Report: IM Yearbook 2019/2020

Media: Investment Migration Yearbook 2019/2020

Sector: Investment Migration

Publication Date: June 2019

Citizenship by Investment: The Real Drivers Behind Applications

Civil unrest, visa-free travel and statelessness are just a few of the reasons behind the recent uptake in applications for citizenship and residency by investment (CRBI). S-RM analyst Sonia Spencer explains the current environment around these sought-after programmes.

Sonia Spencer, S-RM analyst

In recent months, the CRBI industry has been the backdrop for controversy. Bulgaria revoked the citizenship of Russian telecoms millionaire Sergei Adoniev who had been convicted of fraud in the United States in the 1990s. In March, the European Parliament voted to phase out CRBI programmes.

As a due diligence provider for several CRBI programmes globally, S-RM knows first-hand that the recent CRBI headlines paint a skewed picture. This is particularly true for applicants from the Middle East, whose profiles, in fact, closely mirror the wider global political, security and economic trends in the region. The volume of CRBI applications jumped significantly after the 2011 Arab Spring, as citizens tried to escape worsening security across the region. From major Iraqi cities, applications now regularly come from engineers and surgeons who are unable to gain secure employment at home, after years of conflict and instability. Similarly, middle-class Syrians are drawn to CRBI options due to the country’s civil war.

While citizens of areas of major civil unrest, not surprisingly, tend to be subject to restricted international movement, business travellers and expats from these regions choose to apply for CRBI programmes in order to gain better employment and education opportunities. A Syrian surgeon living and working in Qatar is ineligible for Qatari citizenship, which is strictly patrilineal, transferred by blood through the male line. However, travelling for business is difficult on a Syrian passport, which grants visa free travel to only 32 destinations; and obtaining a visa can be difficult with many countries cautious that Syrians will then claim refugee status. The surgeon also cannot return to Syria to renew his passport due to safety concerns. The stark differences in opportunity afforded by different passports is illustrated by the Henley Passport Index, a ranking for free movement. In this ranking, Iraq, Syria and Lebanon are placed in 104th, 103rd and 97th place, respectively. This means that Lebanese citizens, for example, can access only 44 out of 195 countries without a pre-arranged visa. Of these, 14 are small island nations — including Niue, the Pitcairn Islands and Tuvalu — not known for their education or business opportunities. A European or Commonwealth affiliated CRBI programme is therefore highly appealing.

Statelessness is another reason for CRBI applications. When the UAE was founded in 1971, those who couldn’t prove their presence at unification, or lacked the necessary tribal affiliations were not allowed to claim UAE citizenship. NGOs have estimated the number of stateless individuals in the UAE to be between 10,000 and 100,000 people — numbers which persist due to patrilineal citizenship laws, assigning statelessness to the children of stateless parents. With the necessary financial backing, many are understandably drawn to apply for CRBI programmes to escape statelessness for themselves and their children.

Particularly for Middle East applicants, the coverage of CRBI programmes by newspapers and politicians requires more nuance. Criminals do apply, as do controversial oligarchs. Stringent due diligence investigations are essential to keep out the minority of criminals and other fraudulent applicants. But the very large majority of applicants reviewed by S-RM are professionals and business owners from countries such as Iraq, Syria, Yemen and Lebanon. Most apply not as a cover for illegal activity but because they want better employment and education opportunities. This is a far less headline-grabbing narrative. It is also much more reflective of the motivations of applicants from some of the world’s least secure and most unstable countries.

BIO: Sonia Spencer is an Analyst at S-RM, a global risk consultancy that helps clients manage regulatory, reputational and operational risks. S-RM provides background check due diligence and training support to citizenship-by-investment and investor-visa programmes run by government agencies worldwide.

Related Content

Why Strategy is Everything

EB-5 has for many years been a runaway success. But with ever-increasing waiting times and long delays for some nationalities, defining the right strategy has become the most important exercise of the immigration process, says Edward Beshara, US Attorney at Law.

Regulated Consultants Keep Fraud at Bay

While Canada has long been self-regulating immigration consultants, the country is now on its way to giving the industry watchdog more power to investigate offenders and enforce regulation. Gerd Damitz, Past President of the Canadian Association of Professional Immigration Consultants (CAPIC), talks about Canada’s experience in self-regulation and explains why he believes that Canada can be a role model for others. 

A New World of Possibilities

Growth and expansion continue to be the hallmarks of the investment migration industry, triggering a drive towards higher standards and a concerted effort to future-proof the industry.

Load More Posts

Report Sponsors

DHL logo
Individual Investor Programme logo, IIP
exiger logo
BDO logo
refinitiv logo
Malta Residency Visa Agency
Investment Migration Insider logo
Beyond Residence & citizenship logo
CIU Logo
CIU logo
civiquo logo
Deloitte logo
Energopiisi investment consultants Logo
ANZ Migrate logo
Fidesco logo
INVESTMENT MIGRATION COUNCIL logo
Fragomen logo
Ganado Advocates Logo
Globe Detective Agency Logo
GICG Logo
Henley & Partners logo
HazelAlleyne logo, Investment Migration
La Vida logo
Integratas logo
Klasko Immigration Law Partners Logo
L PAPAPHILIPPOU LOGO ADVOCATES AND LEGAL CONSULTANTS CMYK logo
Passpro logo
CIP Saint Lucia logo
SRM logo
Commonwealth of Dominica Citizenship by Investment
Rostova & Westerman Immigration Law Logo
Rosemont International logo
RSM logo
vsg logo
VIMB Logo
2019-07-25T15:31:20+01:00

By continuing to use the site, you agree to the use of cookies. more information

The cookie settings on this website are set to "allow cookies" to give you the best browsing experience possible. If you continue to use this website without changing your cookie settings or you click "Accept" below then you are consenting to this.

Close