The Dominican government intends to fund its capital budget for the next fiscal year using funds from the country’s citizenship-by-investment program.
The program raised 279.9 East Caribbean dollars in the country’s last fiscal year to June 30, which amounts to CAD$133.72.
Dominica’s president and prime minster say this shows exactly how important the program has become to the Caribbean country’s economy.
Now they want the country to rally around the controversial program, which awards Dominican citizenship to individual investors for just $100,000.
Dominica CIP: Investment Requirements
Single investor | US$100,000 |
Investor and spouse | US$175,000 |
Investor, spouse, and two children aged below 18 years | US$200,000(US$50,000 per child from third child onwards) |
A separate application is required for family members aged above 18 years |
President Charles Savarin said: “The CIP … should be presented to the world as a national effort, and not as a party’s initiative mired in political controversy.
“Let us, therefore, try to understand what that program is, how it operates, the benefits to the economy, and to the opportunity of eradicating poverty that it presents.
“If there is need for refinement, let us, as a people, and as a parliament, agree on such improvements that could be made to improve the program as time progresses”.
Roosevelt Skerrit, the island nation’s prime minister, listed off projects including the huge rebuilding effort following Tropical Storm Erika, which killed 30 people in August 2015.
All, including the redevelopment of the island’s major airport, were funded by the CIP.
Skerrit argued Dominicans had been misled about the nature of the CIP and its importance to the island, with opportunities for foreign investment difficult to come by.
Without the CIP, Skerrit said, taxes would have had to rise significantly.
“Dominica is not the only country implementing a CIP; and it is not the only developing country which has introduced such a program,” Skerrit said.
“The USA, the world’s largest economy, has its own program. The UK, Malta, Cyprus and many other countries have programs of their own.”
The programs in the US and the UK actually offer permanent residence in return for investment, although there is a pathway to citizenship years down the line.
Skerrit talked up the integrity of the program, saying that plans to increase the investment threshold had been put to one side for the time being.
He said the government intended to use CIP funds to take pressure of taxes and limit the national debt.
Further reading
- Cheap Dominican Citizenship Program About to Get More Expensive (Audio)
- Dominica Investment Immigration News Articles
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