Residence-by-investment schemes, which enable wealthy people to acquire a visa in return for a financial investment, have become increasingly common. In this article, an original immigration policy index and case studies are used to examine the political economy of residence-by-investment policies in three European countries: France, Spain, and the UK. Two contributions are made to the literature. First, the article compares investment with work visas and shows that across all three countries investor routes are significantly more open and generous than work routes, including for the highly skilled. Second, drawing on theories of comparative political economy, it is explored how investor visas are shaped by capitalist diversity. Based on th...
Why do wealthy people purchase citizenship in peripheral countries? This article investigates the de...
Abstract This article addresses the claim, particularly popular in the 2000s and implicitly resting...
Chapter 1 shows how an elite can turn an institution from being inclusive to extractive, in the cont...
The European Union has seen a proliferation of ‘golden visa’ programs that allow investors to gain r...
Residence by investment (RBI) programmes, or ‘golden visa’ schemes, are now found in half of Europea...
A growing number of developed countries are offering entrepreneurial visas as a means of attracting ...
Golden visa programmes are likely to become more attractive for countries searching for a shot of fo...
Freeman (2006) suggested that auctioning immigration visas and redistributing the revenue to native ...
We study whether individual decisions to invest in the host country, namely obtaining equivalent qua...
Investor residence and citizenship programmes, which grant status to wealthy individuals in return f...
Published online: 22 Jan 2018Immigrant investor programmes (IIPs) have mushroomed around the world i...
In 2008, the UK introduced its (current) golden visa programme, officially known as the ‘Tier 1 (Inv...
The study seeks to analyse the interaction of foreign direct investment, emigration, and immigratio...
Are immigration policies in European countries converging? Or do some countries remain more open to ...
Immigrant investor programmes (IIPs) – aimed at attracting investment in return for residency or cit...
Why do wealthy people purchase citizenship in peripheral countries? This article investigates the de...
Abstract This article addresses the claim, particularly popular in the 2000s and implicitly resting...
Chapter 1 shows how an elite can turn an institution from being inclusive to extractive, in the cont...
The European Union has seen a proliferation of ‘golden visa’ programs that allow investors to gain r...
Residence by investment (RBI) programmes, or ‘golden visa’ schemes, are now found in half of Europea...
A growing number of developed countries are offering entrepreneurial visas as a means of attracting ...
Golden visa programmes are likely to become more attractive for countries searching for a shot of fo...
Freeman (2006) suggested that auctioning immigration visas and redistributing the revenue to native ...
We study whether individual decisions to invest in the host country, namely obtaining equivalent qua...
Investor residence and citizenship programmes, which grant status to wealthy individuals in return f...
Published online: 22 Jan 2018Immigrant investor programmes (IIPs) have mushroomed around the world i...
In 2008, the UK introduced its (current) golden visa programme, officially known as the ‘Tier 1 (Inv...
The study seeks to analyse the interaction of foreign direct investment, emigration, and immigratio...
Are immigration policies in European countries converging? Or do some countries remain more open to ...
Immigrant investor programmes (IIPs) – aimed at attracting investment in return for residency or cit...
Why do wealthy people purchase citizenship in peripheral countries? This article investigates the de...
Abstract This article addresses the claim, particularly popular in the 2000s and implicitly resting...
Chapter 1 shows how an elite can turn an institution from being inclusive to extractive, in the cont...