Prime Minister Godwin Friday of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines (SVG) has pledged that the country’s forthcoming citizenship‑by‑investment (CBI) program will be insulated from direct political control. Framed as a “financing mechanism” rather than a standalone economic pillar, the program is intended to fund four strategic sectors—agriculture, tourism, information and communication technologies, and a blue economy encompassing fisheries, marine services, shipyards and yachting—while also helping to service the nation’s debt.
Governance safeguards
- The CBI scheme will be run at arm’s length from ministers and the political directorate; ministerial interference is ruled out.
- Parliamentary oversight will be required for both the inflow of investment funds and their allocation, ensuring transparency for voters.
- An oversight role for the Eastern Caribbean Central Bank (ECCB) is proposed to prevent “race‑to‑the‑bottom” pricing or due‑diligence standards across the region’s CBI programs.
Fiscal context
- SVG’s public debt stands at roughly 113 % of GDP, a figure confirmed by the IMF’s 2026 Article IV review and projected to rise to 145 % by 2031 if policy does not change.
- The government aims to bring the debt ratio back toward the ECCB’s fiscal anchor of 60 %, a target the currency union as a whole is pursuing (the union was near 79 % at the end of 2025, with a 60 % goal set for 2035).
- CBI proceeds will be channeled into a legislatively ring‑fenced Investment Fund, alongside other instruments such as debt swaps, possible debt forgiveness, concessional loans, foreign direct investment, and a revitalised domestic private sector.
Timeline and structure
- SVG plans to launch the CBI program in mid‑2026.
- The legislation establishing the program’s operating rules has not yet been published.
- Applicants will be required to meet residency conditions, and the investment proceeds will be earmarked for the four priority sectors and debt servicing.
Regional and international pressures
- The United States suspended immigrant‑visa processing for 75 countries, including SVG, in January 2024, despite SVG not yet having an operational CBI scheme.
- The European Union, in a December 2024 report, linked the operation of citizenship‑by‑investment programs to visa suspensions and urged Caribbean states to move toward discontinuation of such schemes.
- SVG’s “firewall” approach will be tested once the program becomes operational, particularly under the scrutiny of U.S. and EU immigration policies.
Due‑diligence emphasis
- Friday stressed that robust due‑diligence is essential to protect the country’s reputation and the value of its passport.
- The government will not court promoters or applicants whose objectives conflict with long‑term national development, nor will it treat the program as a “get‑rich‑quick” venture for politically connected individuals.
By positioning the CBI program as a tightly regulated financing tool with clear parliamentary and regional oversight, SVG seeks to leverage investment while avoiding the pitfalls that have plagued similar schemes in neighboring jurisdictions.
Source article: www.imidaily.com






