Remote-work visas will shape the future of work,
travel and citizenship
September
3, 2020 2.10pm BST
Author
Dave Cook
PhD
Researcher, Anthropology, UCL
Dave Cook
does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company
or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no
relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.
University
College London provides funding as a founding partner of The Conversation UK.
During
lockdown, travel was not only a distant dream, it was unlawful. Some even
predicted that how we travel would change forever. Those in power that broke
travel bans caused scandals. The empty skies and hopes that climate change
could be tackled were a silver lining, of sorts. COVID-19 has certainly made
travel morally divisive.
Amid these
anxieties, many countries eased lockdown restrictions at the exact time the
summer holiday season traditionally began. Many avoided flying, opting for
staycations, and in mid-August 2020, global flights were down 47% on the
previous year. Even so, hundreds of thousands still holidayed abroad, only then
to be caught out by sudden quarantine measures.
In
mid-August for example, 160,000 British holiday makers were still in France
when quarantine measures were imposed. On August 22, Croatia, Austria, and
Trinidad and Tobago were added to the UK’s quarantine list, then Switzerland,
Jamaica and the Czech Republic the week after – causing continued confusion and
panic.
This
insistence on travelling abroad, with ensuing rushes to race home, has prompted
much tut-tutting. Some have predicted travel and tourism may cause winter
lockdowns. Flight shaming is already a cultural sport in Sweden, and vacation
shaming has even become a thing in the US.
Amid these
moral panics, Barbados has reframed the conversation about travel by launching
a “Barbados Welcome Stamp” which allows visitors to stay and work remotely for
up to 12 months.
Prime
Minister Mia Mottley explained the new visa has been prompted by COVID-19
making short-term visits difficult due to time-consuming testing and the
potential for quarantine. But this isn’t a problem if you can visit for a few
months and work through quarantine with the beach on your doorstep. This trend
is rapidly spreading to other countries. Bermuda, Estonia and Georgia have all
launched remote work-friendly visas.
I think
these moves by smaller nations may change how we work and holiday forever. It
could also change how many think about citizenship.
Digital
nomads
This new
take on visas and border controls may seem novel, but the idea of working
remotely in paradise is not new. Digital nomads - often millennials engaged in
mobile-friendly jobs such as e-commerce, copywriting and design - have been
working in exotic destinations for the last decade. The mainstream press
started covering them in the mid-2010s.
Fascinated
by this, I started researching the digital nomad lifestyle five years ago – and
haven’t stopped. In 2015, digital nomads were seen as a niche but rising trend.
Then COVID-19 paused the dream. Digital nomad Marcus Dace was working in Bali
when COVID-19 struck. His travel insurance was invalidated, and he’s now in a
flat near Bristol wondering when he can travel.
Dace’s
story is common. He told me: “At least 50% of the nomads I knew returned to
their home countries because of CDC and Foreign Office guidance.” Now this new
burst of visa and border policy announcements has pulled digital nomads back
into the headlines.
So, will the
lines between digital nomads and remote workers blur? COVID-19 might still be
making international travel difficult. But remote work – the other foundation
of digital nomadism – is now firmly in the mainstream. So much so that remote
work is considered by many to be here to stay.
Before
COVID-19, office workers were geographically tethered to their offices, and it
was mainly business travellers and the lucky few digital nomads who were able
to take their work with them and travel while working. Since the start of the
pandemic, many digital nomads had to work in a single location, and office
workers have become remote workers – giving them a glimpse of the digital nomad
lifestyle.
COVID-19
has upended other old certainties. Before the pandemic, digital nomads would
tell me that they despised being thought of as tourists. This is perhaps
unsurprising: tourism was viewed as an escape from work. And other established
norms have toppled: homes became offices, city centres emptied, and workers
looked to escape to the country.
Given this
rate of change, it’s not such a leap of faith to accept tourist locations as
remote work destinations.
A Japanese
businessman predicted this
The idea of
tourist destinations touting themselves as workplaces is not new. Japanese
technologist Tsugio Makimoto predicted the digital nomad phenomenon in 1997,
decades before millennials Instagrammed themselves working remotely in Bali. He
prophesied that the rise of remote working would force nation states “to
compete for citizens”, and that digital nomadism would prompt “declines in
materialism and nationalism”.
Before
COVID-19 – with populism and nationalism on the rise – Makimoto’s prophecy
seemed outlandish. Yet COVID-19 has turned over-tourism into under-tourism. And
with a growing list of countries launching schemes, it seems nations are
starting to “compete” for remote workers as well as tourists.
The latest
development is the Croatian government discussing a digital-nomad visa –
further upping the stakes. The effects of these changes are hard to predict.
Will local businesses benefit more from long-term visitors than from hordes of
cruise ship visitors swarming in for a day? Or will an influx of remote workers
create Airbnb hotspots, pricing locals out of popular destinations?
It’s down to employers
The real
question is whether employers allow workers to switch country. It sounds
far-fetched, but Google staff can already work remote until summer 2021.
Twitter and 17 other companies have announced employees can work remotely
indefinitely.
I’ve
interviewed European workers in the UK during COVID-19 and some have been
allowed to work remotely from home countries to be near family. At Microsoft’s
The New Future of Work conference, it was clear that most major companies were
mobilising task forces and would launch new flexible working policies in autumn
2020.
Countries
like Barbados will surely be watching closely to see which companies could be
the first to launch employment contracts allowing workers to move countries. If
this happens, the unspoken social contract between employers and employees -
that workers must stay in the same country – will be broken. Instead of booking
a vacation, you might be soon booking a workcation.

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