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US Exclusion From Europe's Accepted Traveller List Is "Stinging Rebuke"
Tom Burroughes
7 July 2020
The decision a week ago by the European Union to exclude US residents from entering the bloc because of COVID-19 worries is a “stinging rebuke” for America’s “poor handling” of the pandemic, according to golden visa specialist firm .
EU member states have agreed to a list of 15 countries that will be allowed to enter when external borders reopen. The US, which has more than 2.4 million cases of coronavirus, is on the excluded list. The move is ironic because in recent years the US has scored highly for the access value of its passports.
Algeria, Australia, Canada, Georgia, Japan, Montenegro, Morocco, New Zealand, Rwanda, Serbia, South Korea, Thailand, Tunisia, Uruguay, Andorra, San Marino, Monaco, and the Vatican. China will also be included, as long as China allows European Union visitors in the context of reciprocity. That China could be on the accepted list will anger some countries because the virus is widely believed to have originated in that country, and China has been blamed by a number of nations for not warning the world fast enough. Inevitably, the decisions to admit or block countries will be mired in political controversy. Trump's temporary travel ban on the EU earlier this year because of COVID-19 was a blow to Brussels.
Henley & Partners argued that effective management of COVID-19 showed that conventional measures of passport power had been upended. The US is among the worst for coronavirus, as measured on a case per head basis. Chile is highest (14,736 per one million), followed by Kuwait, Peru and the US in fourth. The US figure is 8,200, ahead of Panama at 7,787, Singapore at 7,849, and Sweden at 6,727. (Source: Statista, July 1.) Debate continues on whether figures accurately reflect testing results, and the extent of any such tests. Statista said such data must be “treated with caution”.
Henley & Partners noted that its Passport Index, which ranks the world’s passports based on the number of destinations holders can get into without a prior visa, contains many countries on the EU’s list of accepted states. The US has also been a high-ranking member of the Passport Index and the EU’s move is “eye-opening”, it said.
“For instance, before COVID-19 the US passport usually ranked within the top 10 on the Henley Passport Index in 6th or 7th place, with its citizens able to access 185 destinations around the world without requiring a visa in advance. However, under the current EU ban, the picture looks starkly different. US nationals now have roughly the same level of travel freedom as citizens of Uruguay (included on the EU’s list of welcome countries), which ranks 28th on the index, with a visa-free/visa-on-arrival score of 153,” Henley & Partners said.
The firm is a major player in the market for arranging citizenship-by-investment for high net worth individuals. Dozens of countries offer these programs, which at times are politically controversial. Canada, for example, mothballed its program about six years ago, while the UK has changed its program by doubling the investment amount to £2.0 million ($2.5 million). Some critics of these programs say they facilitate money laundering, although their defenders say that is an unjust accusation.
Henley & Partners continued: “This is one of many extraordinary shifts in passport power caused by the temporary pandemic-related bans. Brazilian passport holders, for example, find their passport strength greatly diminished. The country usually ranks highly on the index - most recently placed 19th, with a visa-free/visa-on-arrival score of 170 - but the loss of access to the EU means that Brazilians currently have roughly the same extent of travel freedom as citizens of Paraguay (36th on the index, with a score of 142).”
The firm added that without taking the various travel bans and restrictions into account, Japan continues to hold the number one spot on the index with a score of 191. Singapore remains in 2nd place with a score of 190, while Germany and South Korea are in joint-3rd place, each with a score of 189.
Both Japan and South Korea have been included on the EU’s list of ‘safe’ countries, while Singapore has been excluded, which means Singaporean passport holders currently have far less travel freedom than their closest competitors on the index, which is based on exclusive data from the International Air Transport Association (IATA), it added.