Premium Passports, including Singapore’s, Lose their Shine in a Post-Pandemic World, says Henley & Partners
As parts of the globe cautiously begin to open up, the focus is on what travel freedom and global mobility will look like in a post–Covid-19 world, notes Henley & Partners, the global leader in residence and citizenship planning.
Every two weeks, the EU releases a list of countries whose residents would be allowed entry into the bloc based on coronavirus-related health and safety criteria.
Included on the latest welcome list are countries such as Australia, Canada, Japan, and South Korea that traditionally score highly on the Henley Passport Index (HPI) – the original ranking of all the world’s passports according to the number of destinations their holders can access without a prior visa. However, in a move perceived as a stinging rebuke for its poor handling of the pandemic, the US was notably excluded from the list, as were Brazil, Russia and even Singapore.
Although not reflected in the latest ranking, which does not take temporary travel bans into account, it is eye-opening to consider what travel freedom currently looks like for the holders of these once-prestigious passports.
For instance, before Covid-19, a Singaporean passport would usually rank between first and second place on the HPI, with its holders being able to access 190 destinations around the world without requiring a visa in advance. However, under the current EU ban, Singaporeans can travel to 27 fewer countries visa-free. They now have roughly the same travel freedom as citizens of Barbados or Israel.
As for the US, its passport is usually ranked within the top 10 on the HPI in 6th or 7th place. With the US now being kept off the EU list of ‘safe countries’, US nationals now have roughly the same level of travel freedom as citizens of Mexico (25th on the index, with a score of 159), current travel bans notwithstanding, albeit temporarily.
This is one of many extraordinary shifts in passport power caused by the temporary pandemic-related bans. Brazilian passport holders, for example, find their passport strength greatly diminished. The country usually ranks highly on the index ¾ most recently placed 19th, with a visa-free/visa-on-arrival score of 170 ¾ but the loss of access to the EU means Brazilians currently have roughly the same extent of travel freedom as citizens of Paraguay (36th on the index, with a score of 142).
Without taking the various travel bans and restrictions into account, Japan continues to hold the number one spot on the Henley Passport Index with a score of 191. Singapore remains in 2nd place with a score of 190, while Germany and South Korea are in joint-3rd place, each with a score of 189. Both Japan and South Korea have been included on the EU’s list of admissible countries, while Singapore has been excluded, which means Singaporean passport holders currently have far less travel freedom than their closest competitors on the index, which is based on exclusive data from the International Air Transport Association (IATA).
Dominic Volek, Head of Southeast Asia and Group Head of Sales for investment migration firm Henley & Partners, says the EU’s recent decision will have far reaching effects. “These last few months have shown us that the current pandemic has adversely impacted something which a lot of people normally take for granted, our travel freedom. The US passport is a perfect example of what this means. In 2014, it held the number one spot on our global passport ranking, but now with US nationals being effectively locked out of Europe, they currently have far less travel freedom than even some lesser developed nations.
“The latest decision by the EU is just the start of more upheaval to come. There is now an emergence of a new global hierarchy in terms of mobility; countries that have effectively managed the pandemic are taking the lead, while countries that have handled it poorly, are falling behind,” said Volek.
Immigration controls in US and UK tighten amid calls for co-operation
While the US looks set to be significantly affected by the EU’s latest decision, it has issued stringent immigration controls of its own over the past few months. Greg Lindsay, Director of Applied Research at NewCities, says that the Trump administration’s temporary suspension of all work visas will have far-reaching effects. “The executive order, signed on the 22nd June, will bar as many as 525,000 foreign workers from entering the country for the rest of the year.” As Lindsay points out, this decision is only the latest salvo in White House aide Stephen Miller’s years-long campaign to curtail worker visas, arguing that they harm employment prospects for Americans.
In the UK, the pandemic’s effect on mobility has also been severe. Robert McNeil, Deputy Director of the Migration Observatory at the University of Oxford, says that the almost complete cessation of international arrivals into the country has generated serious challenges for industries that have become dependent on seasonal migrant workers from the EU. McNeil says that despite public attitudes around immigration softening, the Brexit process has not slowed down. “In May, the government pushed through the new Immigration Bill, paving the way for a new ‘points-based’ immigration system. The new restrictions would prevent many people from becoming key workers in the UK in future. Around half of the EU citizens currently in key worker positions in the UK would not meet the new salary and skills thresholds required to move to the country from 2021.”
Changing priorities in a transformed world
As premium passports lose their shine in a post-Covid world, experts suggest that the crisis is likely to make international mobility more restricted and unpredictable in the longer term. “Even as countries open their borders, it is expected that numerous governments will use epidemiological concerns as a justification for imposing new immigration restrictions and nationality-targeted travel bans that will mainly be aimed at citizens of developing countries,” says Prof. Dr. Yossi Harpaz, Assistant Professor of Sociology at Tel Aviv University. Noting the recent decision by the EU with respect to the US and other countries, Harpaz says, “The passports of both developing and developed nations stand to decrease in value, at least temporarily. In such uncertain times, global demand for dual citizenship and investor visas is expected to increase.”
Discussing the impact of the pandemic on global migration trends, Charles Phillips, researcher and consultant for Oxford Business Group, suggests that environmental health concerns could become a priority for those seeking alternative residence or citizenship. “We can expect places that are governed well and better equipped to deal with pandemics to become destinations people will seek to move to. Just as travel choices will likely be more strongly influenced by health considerations, we may see those acquiring alternative residence or citizenship placing a greater emphasis on a country’s health policies when deciding where to reside.”
Volek added that the growing demand for additional residence and citizenship options comes as no surprise. “Everything that we thought we knew and were accustomed to has been turned upside down on its head. Holding a second citizenship or alternative residence is now more an asset than ever before, as concerns over access to first-rate healthcare, global mobility, and quality of life take on a new urgency.
“In turn, investment migration programs have provided an invaluable stimulus for economic recovery to the countries have been bit hard by the pandemic. As we enter the worst recession since the Great Depression, a small country like Montenegro, for instance, is better equipped to weather the storm. The recently launched Montenegro Citizenship-by-Investment Program provides permanent access and the right to stay in this beautiful and safe European country. It also provides the country with an immediate liquidity injection of much needed debt-free foreign capital that can be used to buffer the impact of the pandemic and create significant societal value.”
Source: hubbis.com
Published: 28 July 2020