By Rob Taylor 

CANBERRA--Australia's government believes changes to visas offering rich foreign investors a fast track to residency in return for multimillion-dollar capital infusions will better combat potential corruption.

Australian police, meanwhile, confirmed it's working with Chinese authorities to trace illegal assets in the country.

The conservative government this month announced a new Premium Investor Visa, or PIV, offering a faster 12-month pathway to permanent residency for people investing A$15 million (around $13.2 million) or more into Australia. The aim is for the money to go into higher-risk infrastructure priorities rather than lower-risk sovereign bonds and managed funds.

Both China's government and Australian investment experts raised concerns the visas, which build on an existing plan offering residency in four years for people investing at least A$5 million, could potentially offer a haven for corrupt officials that Beijing has been trying to crack down under President Xi Jinping in an operation dubbed 'Fox Hunt.' China's Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said during a news conference on Oct. 13 that the visas should not allow "corrupt elements to have shelter overseas."

"The scheme in the past has been open to abuse. It's been a disgrace and they needed to do something," said a senior manager of an Asia-focused investment fund.

The office of Australia's Assistant Immigration Minister Michaelia Cash, who is also a senator, told The Wall Street Journal that the government had "robust integrity measures in place" to ensure visa programs were not targeted by economic fugitives or used for money laundering after a review in March this year of the existing second-tier Significant Investor Visa, or SIV.

Australia introduced SIV visas two years ago and the overwhelming majority of applications--more than 80%--have come from China. More than 436 have been granted from 1238 applications, with more than A$2 billion poured into complying investments, immigration department figures show.

"The (immigration) department remains aware that there is potential for serious economic fraud and assesses and refers these matters as appropriate to the Australian Federal Police," a spokesman for Sen. Cash's office told the Journal.

"Integrity measures also provide for referrals to law enforcement authorities in source countries for background checks on applicants that have been identified as suspicious," the spokesman said.

A spokesman for the Federal Police, Australia's FBI equivalent, said operation 'Fox Hunt' was a strictly Chinese operation, but said agents were cooperating with Chinese authorities "in assisting to trace and restrain illicit assets in Australia on behalf of Chinese authorities."

"The AFP has previously successfully restrained and confiscated proceeds of crime from Chinese economic fugitives," the spokesman said, adding that Australian authorities were working with Chinese Ministry of Public Security officials to better combat money laundering and economic fugitives.

Australia's Trade and Investment Minister Andrew Robb told The Australian newspaper this month that the visa changes should force holders to direct money into riskier national investment priorities like new medical or agriculture startups and infrastructure projects, rather than just parking it into safe government bonds or managed funds.

"We feel this SIV and PIV could make a very material contribution in terms of lowering costs and getting ventures off the ground," he told the paper.

Ms. Cash's office said applicants for the visas would go through rigorous integrity assessment using information from various "external sources." That could include tax-sharing information, with China part of a new international taxation alliance with Australia and several other Western nations.

Also, the government's trade and investment promotion agency Austrade would have oversight of potential investments and, in the case of the new premium visa class, would have to nominate applicants, adding another assurance of legality.

"SIV applicants must provide evidence that their funds have been lawfully acquired and owned, and are not proceeds of crime," Sen. Cash's spokesman said.

Write to Rob Taylor at rob.taylor@wsj.com

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