The EB-5 visa programme offers foreign residents the chance to become permanent US residents provided they invest a minimum $500,000 in a government approved EB-5 business or create 10 full-time jobs in the country.
While Chinese citizens had remained the top applicants for long, applications from India had picked up dramatically since last year and were set to grow exponentially, said Jeff DeCicco, CEO of CanAm Investor Services, an immigration consultancy and investment facilitation firm.
“India has become a major player since 2015 even as the number of applications from China remained stagnant. We had received less than 30 applications from India in the 2007-14 period, while we are receiving around 200 applications annually now,” DeCicco added.
A total of 10,000 visas are up for grabs every year with no country allowed more than seven per cent of all visas, or 700 slots, in the first instance.
However, if applicants from a country cross that limit, they are put on a waitlist, which is the case for most Chinese citizens with whom the programme has been a hit since the beginning.
If there are remaining slots after applications close, waitlisted candidates are chosen. As a result, more than 85 per cent of visas went to Chinese nationals till 2014.
US government figures suggest Indian investors have pumped in more than $120 million through the programme, registering a growth rate of 140 per cent since 2014. They rank just behind China and Vietnam.
While the scheme had been running since 1990, later amendments started the regional centre programme that Indians favour. It facilitates investments in targeted employment areas, mostly in rural areas, where unemployment rates are 1.5 per cent higher than the national average.
- Rich Indians are opting for the EB-5 programme to cut through the line for permanent residency
- Indian investors have pumped in more than $120 million through the programme, registering a growth rate of 140 per cent since 2014, ranking only behind China and Vietnam
- The US President Donald Trump-led administration has suggested the programme may be widened
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