And, because of current Chinese naturalization laws, these returnees would be able to acquire Chinese citizenship before their special Chinese heritage visas expire or need to be renewed. With more than 1.4 million Chinese in Australia, 5.5 million Chinese in the United States, 500,000 Chinese in Britain, and more than a million-plus Chinese in mainland Europe it is this program that offers that will expand remigration opportunities to virtually all Chinese in the West.
There are also non-countries where remigration cooperation between the West and themselves would be explicitly beneficial to that non-Western society. In particular I am thinking of Korea and Japan, both of which have ethnicity-based visa programs for their kin abroad and both of which are entering periods of steep demographic decline.
The Japanese have a Japanese descent (Nikkei) visa that applies to anyone who is the child or grandchild of a Japanese citizen. The visa is also applicable to the spouse of a Japanese national. The visa goes so far as to extend to those of third generation descent and perhaps beyond. Despite this visa being widely available there is little evidence that knowledge of it is widespread among ethnic Japanese living in the West, and there are a great many.
More than 1.65 million Japanese reside in the United States, some 150,000 in Canada, and a further 3 or so million spread across the rest of the world. With Japan projected suffer a catastrophic population implosion from 126 million today to 106 million by 2050, 87 million by 2070, and less than 50 million after 2100 it is critical that the young Japanese diaspora return home to avert this disaster. The median age in Japan now exceeds 50 years old while the average age of a Japanese American is just 36 years old. Japanese and Asian Americans also have a higher marriage rate compared to other Americans and compared to their Japanese brethren in the homeland. Marriages, more than any economic or social policy incentive, are what lead to children and therefore higher fertility rates. Birth rates among married women are more than double that among unmarried women, and remain relatively stable over time while unmarried birth rates often experience crashes, according to the Institute for Family Studies.
Then there is South Korea. The country is in the exact same demographic predicament as Japan and also offers ethnicity-based visas to its diaspora. The F-4 visa issued by South Korea allows for those with Korean parents and grandparents to settle in the country for 5 years and renew the visa every 5 years so long as they maintain employment and good standing.
With more than 7 million people in its diaspora this visa present an opportunity for South Korea to reverse its own demographic decline. With more than 2.6 million Koreans in the United States, 250,000 in Canada, and 160,000 in Australia the West serves as the greatest source of potential Korean returnees.
Without remigration from the West to Korea the Korean population is expected to fall from 52 million today to some 38 million by 2070. Koreans in the West could radically reverse this process. While the median age in South Korea is nearly 46 years old the media age of a Korean American is population is young and growing. Like Japanese Americans they have a higher marriage rate and therefore larger rates of family formation that would be massively beneficial for an aging and gender divided South Korea.
These four countries represent just a small number of those I was able to discover have vast diaspora outreach and resettlement opportunity programs. It would be remiss of our nationalist movement if we were not aware of these things. We must bring them to the public debate so that whenever a smarmy leftist or holier-than-though center right conservative says “Well, where will THEY go?” we have the answer!