travel and visa requirements for Citizenship-by-Investment passport holders, to the Schengen zone in particular.
In general, she notes, opponents of Caribbean passport programmes believe that nationality is not something that can be sold; and the granting of rights and freedoms to persons without any historic or cultural affinity with the country is deemed by some to be unacceptable.
And while the US, Canada and the UK all have economic citizenship programmes, which can be a fast track to citizenship, it isn’t guaranteed and in all cases requires residency, unlike Dominica and St. Kitts and Nevis.
Dukharan notes that the US and Canada have long questioned the adequacy of CBI passports being handed out in the Eastern Caribbean Currency Union area, on the grounds of whether due diligence and background checks of applicants had been carried out. Canada even went so far as to impose visa restrictions on St. Kitts and Nevis passport holders in November 2014. Since then, the St. Kitts and Nevis CBI programme has been reformed, which the IMF recently commended.
(Broad Street Journal) ~

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