By Colin Packham
SYDNEY (Reuters) – Soaring demand for Vanuatu’s controversial passport scheme has kept the South Pacific island nation’s budget in surplus despite the COVID-19 pandemic and a damaging cyclone crippling its dominant tourism sector, budget papers show.
Vanuatu late on Thursday reported a budget surplus for the first six months of 2020 of 3.8 billion vatu ($34.16 million), led by 32% rise in sales of citizenship, worth 7.1 billion vatu.
The jump in passport sales has helped Vanuatu avoid the mounting debts some Pacific island states have racked up with China and other lenders, but experts warn the practice risks harming Vanuatu’s beneficial relationship with countries such Australia.
“Some of the people buying these passports have been on Interpol red notices and the more that happens, the more it undermines the value of the passport,” said Jonathan Pryke, Director, Pacific Islands Program at the Lowy Institute.
Vanuatu charges $130,000 for local citizenship, giving access to a passport that is highly valued as holders can travel visa-free to over 100 countries and territories including the European Union, Britain, Russia and Hong Kong – countries that can be difficult to visit for some nationalities.
There are no residency requirements on people who acquire Vanuatu citizenship.
The Vanuatu government did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
The scheme is controversial, however, with four Chinese people stripped of their citizenship last year after records showed they were on Interpol’s wanted list.
But Vanuatu, which has no personal or corporate income tax, says the scheme has allowed it to issue a 4.2 billion vatu stimulus package – one of the most generous in the Pacific – amid estimates that tens of thousands of locals have lost their jobs after the closure of the country’s border.
(Reporting by Colin Packham; Editing by Lincoln Feast.)