The Sunday Guardian

Rich Indians applying for costly EB5 visas

Getting EB5 visas amounts to investing a minimum of $500,000 (Rs 3.3 crore) in the US.

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(Rs 3.3 crore) legally acquired by the investor.

Though the official data for 2016 is yet to be released by theUnited States Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services (USCIS), immigratio­n law firms and lawyers believe that the number of applicatio­ns had been on the rise for 2016 as well.

In 2014, Indians had invested by way of EB5 visas just $50 million in the United States and was ranked at number five, making China the highest investor with about $4,800 million in the US, according toUSCIS data.

Abhinav Lohia, a partner from Davies and Associates, a US immigratio­n law firm, told The Sunday Guardian, “Our firm alone had filed around 40 cases for EB5 visas in 2016 and this year, we have already filed around 20 cases and the number is going to increase. As the EB5 visa is one of the best alternativ­es to get a green card in the US, more and more people are joining to avail this opportunit­y.”

Rogelio Caceres, co-founder of LCR Capital Partners, another US based immigratio­n law firm, told The Sunday Guardian that most applicants want to secure an EB5 visa for their children to study in the US and settle down there.

“We have seen most ap- plicants being parents who wanted to send their children to good universiti­es in the US and want them to settle there. The uncertaint­y over the H1B visa has also made many having the required funds to apply for the EB5 visa. After spending thousands of dollars in the education of their children, most parents would not want them to come back to India, asremunera­tionsin India are not as much as they are in the US,” Caceres said.

Abhinav also said that keeping in mind the current job market scenario in India, with thousands of employees being laid off from different multinatio­nal companies in India, “parents are sceptical of bringing their child back to India where job opportunit­ies are shrinking”.

He further added that many startups and entreprene­urs are also shifting to the US as the ease of doing business there is much higher than in India.

“Many investors and entreprene­urs are moving to the Silicon Valley because things are much simpler and opportunit­iesmuch greater. I think if one has the required amount of funds to secure an EB5 visa, one should go for it as there is no waiting period and one directly becomes a green card holder,” he told The Sunday Guardian. Experts have said that the lack of agricultur­al reforms is a major reason for the rise in demand for loan waiver schemes in many states.

“The loan waiver scheme is a penance for the failure of populist policies of almost all past government­s. There is no reason to carry on with the same age-old way of farming in the hyper consumer demand era,” Dr C. Devakumar, former Assistant Director General of the Indian Council of Agricultur­al Research, told The Sunday Guardian.

“Loan waiver is only a short-term relief. In a globalised economy, production efficiency will determine demand and prices. The time has come to design a checklist to determine viability or otherwise of production of a particular crop in a district and issue advisories to farmers accordingl­y. Areas low in crop productivi­ty cannot be sustained for marketing. Such areas are like sick industrial units. Farmers in such areas must be skilled in non-farm occupation­s with due compensati­on. This will reduce dependence of a large population on primary agricultur­e. Ignoring the ground reality will hurt us. It is time that the states issue district-wise checklists,” Dr Devakumar said.

The debt relief programme has also failed to provide assistance to landless farm workers who don’t have access to bank loans and some small farmers who depend on money lenders.

According to agricultur­al experts, about 52% of India’s nine crore agricultur­al households are indebted. Debts have been recognised as a major cause for farmers’ distress. Experts say that the use of unconditio­nal debt relief to improve living conditions, crop productivi­ty and reduce suicides is a temporary measure and not a permanent solution to farmers’ distress.

A.K. Gupta, professor of agro-economics in Kurukshetr­a University, Haryana, said: “The country’s agricultur­e sector needs significan­t reforms, including land leasing, streamlini­ng the incentive structure to promote private sector investment, as well as policy changes for essential commoditie­s and markets, and for that, political will and help from agricultur­al experts is needed.”

“The solutions are well-known as they have been articulate­d at regular intervals over several decades by many committees and commission­s, and all revolve around greater market access. While the Centre’s agricultur­e policy seems focused around export bans and stocking limits, what is required is a policy that allows farmers to access more markets,” Gupta added.

Rajendra Malhotra, a retired scholar from ICAR, said: “A range of agricultur­al reforms are still pending, a greater link to organised retailers across the country is required, but the policy on FDI in retail continues to remain stuck. Greater developmen­t of food processing is required. Also, substituti­ng subsidies like those on fertiliser­s that only rich farmers corner, by acreage-based unconditio­nal transfers needs to be reformed. The government’s e-NAM (e-National Agricultur­e Market) initiative directed linking farmers with the market on digital platform, but it is yet to achieve the final goal set under e-NAM.”

“The government’s e-NAM or e-Mandi initiative to link the entire country is a great scheme for the agricultur­al sector and after getting fully functional can prove beneficial for the farm sector. However, it is not clear whether states will be able to implement e-NAM; the fact is even trades across mandis in the same state are not taking place,” Malhotra added.

In April 2015, Prime Minister Narendra Modi had launched the e-NAM scheme on a pilot basis at 22 mandis in eight states. The target was to integrate 200 mandis by September this year and a total 585 by March 2018. However, the current status of the e-NAM programme is far from the target.

 ?? AFP ?? A child rides her tricycle as paramilita­ry personnel stand guard during an indefinite strike called by the Gorkha Janamukti Morcha (GJM) in Darjeeling on Friday. The shutdown entered the sixth day on Saturday and GJM protesters clash with security...
AFP A child rides her tricycle as paramilita­ry personnel stand guard during an indefinite strike called by the Gorkha Janamukti Morcha (GJM) in Darjeeling on Friday. The shutdown entered the sixth day on Saturday and GJM protesters clash with security...

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