Commentary
Does U.S. and EU Foreign Investment Need
“Protection”?
By
Simon Lester
This article appeared in
National Interest
on December 12, 2013.
European negotiators will be in DC next week for the third round of talks on the Transatlantic Trade
and Investment Partnership (TTIP). While much of the media focus for these negotiations is on
trade issues, foreign investment will be covered in the talks as well. One of the most important, but
least well understood, aspects of the foreign investment-related portions of the talks is the idea of
rules for “protecting” foreign investment. While one might think that foreign investors such as
BMW or Google are powerful companies that can assert their rights effectively, even when they are
outside their “home” country, current international investment agreements treat them as ninety-
eight-pound weaklings who are likely to be pushed around by mean foreign governments when they
go abroad. In the TTIP negotiations, the US and EU will be considering provisions that “protect”
these and other foreign investors. These talks provide a good opportunity to rethink the rules.
In many of their other trade and investment agreements, the US and EU have pushed hard for
investment rules that provide for “investor
state dispute settlement”
(ISDS), in order to “protect”
companies who invest abroad. While many international agreements only allow for states to make
claims against each other, under ISDS, foreign investors can bring claims against states directly in
an international tribunal. Such rules have been part of international economic policy in the US and
Europe for many years. But should these rules be extended to the TTIP? More specifically, should
we use international agreements to “protect” U.S. and EU foreign investment in this way?
In answering these questions, a key issue is, protection from what exactly? Looking at the existing
rules in other agreements, there are three main kinds of government behavior that are at issue here
(that is, from which investors supposedly need protection):
- Discriminatory treatment of foreign investors and investments;
- Expropriation of foreign investments; and
- Treatment that is not “fair or equitable.”
Let’s consider each of these separately.
The idea of nondiscrimination in international economic relations is probably the least controversial
of these. It is a long-standing component of the world trading system, and simply means that each
party promises to treat foreigners the same way it treats its own nationals.
The other issues are more difficult. Expropriation of private assets, once very common, has gone
out of favor in recent decades, although it still occurs occasionally. But the international
expropriation rules also cover
regulatory
expropriation, which means that government regulation is