The European Union (EU) earned €3,435,200 from rejected Schengen visa applications from Nigeria in 2023, according to Schengen visa statistics.
Globally, the EU governments raked in €130 million from rejected Schengen visa applications with African and Asian countries shouldering 90% of the costs, according to reports from EUobserver.com.
The report also indicates that African countries particularly, are disproportionately impacted, with rejection rates as high as 40-50% for Ghana, Senegal, and Nigeria.
Notably, the figures do not account for the costs incurred from being unable to travel for business and leisure or the expenses for legal advice and private agencies involved in processing visa applications.
Marta Foresti, founder of LAGO Collective and senior visiting fellow at the Overseas Development Institute, said, “Visa inequality has very tangible consequences and the world’s poorest pay the price”.
“You can think of the costs of rejected visas as ‘reverse remittances’, money flowing from poor to rich countries. We never hear about these costs when discussing aid or migration, it is time to change that,” she added.
The EU estimates that about half of all irregular migrants within the bloc’s 27 member states result from visa overstays. Last year, over 83,000 non-EU citizens people were sent back to their countries, a return rate of 19%, according to the EU Commission.
Over the past year, the EU has begun to use visa restrictions as a political tool, employing Article 25a of its 2019 visa code a provision that allows visa restrictions for countries with low rates of migrant returns.
For instance, in April, the EU Council agreed to impose visa sanctions on Ethiopia, including a ban on obtaining visas for multiple entries into EU countries, while diplomatic and service passport holders will no longer be exempt from visa fees.
EU ministers extended the processing time for visas from 15 days to 45 days, citing Ethiopia’s lack of cooperation in returning its nationals staying illegally in EU countries.
Conversely, in April, EU ministers lifted visa restrictions on The Gambia, imposed in 2021, after its migrant return rate increased from 14% in 2022 to 37% in 2023.
The rejection of visas is a phenomenon which has been termed ‘reverse remittances,’ according to an analysis shared with EUobserver. These fees are non-refundable, regardless of the application outcome.
Curled from Nairametrics