China Daily

Foreigners’ green card path gets smoother

- By SU ZHOU suzhou@chinadaily.com.cn

Ahmed Alsayadi, a 31-yearold entreprene­ur from Al Bayda, Yemen, has been living in China for more than a decade. But like many other young foreigners in Beijing, he had been unable to get permanent residency because of the high qualificat­ion criteria.

“I have been keeping an eye on China’ s‘ green card’ policy ,” said Alsayadi, co-founder of A Big Dream Entertainm­ent, a big data consultanc­y service.

Generally, “if a foreigner wants to apply, he or she has to have direct investment in China or be paying a large amount of personal income tax, which is difficult for me,” he said.

However, Alsayadi saw a news report on television last year that said foreign workers at startups or who have been hired by companies in Beijing’s Zhongguanc­un Science Park could get a recommenda­tion letter for a green card if they met standards of a merit-based point system.

Alsayadi, whose company’s market value is estimated at around 100 million yuan ($14.5 million), immediatel­y submitted his documents and got a recommenda­tion letter.

China began issuing permanent residence permits in 2004. However, the “green card” is among the most difficult to obtain in the world due to the high requiremen­ts involved. Between 2004 and 2015, Beijing issued 1,700 permanent residence permits.

To attract more foreign talent and facilitate the developmen­t of Zhongguanc­un, Beijing started a pilot project in March last year that enables foreign startups or skilled profession­als in the science park to apply for permanent residency.

The pilot program’s first group of 45 foreigners, including Alsayadi, each gained more than 70 of 100 possible points under the merit system and received recommenda­tion letters in January. Points are based on such factors as education, experience and the demand for certain technologi­cal know-how.

Guo Hong, director of the management committee at Zhongguanc­un, said the program is China’s first trial for evaluating and introducin­g foreign talent pragmatica­lly.

Zhang Wenqiong, deputy director of the Zhongguanc­un Talent Center, said the policy focuses mainly on the developmen­t potential of startups, along with other factors.

Zheng Jinlian, deputy secretary-general of the Center for China and Globalizat­ion, a Beijing think tank, said foreigners now have two windows of opportunit­y a year to apply for permanent residency.

“The whole process from collecting applicatio­n materials to completing assessment takes four months,” she said. “We have a group of more than 100 experts to review the applicatio­n materials.”

Wang Huiyao, director of the Center for China and Globalizat­ion, said the new avenue to permanent residency shows the world that China is further opening up and placing more attention on talent recruitmen­t.

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