Here to Stay
- 来源:中国与非洲 smarty:if $article.tag?>
- 关键字:permanent residence permits smarty:/if?>
- 发布时间:2014-09-12 07:51
China considers loosening up the application process for foreigners getting permanent residence permits
After living in Beijing for more than a decade, Elyse Ribbons, who grew up in Detroit, Michigan, considers herself a true Beijinger. Ribbons, who speaks fluent Mandarin, founded a theater company in Beijing in 2007 and is also a playwright, radio talk show hostess and actress.
Ribbons was excited to learn that China is considering lowering the requirements for permanent resident status.
“It used to be very hard to get a permit. My impression is that the policy favored people with a lot of money to invest. If there is a change of policy, I will definitely apply for one myself,” Ribbons, 34, told International Herald Leader, a Beijing-based newspaper.
Xinhua News Agency reported in early June that authorities have been discussing changes to the regulations on granting permanent residency by decreasing the requirements for eligibility.
Slow progress
China first introduced permanent resident status for foreigners in the Law on the Control of the Entry and Exit of Aliens, which was enacted in November 1985.
In 1986, Werner Gerich, a German who served as manager of the Wuhan Diesel Engine Plant in Hubei Province and the first foreign company manager in China after 1949, became the first foreigner to be granted permanent resident status in China.
China began issuing permanent residence permits, sometimes colloquially referred to as Chinese green cards, in 2004. According to the Regulations on Examination and Approval of Permanent Residence of Aliens in China, which was promulgated jointly by the Ministry of Public Security and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs that year, permanent residency is primarily open to foreign investors who have made sizable investment in China, high-level business executives, prestigious scholars and other persons who have made outstanding contributions or are of special importance to China, as well as people who have come to China to join their families.
In recent years, fast-track permits have been granted to participants in China’s global headhunting campaign, the Recruitment Program of Global Experts. Launched in December 2008, the program was designed to recruit 2,000 top-notch scientists and other professionals of any nationality over the next five to 10 years.
By the end of this May, the program and its seven sub-programs had recruited more than 4,180 elite scholars, business executives and entrepreneurs. The Chinese Government has issued several regulations to ensure the success of this program. According to the regulations, on top of large grants and other benefits from the Chinese Government, innovative scientists and entrepreneurs and their families are also entitled to favorable treatment in obtaining visas and residence permits to help with their international travels.
A total of 1,306 green cards have been issued to this group of people, which fall under the category of people making special contributions to the country. And the number could be higher if the preferential policies in obtaining Chinese green cards had been better publicized.
The relatively high requirements have kept most foreigners from even applying for the permanent residency in China. National newspaper People’s Daily reported on June 2 that 4,976 foreigners had obtained permits to date, averaging less than 500 issued annually.
Same services denied
One of the first permanent residence permits was issued to Joan Hinton (1921-2010), known as Han Chun in China, who was one of the few female scientists to take part in the Manhattan project, which resulted in the first atomic bomb. When receiving the card in 2004, the 83-year-old had been living in China for 56 years, time she devoted to improving the country’s dairy farm automation technologies.
It is stipulated that holders of a permanent residence permit enjoy the same rights as Chinese citizens during their stay in China, except for political rights and those otherwise explicitly mentioned in laws and regulations. For example, the permit holders can apply to join social security plans, board airliners and apply for a driver’s license in China.
As one of the earliest Turkish students sent to China on a government scholarship, Noyan Rona has lived in China for 32 years. Besides working as the chief representative of Garanti Bank’s Shanghai office, Rona spent a lot of time doing volunteer work for local communities and care homes. After becoming an honorary citizen of Shanghai in 2012, Rona received his permit in 2013.
In addition to reducing the requirements for permanent residence permits, he added there should be improvements for foreigners who do get the cards.
“I have a permit, but I cannot enjoy the services as easily as native Chinese citizens,” he said, citing an example from when he wanted to open a bank account.
“They did not recognize my permit, and insisted on a passport,” he said, adding that he encountered similar problems in hospitals and with other service agencies.
Dutch banker Piter De Jong, who heads the Shanghai operations of ING Bank NV and has lived in Shanghai for 16 years, received a Chinese green card in 2012. He experienced similar difficulty in using this card in hotels and banks and ended up having to present his passport to prove his identity.
“I hope that the green card will be widely recognized and get holders the services it promises. Otherwise, why would anyone bother to apply for a green card?” De Jong said.
Lower bar needed
“When the Regulations on Examination and Approval of Permanent Residence of Aliens in China were drafted, the policy leaned toward prudence based on two factors: China has a large native population and a comparatively small expatriate population,” said Wang Zhenyao, Director of the Beijing-based Center for China and Globalization.
Today, the situation is changing rapidly as more and more foreign nationals come to study or work in China. The population of long-term foreign residents in China increased from around 230,000 in 2003 to nearly 500,000 in 2010.
Wang commented that after the global financial crisis in 2008, more and more foreigners have come to China to seek job opportunities or start businesses, which has driven up the population of foreigners living in China as well as the demand for permanent residence permits.
Wang believes the government’s programs to lure professionals from overseas are far from enough to satisfy the demand for talented foreign manpower. He suggested that permanent residence permits cover a larger group of foreigners.
According to Wang, the Chinese residence permit system puts too much emphasis on applicants’ professional titles and working experience in China compared with the systems in Western countries, which mainly evaluate applicants’ academic background, language skills and working experience in their countries of origin.
Professor Xiao Mingzheng at the School of Governance of Peking University was on the drafting panel of China’s National Medium- and Long-term Talent Development Plan (2010-20), which was released in 2010 as China’s blueprint for creating a highly skilled workforce within the next 10 years. He said that China occupies an upper-middle position in the international competition to attract high-level human resources.
“While developed countries excel with their advanced social development and clean natural environment, China’s biggest advantage lies in the promising development space it provides for talented people with its rapid socioeconomic development,” Xiao said.
By Li Li
