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Australia
This Week in AsiaPolitics

Australia stops ‘golden visa’ scheme, aims to draw ‘exceptionally talented migrants’

  • A total of 110,000 migration places will be cut under new measures announced in Australia’s budget
  • The number of places for international students will be capped while universities seeking higher enrolments have to meet new accommodation rules

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The Sydney Opera House and central business district at night. Photo: Shutterstock
Su-Lin Tanin Singapore
Australia has ceased its business visa programme, including the so-called “golden visa”, as part of ongoing migration policy reforms revealed in the country’s latest budget.

A new innovation visa programme to “attract exceptionally talented migrants” will instead be introduced at the end of the year. Australia will also reduce migration intake by 110,000 places over the next four financial years and cap the number of international students.

While they were prepared for the worst after hearing an earlier rumour about the programme’s axing, migration agents handling business visa applications said they were still at a loss as to how to communicate these changes to clients who had spent hundreds or thousands of dollars in legal and other expenses, even if Canberra had promised to refund application fees.

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“While I somewhat support the closure of the programme as it has been widely exploited, the way the government handled this has been appalling,” said Jessica Meng, a business migration specialist at advisory firm Precision Migration. “The changes to the programme have been communicated piecemeal, lacking clarity.”

Chinese migrants protest against Australia’s policy shift on the investment visa scheme, as they march outside the Australian Broadcasting Corporation office in Sydney, Australia, in June 2023. Photo: Reuters
Chinese migrants protest against Australia’s policy shift on the investment visa scheme, as they march outside the Australian Broadcasting Corporation office in Sydney, Australia, in June 2023. Photo: Reuters

The golden visa programme, officially known as the “significant investor visa”, conferred the right of abode to foreign nationals who could invest A$5 million (US$3.3 million). Critics argued it had led to poor economic outcomes and was exploited by those with little interest in long-term investment. Chinese nationals made up 85 per cent of those who applied.

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