3:07 pm | Tuesday, October 14th, 2014
SYDNEY — Australia said Tuesday it would introduce a “premium investor visa” to give immigrants permanent residency after a year if they invest Aus$15 million (US$13 million) in the country.
The visa, available from next July, builds on the Significant Investor program under which people who sink Aus$5 million into Australia are granted a minimum four-year visa.
“The government will reform the program to encourage more high net-worth individuals to make Australia home,” Prime Minister Tony Abbott said in a joint statement with the immigration and trade ministers.
They said the changes would “leverage and better direct additional foreign investment, while maintaining safeguards to ensure the migration program is not misused.”
The reforms include a reassessment of where the investments were made so they matched the government’s “national investment priorities.”
Some 436 Significant Investor visas were granted between November 24, 2012 — when the program was launched — to the end of last month, according to immigration department figures.
A total of Aus$2.18 billion was invested in Australia through the program, with 88 percent of visa holders hailing from China.
The government also announced a review of its 457-class skilled visa program, which was tightened under the previous Labor government amid claims of abuse by employers and disadvantage to local workers.
There will be “greater flexibility” in English-language testing and skill requirements, and a streamlining of the sponsorship and visa application process.
Abbott did not specify which industries would benefit from the 457 visa changes, but stressed they “are not a way of substituting overseas labor for domestic labor.”
RELATED STORIES
Australia offers temporary refuge to Ukrainians
Australia gives visas to 500 Afghans who helped in war
Follow Us
Other Stories:
Recent Stories:
Short URL: http://globalnation.inquirer.net/?p=112493
Factual errors? Contact the Philippine Daily Inquirer’s day desk. Believe this article violates journalistic ethics? Contact the Inquirer’s Reader’s Advocate. Or write The Readers’ Advocate: