The island is a magnet for high net worth buyers, and one of Countrywide’s most upmarket brands – Hamptons – has recently entered into a partnership with a local agency to attract mainland buyers to the tax haven.
Part of the island’s coastline is scheduled for regeneration, with the Jersey Development Company seeking to build 1,000 new homes as part of a wider scheme.
But Senator Sam Mézec, a former Jersey housing minister, is proposing that foreign investors be banned from purchasing any of the new waterfront units.
This proposal appears to have the backing of the Council of Ministers – the main decision making body of the island’s government.
“Today the government have lodged an amendment to my proposition which, following discussions with myself, accepts that no homes built as a part of the proposed Waterfront development should be sold to foreign investors, and that we should maximise the proportion of affordable homes on the site” Mézec has told the local media.
In 2019 a campaign called Tax Haven Justice – which wants companies and individuals taxed where they do business, rather than where they are registered – described Jersey as the seventh most “aggressive” tax haven in the world. The Jersey government responded by saying it was “fully compliant” with standards set by “independent global bodies”.