Wednesday, September 19, 2012

The rich are special

The UK Border Agency has disclosed that it is working on plans for fast-track passport lanes for rich travellers. Brian Moore, the head of the UK Border Force, told MPs that "high-value" people who were considered valuable passengers by the airlines or valuable to the British economy would be given priority treatment at immigration control under the plans.

The super-rich from outside Europe have already been offered a fast track to settle in Britain under immigration rule changes proposed last year. Overseas "super-investors" who are willing to keep £5m in a UK bank account are to be given the right to stay indefinitely in Britain after only three years, two years faster than the five-year wait imposed on every other migrant. An overseas investor who is willing to deposit more than £10m will be able to stay after an even shorter period: two years.

This contrasts sharply with the new minimum income threshold of £22,400 a year introduced in July for a British citizen wanting to bring an overseas spouse and child into the country to live with them.




2 comments:

Paul said...

"This contrasts sharply with the new minimum income threshold of £22,400 a year introduced in July for a British citizen wanting to bring an overseas spouse and child into the country to live with them."

Is that true? I didn't know that. Oh, well. Capitalism puts pay to another of life's little hopes.

Paul in Thailand.

ajohnstone said...

New income threshold of £18,600 for those wanting to sponsor a non-EU spouse or partner - increasing to £22,400 for one child and an additional £2,400 for each further child. This falls short of the potential level of £25,700 which was on the table and which the home secretary was apparently pushing for. However, it still means that, based on data from the National Earnings Survey website, nearly 40% of the working population of the UK would be prevented from sponsoring a foreign spouse or partner in the future.
http://www.migrantsrights.org.uk/blog/2012/06/family-migration-new-rules-announced

Requirement that, from October 2013, all people applying to settle in the UK will need to pass an intermediate level English language test and pass the ‘life in the UK’ test. Currently, applicants can either take the Life in the UK Test or take combined English for Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL) and citizenship classes - the system is geared towards accommodating different skills in language ability. This means that the change will impact in particular those without strong English reading and writing skills.