Print

Print


*Karl P. Sauvant, PhD*
*Resident Senior Fellow*
*Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment*
Columbia Law School - The Earth Institute, Columbia University
435 West 116th St., Rm. JGH 825, New York, NY 10027
| p: (212) 854 0689 | cell: (646) 724 5600 e: [log in to unmask]
| w: www.ccsi.columbia.edu | t: @CCSI_Columbia
<https://twitter.com/CCSI_Columbia>

"China Moves the G20 toward an International Investment Framework and
Investment Facilitation", "China Moves the G20 on Investment", "The Rise of
Self-judging Essential Security Interest Clauses in IIAs", "Can Host
Countries have Legitimate Expectations?", "The Next Step in Governance: The
Need for Global Micro-regulatory Frameworks", "How International Investment
Agreements can Protect Free Media", "The Evolving International Investment
Law and Policy Regime: Ways Forward", "China's Outward FDI and
International Investment Law", and  "Policy Options for Promoting FDI in
the LDCs" *are* available at
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/cf_dev/AbsByAuth.cfm?per_id=2461782 and
http://www.works.bepress.com/karl_sauvant/.


View this email in your browser
<http://mailchi.mp/law/perspective-202-media?e=dd153d6a25>

哥伦比亚大学国际直接投资展望中文版都可以在我们的网站查看:http://ccsi.columbia.edu/
publications/columbia-fdi-perspectives.
<http://columbia.us6.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ab15cc1d53&id=796af5a3a8&e=dd153d6a25>
*Columbia FDI Perspectives*
Perspectives on topical foreign direct investment issues
No. 202  June 19, 2017
Editor-in-Chief: Karl P. Sauvant ([log in to unmask])
Managing Editor: Matthew Schroth ([log in to unmask])
*Focusing on* *investment facilitation** - is it that difficult?*
<http://columbia.us6.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ab15cc1d53&id=465485f182&e=dd153d6a25>
*** <#m_1878479743991833838__edn1>
by
Felipe Hees and Pedro Mendonça Cavalcante** <#m_1878479743991833838__edn2>

Facilitating FDI flows is important, to mobilize resources for development.
For this reason, Brazil is concluding bilateral investment treaties that
put investment facilitation at its core. This is reflected in the very
title of those instruments – Cooperation and Facilitation Investment
Agreements. Broader discussions related to investment facilitation and
exploring the desirability and feasibility of establishing a common
framework in this respect are, therefore, important.

Such a framework was suggested by the E15 Task Force on Investment Policy.
[1] <#m_1878479743991833838__edn3> Several international organizations have
since prepared formal and informal contributions that try to define
investment facilitation. For instance, the United Nations Conference on
Trade and Development (UNCTAD) published a discussion note on “Investment
facilitation and promotion: a global action menu”[2]
<#m_1878479743991833838__edn4> that guided the work on investment
facilitation during the Chinese presidency of the G20 before the issue was
withdrawn from discussion, only to be reintroduced during the current
German presidency. The OECD also has contributed to the discussion, and a
useful working document—“Towards an international framework for investment
facilitation”—was circulated among the members of its Investment Committee
[3] <#m_1878479743991833838__edn5> in which national, bilateral and
multilateral investment facilitation measures were reviewed.

Governments too are increasingly concerned with investment facilitation. In
October 2016, India submitted to the WTO a concept note on a Trade
Facilitation in Services Agreement (TFS).[4] <#m_1878479743991833838__edn6>
The submission recognized that the Trade Facilitation Agreement (TFA),
adopted by WTO members in 2014, was a significant milestone in relation to
trade in goods and suggested that there is need for a counterpart agreement
in services that can foster the reduction of transaction costs associated
with unnecessary regulatory and administrative burdens on trade in
services. The concept note was followed in November 2016 by another
contribution focusing on possible elements of a TFS.[5]
<#m_1878479743991833838__edn7> Finally, on the same day the TFA entered
into force, February 22, 2017, India submitted a draft legal text of a TFS.
[6] <#m_1878479743991833838__edn8>

Against this background, India’s proposal moved discussions to the next
level: by putting forward legal language encompassing “commercial presence”
(“Mode 3” in the parlance of the General Agreement on Trade in Services),
the TFS represents, de facto, a proposal on investment facilitation, even
though it is confined to the services sector. Still, although the debate on
investment facilitation is already on the WTO’s menu, a clearer picture of
what investment facilitation in general actually means has yet to be
developed. It is hoped that the WTO Informal Dialogue on Investment
Facilitation, initiated in May 2017, could contribute in that respect.

Perhaps one of the most appropriate ways of tackling this concept is by
means of a negative approach, i.e., by clarifying what is outside the scope
of facilitation. In this regard, it is clear that facilitation does not
include market access, investment protection and investor-state dispute
settlement. In other words, if any multilateral effort in this area is to
succeed, it should be strictly circumscribed to the issue of facilitation
only.

If a positive approach is used instead, the concept of facilitation would
involve a variable set of measures, mechanisms and actions that contribute
to a favorable national investment environment, with a strong procedural or
practical component. Drawing on the Brazilian experience, examples include:

   - transparency/publication of general and sector-specific
   investment-related laws and regulations;
   - corporate social responsibility, as a means to try to rebalance the
   interests of investors and host countries;
   - mechanisms for dialogue, both between governments of host countries
   and investors, and between governments;
   - national focal points for foreign investors, including ombudspersons
   seeking to resolve any issues;
   - a single electronic window for the submission of documents and
   applications; and
   - agendas for less-than-multilateral cooperation on selected issues,
   enabling interested countries to discuss topics that are only relevant for
   a specific region, for instance.

The Indian proposal raises the issue of whether, from a public policy
perspective, it makes sense to improve domestic institutional arrangements
or to adopt regulatory measures to facilitate investment in services only,
and not investment in general. Therefore, serious consideration should be
given to the establishment of one common framework encompassing investment
facilitation in general, i.e., for both services and goods. A comprehensive
approach is even more important in a situation in which the distinction
between the provision of services and the production of goods is
progressively blurring—the so-called “servicification” of the production of
goods.

By focusing discussions strictly on investment facilitation, there can
finally be a constructive and effective approach to the issue of
investment, avoiding the controversies of the past regarding possible
multilateral rules for investment protection and dispute resolution. In
this regard, the recent contributions by the Russian Federation;[7]
<#m_1878479743991833838__edn9> Brazil and Argentina;[8]
<#m_1878479743991833838__edn10> China;[9] <#m_1878479743991833838__edn11>
and the Friends of Investment Facilitation for Development[10]
<#m_1878479743991833838__edn12> to the discussions in the WTO stress that
the relevance of this discussion is not purely academic. Rather, it is
highly political and will have important consequences for the future work
of the WTO.

------------------------------
* <#m_1878479743991833838__ednref1> T*he Columbia FDI Perspectives are a
forum for public debate. The views expressed by the author(s) do not
reflect the opinions of CCSI or Columbia University or our partners and
supporters.* *Columbia FDI Perspectives (ISSN 2158-3579) is a peer-reviewed
series.*
** <#m_1878479743991833838__ednref2> Felipe Hees ([log in to unmask])
is a counsellor at the Mission of Brazil to the WTO in Geneva; Pedro
Mendonça Cavalcante ([log in to unmask]) is Secretary of the
Trade in Services Division of the Brazilian Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
The opinions expressed in this *Perspective* are the authors’ and do not
necessarily reflect the views of the Brazilian Ministry of Foreign Affairs
or the Brazilian government. The authors are grateful to Herbert
Oberhaensli, Miguel Rodríguez Mendoza and one anonymous reviewer for their
helpful peer reviews.
[1] <#m_1878479743991833838__ednref3> Karl P. Sauvant on behalf of the Task
Force, *The Evolving International Investment Law and Policy Regime: Ways
Forward*, http://www.ictsd.org/sites/default/files/research/WEF_
Investment_Law_Policy_regime_report_2015_1401.pdf.
[2] <#m_1878479743991833838__ednref4>http://investmentpolicyhub.
unctad.org/Upload/Documents/Investment%20Facilitation%20Action%20Menu.pdf
[3] <#m_1878479743991833838__ednref5> DAF/INV/WD(2016)13.
[4] <#m_1878479743991833838__ednref6> S/WPDR/W/55.
[5] <#m_1878479743991833838__ednref7> S/WPDR/W/57.
[6] <#m_1878479743991833838__ednref8> S/C/W/372.
[7] <#m_1878479743991833838__ednref9> JOB/GC/120.
[8] <#m_1878479743991833838__ednref10> JOB/GC/124.
[9] <#m_1878479743991833838__ednref11> JOB/GC/123.
[10] <#m_1878479743991833838__ednref12> JOB/GC/122.

*The material in this Perspective may be reprinted if accompanied by the
following acknowledgment: “Felipe Hees and Pedro Mendonça Cavalcante,
‘Focusing on investment facilitation - is it that difficult?’,* Columbia
FDI Perspectives, No. 202, June 19, 2017. Reprinted with permission from
the Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment (*www.ccsi.columbia.edu*
<http://columbia.us6.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ab15cc1d53&id=1a2fa98157&e=dd153d6a25>*).”
A copy should kindly be sent to the Columbia Center on Sustainable
Investment at **[log in to unmask]* <[log in to unmask]>*. *
For further information, including information regarding submission to the
*Perspectives*, please contact: Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment,
Matthew Schroth, [log in to unmask]

   - No. 201, Gabrielle Kaufmann-Kohler and Michele Potestà, “Challenges on
   the road toward a multilateral investment court,” June 5, 2017.
   - No. 200, Saurabh Garg, “The next phase of IIA reforms,” May 22, 2017.
   - No. 199, Miguel Pérez Ludeña, “United States corporate tax reform and
   global FDI flows,” May 8, 2017.

*All previous FDI Perspectives are available at *
*http://ccsi.columbia.edu/publications/columbia-fdi-perspectives/*
<http://columbia.us6.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ab15cc1d53&id=18218702dc&e=dd153d6a25>
*. *

*Other relevant CCSI news and announcements*

   - *On September 20, 2017*, CCSI and the UN Sustainable Development
   Solutions Network (SDSN), under the guidance of Prof. Jeffrey Sachs,
   Special Adviser to the UN Secretary-General on the SDGs, and Laurent
   Fabius, President of the Constitutional Council of the French Republic,
   will host a one-day conference to present and discuss the blueprint for a
   Global Pact for the Environment. Coinciding with the 72nd Session of the
   UN General Assembly, this Conference will offer a high-level opportunity to
   explore the complex legal and political challenges of the Global Pact in
   light of existing agreements and soft law principles on the environment,
   and the current global political scene. *The event is free and open to
   the public, but advance registration here
   <http://columbia.us6.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=ab15cc1d53&id=b0bafd580a&e=dd153d6a25>
is
   required. For more information, please visit our website here
   <http://columbia.us6.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ab15cc1d53&id=0f46fe37d0&e=dd153d6a25>.*
   - *On May 16, 2017*, *The New Frontiers of Sovereign Investment
   <http://columbia.us6.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ab15cc1d53&id=ea75285dd1&e=dd153d6a25>
*was published
   by Columbia University Press. Edited by CCSI Fellow Malan Rietveld and CCSI
   Head of Extractive Industries Perrine Toledano, the volume combines the
   insights and experience of academic economists and practitioners from
   several sovereign wealth funds (SWF) to survey a diverse financial
   landscape and to establish the challenging topical questions facing a broad
   range of SWFs today: Should they serve both economic development and
   financial returns—and how? Will responsible investment will enhance
   long-term returns? How can fiscal rules for SWFs be improved to meet
   emerging economic challenges? The book considers these questions as they
   apply to both long-established and newer SWFs. Featuring contributions from
   sovereign wealth practitioners from Alberta’s AIMCo, the Nigerian Sovereign
   Investment Authority and the New Zealand Superannuation Fund, as well as
   analysis by scholars at the forefront of sovereign investment, this volume
   provides timely and much-needed information on these rapidly evolving
   institutions.
   - *In April 2017*, CCSI launched a series of short videos from the
   authors of Rethinking Investment Incentives: Trends and Policy Options
   <http://columbia.us6.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ab15cc1d53&id=f850ef5aca&e=dd153d6a25>
   (published by Columbia University Press in July 2016), summarizing the
   important messages from each chapter. New videos are posted weekly
   <http://columbia.us6.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=ab15cc1d53&id=97534a5ec6&e=dd153d6a25>.
The
   use of incentives to attract investment is connected to and impacts the
   most pressing challenges facing us today, including climate change,
   corruption, conditions/availability of employment, harmful competition, and
   inefficient public spending. How, when, where, and why governments use
   incentives to attract, keep and influence investment is therefore
   critically important to whether and how society benefits from investments
   and to other public policy decisions and trade-offs. It is increasingly
   apparent, however, that the use of incentives is not well
   understood—including by the policy makers who use them—which necessitates a
   closer look and, in many cases, a policy response.

Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment
Columbia Law School - Earth Institute
Columbia University
*Copyright © 2017 Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment (CCSI), All
rights reserved.*
[log in to unmask]

*Our mailing address is:*
Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment (CCSI)
Columbia Law School - Earth Institute, Columbia University
435 West 116th Street
New York, NY 10027

Add us to your address book
<http://columbia.us6.list-manage2.com/vcard?u=ab15cc1d53&id=a437e0fd88>


unsubscribe from this list
<http://columbia.us6.list-manage.com/unsubscribe?u=ab15cc1d53&id=a437e0fd88&e=dd153d6a25&c=25c5c7929a>
update subscription preferences
<http://columbia.us6.list-manage.com/profile?u=ab15cc1d53&id=a437e0fd88&e=dd153d6a25>


[image: Email Marketing Powered by MailChimp]
<http://www.mailchimp.com/monkey-rewards/?utm_source=freemium_newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=monkey_rewards&aid=ab15cc1d53&afl=1>

____
AIB-L is brought to you by the Academy of International Business.
For information: http://aib.msu.edu/community/aib-l.asp
To post message: [log in to unmask]
For assistance:  [log in to unmask]
AIB-L is a moderated list.