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Effect of Strong Passport on Economic Growth: How African Politics Have Incapacitated Their Passports

Received: 24 January 2023    Accepted: 21 February 2023    Published: 3 March 2023
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Abstract

African states and few Asian nations accepted an inferior position by allowing their citizens to seek visas when they want to travel to western countries, while their peers from western nations can enter the said nations at a will. The problem is that Africans did not reciprocate the demands of visa requirement by westerners. The article will disseminate how African passports became useless at the expenses of western countries and how they mint billions of dollars from the wealthy citizens of the world who seek these strong passports to enable them travel for leisure and business purposes without deterrent. Thus sabotaging the economy of African countries. The study found that top 40 African countries in terms of their population have an average passport rank of 90, which means that these 40 most populous countries can access only 58 countries without visa. These 40 African countries have an average population of 32.7 million, and average land area of 726,801km2. On the same note, forty top European countries in terms of population have an average population of 14.8 million, and land area mean of 147,085. But these European countries have average passport rank of 16, and average access without visa of 172 countries. This means that African countries do not reciprocate visa conditions in the European countries meaning that they allow European citizens to enter visa free in their countries, while African citizens have to struggle in order to get European visas.

Published in Journal of Political Science and International Relations (Volume 6, Issue 1)
DOI 10.11648/j.jpsir.20230601.12
Page(s) 9-15
Creative Commons

This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited.

Copyright

Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Science Publishing Group

Keywords

Passport, Strength, Politics, Visa, Africa, Europe

References
[1] Wilson, J. W., & Biggs, D. (2016). Passport power: entrenching inequality. Science, 353 (6305), 1216-1216.
[2] Index, P. (2020). Global Passport Power Rank 2021. Retrieved, 24 (1), 20.
[3] Cover-Kush, H. (2019). Weighing Up Second Passport Power in Small States.
[4] Higgins, L., & Leps, M. C. (1999). Rethinking the Exercise of Power: The Case of The Passport v. Mobility Rights. Rethinking Marxism, 11 (4), 113-127.
[5] Freisleben, I. U. (2019). Passport Power–Citizenship by Investment Programmes Exploiting Spatiotemporal Hierarchies of Passports.
[6] Scott, P. F. (2020). Passports, the Right to Travel, and National Security in the Commonwealth. International & Comparative Law Quarterly, 69 (2), 365-395.
[7] Hartwig-Peillon, R. (2021). Citizenship and residency by investment in the EU.
[8] Okagbue, H. I., Oguntunde, P. E., Bishop, S. A., Adamu, P. I., Akhmetshin, E. M., & Iroham, C. O. (2021). Significant predictors of henley passport index. Journal of International Migration and Integration, 22 (1), 21-32.
[9] Smit, A. (2019). Improving the power of your passport. Money Marketing, 2019 (8), 9-9.
[10] Gamlen, A., Kutarna, C., & Monk, A. (2019). Citizenship as sovereign wealth: Re-thinking investor immigration. Global Policy, 10 (4), 527-541.
[11] Přívara, A. (2019). Citizenship-for-Sale Schemes in Bulgaria, Cyprus, and Malta. Migration Letters, 16 (2), 245-254.
[12] Williams, I., & Hosein, R. (2019). Citizenship by Investment Program in the OECS, A Necessary Lifeline?. Journal of Eastern Caribbean Studies, 44 (1).
[13] Griffiths, M. (2021). ‘My passport is just my way out of here’. Mixed-immigration status families, immigration enforcement and the citizenship implications. Identities, 28 (1), 18-36.
[14] Džankic, J. (2019). The global market for investor citizenship. Politics of Citizenship and Migration. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan.
[15] Reiser, J. (2019). A Dive Into EB-5: A Need for Complete Modernization of US Investor-Based Immigration Program or EB-5 (Employment-Based Immigration: Fifth Preference). Touro L. Rev., 35, 1255.
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  • APA Style

    Abdikadir Noor Fidow. (2023). Effect of Strong Passport on Economic Growth: How African Politics Have Incapacitated Their Passports. Journal of Political Science and International Relations, 6(1), 9-15. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.jpsir.20230601.12

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    ACS Style

    Abdikadir Noor Fidow. Effect of Strong Passport on Economic Growth: How African Politics Have Incapacitated Their Passports. J. Polit. Sci. Int. Relat. 2023, 6(1), 9-15. doi: 10.11648/j.jpsir.20230601.12

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    AMA Style

    Abdikadir Noor Fidow. Effect of Strong Passport on Economic Growth: How African Politics Have Incapacitated Their Passports. J Polit Sci Int Relat. 2023;6(1):9-15. doi: 10.11648/j.jpsir.20230601.12

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  • @article{10.11648/j.jpsir.20230601.12,
      author = {Abdikadir Noor Fidow},
      title = {Effect of Strong Passport on Economic Growth: How African Politics Have Incapacitated Their Passports},
      journal = {Journal of Political Science and International Relations},
      volume = {6},
      number = {1},
      pages = {9-15},
      doi = {10.11648/j.jpsir.20230601.12},
      url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.jpsir.20230601.12},
      eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.jpsir.20230601.12},
      abstract = {African states and few Asian nations accepted an inferior position by allowing their citizens to seek visas when they want to travel to western countries, while their peers from western nations can enter the said nations at a will. The problem is that Africans did not reciprocate the demands of visa requirement by westerners. The article will disseminate how African passports became useless at the expenses of western countries and how they mint billions of dollars from the wealthy citizens of the world who seek these strong passports to enable them travel for leisure and business purposes without deterrent. Thus sabotaging the economy of African countries. The study found that top 40 African countries in terms of their population have an average passport rank of 90, which means that these 40 most populous countries can access only 58 countries without visa. These 40 African countries have an average population of 32.7 million, and average land area of 726,801km2. On the same note, forty top European countries in terms of population have an average population of 14.8 million, and land area mean of 147,085. But these European countries have average passport rank of 16, and average access without visa of 172 countries. This means that African countries do not reciprocate visa conditions in the European countries meaning that they allow European citizens to enter visa free in their countries, while African citizens have to struggle in order to get European visas.},
     year = {2023}
    }
    

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    JO  - Journal of Political Science and International Relations
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    AB  - African states and few Asian nations accepted an inferior position by allowing their citizens to seek visas when they want to travel to western countries, while their peers from western nations can enter the said nations at a will. The problem is that Africans did not reciprocate the demands of visa requirement by westerners. The article will disseminate how African passports became useless at the expenses of western countries and how they mint billions of dollars from the wealthy citizens of the world who seek these strong passports to enable them travel for leisure and business purposes without deterrent. Thus sabotaging the economy of African countries. The study found that top 40 African countries in terms of their population have an average passport rank of 90, which means that these 40 most populous countries can access only 58 countries without visa. These 40 African countries have an average population of 32.7 million, and average land area of 726,801km2. On the same note, forty top European countries in terms of population have an average population of 14.8 million, and land area mean of 147,085. But these European countries have average passport rank of 16, and average access without visa of 172 countries. This means that African countries do not reciprocate visa conditions in the European countries meaning that they allow European citizens to enter visa free in their countries, while African citizens have to struggle in order to get European visas.
    VL  - 6
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Author Information
  • Chandaria School of Business, United States International University-Africa (USIU), Nairobi, Kenya

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