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Policy Analysis

Investment Facilitation for Sustainable Development: Getting it right for developing countries

This piece explores how investment facilitation belongs not in binding World Trade Organization rules, but in the work of organizations that focus on research, best practice and capacity building for developing countries.

By Martin Dietrich Brauch on August 26, 2019

Over the past 18 months, multiple Columbia FDI Perspectives have argued for the WTO to initiate negotiations on investment facilitation.[i]

A common foundation has been the view that trade and investment are just two sides of the same coin; hence drafting an investment-facilitation agreement is just a matter of replicating its close sibling on trade facilitation. This simplistic view ignores many realities. Trade happens in an instant and generally implicates a limited number of actors and domestic laws. Paperwork related to traded goods is limited and very specific. Investment, by contrast, is a process that happens over decades and implicates a vast array of laws, both when initiated and over its lifespan. More critically, any given investment can impact a wide range of economic actors and community stakeholders, positively or negatively. Approvals often require complex review and decision-making processes taking two to three years, applying very different environmental, social and economic criteria compared to trade. While there are economic relationships between trade and investment, this does not make regulating them akin to regulating siblings, or even cousins.

The argument is becoming dangerously misleading. It is being used to expand the scope of WTO rule making directly into the very heart of national investment law by disciplining government decision-making on investment for sustainable development. The history of the WTO, including the ongoing failures of the Doha Round, shows it is uniquely unqualified to intrude into these detailed and extensive legal aspects of sustainable development at the national or international levels. Investment is to critical for sustainable development for new WTO experiments in this regard.

Worse, the current push to promote investment-facilitation negotiations at the WTO is taking place in the absence of empirical analysis of what investment facilitation for sustainable development means and requires. In August 2018, the authors helped facilitate a workshop with 13 member states of the Southern African Development Community (SADC).[ii] OECD and UNCTAD research used as background for the meeting showed that even these major organizations recognize that although “investment facilitation stands increasingly high in the global economic agenda,” “little conceptual research has been undertaken on the topic.”[iii] This gap becomes even more pronounced in the context of facilitating investment for sustainable development.

The workshop undertook a rigorous analysis of the investment-facilitation goals and needs of the member states, based on proposals by UNCTAD, the OECD and the WTO. Over the course of the workshop, the government participants evaluated each identified item and ranked it by what level of governance is best able to apply it: national, regional or multilateral. They also ranked what type of tool should be used: capacity building, research, technology development, legal obligations on governments, etc. In addition, delegates were invited to identify issues and actions not included in the organizations’ catalogues.

The result of this bottom-up analysis by these developing country experts in attracting and assessing potential FDI for admission was stark. Not one element of the array of items was identified as best addressed by negotiating obligations at the international level. Instead, a rather sophisticated mix of national, regional and multilateral actions was identified as best able to meet the needs of developing countries. Removed from the context of a meeting organized by the WTO Secretariat or states actively promoting a multilateral agreement, the workshop participants rejected negotiating obligations at the international level.

The main needs identified by the workshop participants focused on technical assistance for assessing applications and enhancing informed decision-making processes, benchmarking best practices, applying innovative technologies to enhance, but not replace, regulatory decision-making, and generally better collaborative processes to understand investments and investors. These elements reflected a major concern to develop the capacity of governments properly to analyze investment proposals, the character of potential investors based on their track record in other states and the sources of investment funding.

The SADC workshop appears to be the first time when developing countries, in particular smaller economies, were asked to identify what they actually think is needed. The rebuke of top-down negotiations and a clear identification of the need for support to governments to make better informed decisions as the major priority should be instructive for identifying best practices in facilitating investment for sustainable development, and the support developing countries need to implement them. Given this, UNCTAD and the OECD, working together with developing countries, are best placed to assist most of them, especially those with smaller economies and those not primarily concerned with outward FDI opportunities.

The need to stop WTO negotiations before they start—and move the next stage of investment-facilitation work to organizations that focus on research, best practice and capacity building—is based on a recognition of the legitimate views of the majority of developing countries that did not support investment-facilitation discussions at the WTO as the wrong solution to an important issue. Smaller developing countries, in particular, need to determine their needs for facilitating investment for sustainable development. Their needs should not be suppressed by top-down demands to help move the WTO into the core of investment decision-making for sustainable development.

Investment facilitation for sustainable development: Getting it right for developing countries,’ Columbia FDI Perspectives, No. 259, August 26, 2019. Reprinted with permission from the Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment (www.ccsi.columbia.edu).

 


[i] For example, Perspectives 243, 240, 235, 228, and 226.

[ii] The full report is available at: SADC-IISD Investment Facilitation Workshop.

[iii] Novik, A. & de Crombrugghe, A. (2018, April). Towards an international framework for investment facilitation (OECD Investment Insights), p. 1. Retrieved from https://www.oecd.org/investment/Towards-an-international-framework-for-investment-facilitation.pdf 

[iv] The Joint Ministerial Statement on Investment Facilitation for Development was signed at the 11th WTO Ministerial Conference in Buenos Aires by 42 (out of 164) WTO members, including the European Union and three Chinese entities (China, Hong Kong and Macao). In the absence of WTO criteria for “developed” and “developing” countries; applying the UN definitions indicates a total of 30 signatories of the statement (corresponding to 27 states, counting the three Chinese entities as one) identify as developing countries, including 5 members of the G20. A total of 85 developing country members opposed WTO efforts in this area.

 

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