Business,
Economics and Jobs
Portugal’s golden visa program sparked an
investment boom. But locals say they’re getting priced out.
Over the last decade, Portugal has issued more than
10,000 golden visas to foreign investors in exchange for $6 billion in
investments. But some say the visa program prices out locals and that Lisbon’s
historic neighborhoods are "losing the magic."
The World
April 29,
2022 · 3:45 PM EDT
By Anita
Elash
The main
square of the historic Alfama district in Lisbon, Portugal, fills with the
sounds of fado music as women sell traditional cherry liqueur in tiny chocolate
cups.
The festive
atmosphere here draws packs of tourists to this area of the country every year.
But
activists say that iconic neighborhoods like Alfama have been threatened
largely because of the government’s golden visa program for foreign
investors.
“I'm afraid
that this neighborhood is dying a little bit every day. I'm very afraid of
that."
Luis
Mendes, geographer, University of Lisbon
“I'm afraid that this neighborhood is dying a little
bit every day. I'm very afraid of that,” said Luis Mendes, a geographer who
studies housing at the University of Lisbon.
Related:
Canada’s soaring housing prices leave potential homeowners with limited
choices. Local and federal govts are trying to help.
Mendes
blames it in part on the country’s golden visa program under which foreigners
have flocked to invest in Portuguese properties and businesses in coastal
cities such as Lisbon and Porto.
Portugal’s
golden visa program began in 2012 to attract foreign investors. It was part of
a package of incentives to rejuvenate the Portuguese economy following the 2008
global financial crisis.
Under the
program, golden visa holders can become permanent residents in Portugal if they
invest a minimum of between $294,000 and $525,000 in real estate, depending on
location and rehabilitation costs. Golden visa holders must spend at least
seven days in Portugal for the first year and 14 days every two years after
that. After five years, they can become citizens. Foreigners who live in
Portugal less than six months a year can do so tax-free.
In January,
to relieve the pressure in popular coastal cities like Lisbon and Porto, the
government changed the golden visa program so that foreigners can no longer
qualify for the visa with a coastal residential purchase. However, properties
in Portugal's interior, which have been less popular with investors and
tourists, still qualify under the new guidelines.
So far,
Portugal has issued more than 10,000 golden visas in exchange for $6 billion in
investments, sparking a boom in real estate development and tourism.
People like
Mendes say the visa program has been a double-edged sword.
“We have
all the employment created, all the economy boosting. We have an enormous
amount of rehabilitation work being done in the neighborhood,” Mendes said.
Mendes
pointed out a late 19th-century mansion decorated with traditional blue and
while porcelain tiles located on Rua Remedios, one of Alfama’s main streets. He
said the building was purchased by Chinese investors and converted into luxury
apartments. But the building is currently sitting empty, he said, adding that
many of the area's buildings have been converted to short-term tourist rentals
surrounded by conveniences that cater to them.
“What you
see is souvenir shops and bars and the art gallery. Which is good. But it's all
that we have here in Alfama. And the grocery store, the bakery, the butchery
disappeared. And that's a very high impact for the inhabitants,” he said.
By January,
real estate values were already up by more than 50%. The average rent in Lisbon
is now nearly $1,000 a month.
But
Portugese developers and real estate investors have denied that the golden visa
program alone has inflated home prices, claiming that other factors like high
taxation and antiquated housing legislation have contributed to the housing
crunch in coastal areas.
There are
also other factors pushing out locals.
When the
golden visa program began in 2012, the government also ended rent control,
allowing property owners to raise rental prices and evict those who can not
afford the new rates.
Rita Silva,
a housing activist with the organization Habita, said housing and rental prices
have risen to levels beyond reach for many of Lisbon’s Portuguese residents.
“For us,
it's stratospheric prices. It’s not prices that we can afford."
Rita Silva,
housing activist, Habita, Lisbon, Portugal
“For us,
it's stratospheric prices. It’s not prices that we can afford,” she said.
A big part
of her job is helping local residents fight eviction orders. She said she’s
handled dozens of those cases since the golden visa was implemented.
"We
are seeing more and more middle-class [people] that were all OK. They were
living in the rental house and quiet and they thought they were going to live
in that house for the rest of their lives in peace. And now, they don’t because
rents are increasing, contracts are being interrupted and they don't have
alternatives,” she said.
Irene
Costa, 69, is facing eviction after 50 years in the same apartment building at
the back of a quiet courtyard in the Alfama district. As a retired house
cleaner, she shares her tiny one-bedroom apartment with a black cat. The
apartment is crammed with her belongings.
She said
her problems started when her original Portuguese landlord died. The current
owner, an investor from Brazil, wants her out so he can sell her unit.
Costa lives
on a pension of $300 a month and said she doesn't have the kind of money needed
to purchase the unit or to rent it under the new owner. She said that she
doesn’t know where she’ll go.
She said
it’s an agonizing situation and that sometimes she feels betrayed.
Mendes said
one quarter of Alfama residents have either moved or been evicted in the last
decade.
Sara Paixao
grew up in the area, and still works as a waitress here. She said she welcomes
tourists and foreign residents but misses the old neighborhood — she remembers
playing with her cousins and brothers in the streets.
Paixao said
that today, everything is more expensive and most of her neighbors are gone.
“It’s sad.
I think it’s sad. Because the neighborhood lost the magic of the people.”

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