Close X
Thursday, December 19, 2024
ADVT 
International

Investment Limits For US 'Golden Visa' Likely To Be Hiked

IANS, 31 Jan, 2018 11:40 AM
    Though the US Congress has extended the deadline for the EB5 visa, popularly known as the "Golden Visa", that allows foreign nationals to apply for a green card by investing in the US, experts are of the view that the investment limits under this scheme are likely to be increased in February.
     
     
    The US Congress last week extended the deadline for the EB5 visa to February 8 after the latest deadline expired on January 19.
     
     
    Introduced in 1990, the EB5 visa programme allows an individual to invest $500,000 in either of two Targeted Employment Areas (TEAs) -- a high unemployment area in a US metropolis or a rural area outside of a metro -- or $1 million in a non-TEA area that can create 10 or more jobs, and get US citizenship in a shorter time than H1-B visa holders.
     
     
    With US President Donald Trump calling for stricter norms for issuance of H1-B visas, largely availed by Indian IT firms, the EB5 visa has been in demand for the shorter route to citizenship it offers.
     
     
    A private member's bill was also introduced last year in the US Congress by Democrat Zoe Lofgren which seeks to increase the minimum salary of an H1-B visa holder to a whopping $130,000 from the current minimum of $60,000.
     
     
    At the same time, the EB5 visa programme has also come under controversy with critics saying that it puts up US citizenship for sale. Authorisation for the EB5 programme has been carried on a temporary basis on Congressional spending bills since September 2015.
     
     
    Now, experts say that after the latest deadline expires, investment limits of both the $500,000 and $1 million variants are likely to be increased.
     
     
    According to Pankaj Joshi, Managing Director of Nysa Capital that deals with EB5 applicants, there are reportedly three proposals doing the rounds.
     
     
    One proposal calls for hiking the $500,000 limit to $800,000 and $1 million limit to $1.2 million. A second proposal calls for hiking the limits to $925,000 and $1.025 million, while the third seeks to increase these to $1.3 million and $1.8 million, respectively.
     
     
    So, if a hike is effected, will there be a dip in the number of Indian applicants for the EB5 visa?
     
     
    "Yes, there will be a short-term dip in the applications, but depending on what level is (of the investment limit)," Joshi told IANS.
     
     
    "If it goes from $500,000 to $800,000, there will be a smaller dip. Even $925,000 will see a smaller dip but if it goes to $1.3 million, there will be a large dip," he said.
     
     
    India ranks third after China and Vietnam in terms of the number of applicants for the EB5 visas. A total of 10,000 such visas are issued every year with the limit capped at 700 for one country.
     
     
    According to Mark Davies, Global Chairman of Davies and Associates which also deals with EB5 applicants, the number of Indian clients his firm handled increased from 99 in 2014 to 238 in 2015 and over 330 in 2016. "I expect this to be 500-plus in 2017," he said.
     
     
    Davies explained that there are two ways in which an investor can apply for an EB5 visa -- either through regional centres, which hold licences and are authorised to implement projects under the EB5 visa scheme -- or outside of the regional centres.
     
     
    The advantage of working with regional centres is that the jobs created under the project concerned can be counted, he said.
     
     
    But on the flip side, there can be responsible or irresponsible regional centres "just as a person holding a driving licence can drive responsibly or irresponsibly", Davies said and pointed out that the current deadline only applies for those seeking an EB5 visa through regional centres while "the direct route is open forever".
     
     
    Both Joshi and Davies are of the opinion that Indian applicants should do more due diligence of the investments they make in the projects in the US. Joshi pointed out that the approval rate for Indian applicants was around 65 per cent as against the global approval rate of 82 per cent.
     
     
    "My advice is that the applicants must have white money, the source of their funds," Davies said. "They need to have good real estate finance lawyers."
     
     
    Both the experts also warned that Indian applicants are likely to enter the retrogression phase by 2019-20. In other words, the waiting period for the green card getting longer once the cap of 700 applicants for one country is hit.
     
     
    Joshi's advice is that applicants should take advantage of the expedited process approval whenever such an opportunity arises.
     
     
    Requests to expedite applications are approved only in the case of national interest, humanitarian need, or emergency situations.
     
     
    Joshi's Nysa Capital holds the exclusive marketing rights in India for the Tryon International Equestrian Center, where this year's FEI World Equestrian Games will be held.
     
     
    The project has been given the status of that of national interest and expedite process approval under the EB5 visa scheme has been granted to it. It is a new economic cluster centred around the development of a world class equestrian lifestyle centre in North Carolina.
     
     
    "One of the greatest advantages of investing in an expedited process approved project like Tryon is to get the Golden Visa in less than six months whereas the average process time is around 20-24 months," Joshi said.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Indians Get More British Work Visas Than Others

    Indians Get More British Work Visas Than Others
    Stating that there has been a sharp increase in the number of British visas issued to Indians, the British High Commission said on Tuesday that Indians get more work visas than all other nationalities combined.

    Indians Get More British Work Visas Than Others

    Bangladesh Police Detain Wife, In-Laws Of New York 'Attempted Suicide Bomber'

    Bangladesh Police Detain Wife, In-Laws Of New York 'Attempted Suicide Bomber'
    Bangladesh Police detained the wife and in-laws of New York's 'attempted suicide bomber' Akayed Ullah for questioning in Dhaka, the media reported.

    Bangladesh Police Detain Wife, In-Laws Of New York 'Attempted Suicide Bomber'

    India's Lakshmi Puri Among 6 Diplomats To Receive 'Power Of One' Award At UN

    India's Lakshmi Puri Among 6 Diplomats To Receive 'Power Of One' Award At UN
    The inaugural 'Power of One' award is bestowed upon exceptional people who have toiled selflessly to help form a more perfect peaceful and secure world for all of us.

    India's Lakshmi Puri Among 6 Diplomats To Receive 'Power Of One' Award At UN

    Teen Footballer Nitisha Negi's Father Seeks Sushma Swaraj's Help To Bring Back Body From Australia

    Teen Footballer Nitisha Negi's Father Seeks Sushma Swaraj's Help To Bring Back Body From Australia
    Nitisha Negi was one of the five Indian footballers who were swept away by a huge wave on Sunday when they ventured into the sea waters after the completion of the games.

    Teen Footballer Nitisha Negi's Father Seeks Sushma Swaraj's Help To Bring Back Body From Australia

    ISIS-Inspired Bangladeshi Bomber Arrested After Blast In New York Subway

    ISIS-Inspired Bangladeshi Bomber Arrested After Blast In New York Subway
    Akayed Ullah, the 27-year-old suspected bomber, had wires and a pipe bomb strapped to his body. The device prematurely exploded between two subway platforms near Port Authority, which is America's largest bus terminal, police said

    ISIS-Inspired Bangladeshi Bomber Arrested After Blast In New York Subway

    Kansas Hero Ian, Who Took Bullet For An Indian, Honoured By Time

    Kansas Hero Ian, Who Took Bullet For An Indian, Honoured By Time
    Time magazine has honoured Ian Grillot, the US national who took a bullet for an Indian while trying to intervene during a racially-motivated shooting in Kansas early this year.

    Kansas Hero Ian, Who Took Bullet For An Indian, Honoured By Time