fbpx
Log in

Login to your account

Username *
Password *
Remember Me

Create an account

Fields marked with an asterisk (*) are required.
Name *
Username *
Password *
Verify password *
Email *
Verify email *
Captcha *

EU States in race to the bottom to sell Golden Visas to the super-rich

eurozoneThe doors of Europe are open to criminals and the corrupt, thanks to lax, opaque, and mismanaged ‘Golden Visa’ schemes, according to a report released today by Transparency International and Global Witness.

The two anti-corruption organisations say the financial benefit of 'citizenship-and residency-by-investment' schemes is undercut by risks arising from insufficient due diligence, conflicts of interest, and wide discretionary powers.

“If you have a lot of money that you acquired through dubious means, securing a new place to call home far away from the place you stole from isn’t just appealing, it’s sensible. Golden Visa schemes offer a safe haven from authorities who might be looking to seize your stolen assets, and the freedom to travel without raising suspicion,” said Naomi Hirst, a Senior Campaigner at Global Witness.

“Given these inherent risks, these schemes must have the highest standards of due diligence checks, so that countries know who they are welcoming in and where their money came from. Unfortunately, that is not what we are seeing. This approach exposes countries to corrupt individuals, and risks the corruption of the state itself as profit-hungry governments disregard the dangers and enter into a race to the bottom.”

The report comes just weeks after police in Finland raided a real-estate agency at the centre of a suspected €10 million money-laundering operation, controlled by a Russian businessperson who reportedly purchased Maltese citizenship.

Laure Brillaud, Anti-Money Laundering Policy Officer at Transparency International EU and a co-author of the report said: “Poorly managed schemes allow corrupt individuals to work and travel unhindered throughout the EU and undermine our collective security. It is for this reason that EU-wide action is urgently required. Brussels needs to define standards for these programmes and ensure that they are adhered to in all Member States offering citizenship and residence permits for investment.”

Although Golden Visa schemes continue to be shrouded in secrecy, available data shows that at least six thousand passports and nearly 100,000 residency permits have been sold in the EU in the last decade. Spain, Hungary, Latvia, Portugal and the United Kingdom have granted the highest numbers of these – over 10,000 each.

Golden Visa schemes in all member states have generated around €25 billion in foreign direct investment in the past decade. Cyprus has raised €4.8 billion since 2013, while Malta has brought in about €718 million since opening a scheme in 2014. Cyprus, Portugal, Spain and the UK appear to earn between half a billion and close to a billion Euros per year.

Despite the large amounts of money involved, Cyprus and Portugal do not seem to question applicants’ source of wealth. In Malta, applicants who have criminal records or are under investigation can still be considered eligible in “special circumstances”. In Portugal, 95 per cent of total investment has been in property, which has contributed to increased pressure on the housing market and does little for employment creation. In Hungary, Latvia and the UK, the success rates of applicants have been as high as 90 per cent, raising doubts about how selective the checks on applicants are in some Member States.

Since residency and citizenship awarded by one member state affects the entire EU, Transparency International and Global Witness call upon the EU institutions to:

  • Set EU-wide standards for golden visa schemes, including enhanced due diligence and transparency;
  • Identify and regularly assess the risks posed by schemes for the EU as a whole and mitigate accordingly;
  • Seek to broaden anti-money laundering rules so they apply to all players in the golden visa industry;
  • Establish mechanisms for collecting and coordinating information on applications, investment and rejections;
  • Start legal proceedings against member states whose schemes could undermine the collective security of EU nations.

Download the full report: European Getaway: Inside the Murky World of Golden Visas

__________

Transparency International’s work on Golden Visas is supported by the Global Anti-Corruption Consortium, a groundbreaking partnership to accelerate the global fight against corruption by bringing together advocacy and investigative journalism, spearheaded by The Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP). Global Witness is working in cooperation with the Consortium on this issue.

Pin It

Comments  

0 #7 Ed 2018-10-17 10:05
Quoting Denby:
Wealthy people will always able to afford crafty accountants and lawyers to find the loopholes.

But not all of them do...
+2 #6 AL 2018-10-11 09:43
Global Anti Corruption Consortium sounds like a cover to protect the biggest thieves on the planet, the ones that ̶u̶s̶e̶ buy the law to protect themselves. Obviously once in a while there will have to be a sacrificial lamb to warrant it's existence.
+4 #5 nogin the nog 2018-10-11 00:03
Quoting H.Stone:
Interesting that Roman Abramovich the Chelsea FC owner is arranging an Israeli passport now that the UK has cold shouldered him following the Salisbury attempted assassination. What other EU country would have turned away a billionaire that wealthy?

hmm.
Corrupt individuals are small fry. Corrupt and untouchable institutions are what govern our lives..
+1 #4 H.Stone 2018-10-10 19:48
Interesting that Roman Abramovich the Chelsea FC owner is arranging an Israeli passport now that the UK has cold shouldered him following the Salisbury attempted assassination. What other EU country would have turned away a billionaire that wealthy?
+2 #3 nogin the nog 2018-10-10 18:29
hmm.
Global Anti Corruption Consortium, Should of been around in 2006 when the biggest Banking mafia in the world brought it to its knees and left us with a decade of debt. Bettor late than never , the money has to be somewhere.. :-*
+2 #2 Denby 2018-10-10 15:31
Wealthy people will always able to afford crafty accountants and lawyers to find the loopholes.
-1 #1 Chip 2018-10-10 12:33
Freedom of Movement. One of the EU's red lines.

You must be a registered user to make comments.
Please register here to post your comments.