Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7czq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-20T13:23:19.981Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Do Investor–State Disputes (Still) Harm FDI?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 March 2021

Andrew Kerner
Affiliation:
Department of Political Science, Michigan State University, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA
Krzysztof J. Pelc*
Affiliation:
Department of Political Science, McGill University, Montreal, Canada
*
*Corresponding author. E-mail: [email protected]

Abstract

What are the consequences of being sued for violating bilateral investment treaties? The conventional wisdom is that investor–state disputes (ISDS) tarnish countries' compliance records, and harm foreign direct investment in the process. This article re-examines this belief in light of recent trends in ISDS. The regime has witnessed a proliferation of claims, a growing proportion of which allege breaches of provisions like fair and equitable treatment and indirect expropriation. Combined with a decrease in the rate of success of such claims, the authors argue that the average ISDS claim now contains less information than it once did. If this is the case, investors should be less likely to update their expectations and reduce investments. This study examines 812 investor–state disputes from 1987 to the present day, and finds consistent evidence for this across two different datasets relating to firms' risk perceptions. Consequences of investor–state claims on foreign direct investment are only apparent in cases that allege direct expropriation. Even among these, the effects are smaller today than they were in the past. In sum, the reputational effects of ISDS claims appear to have been eroded by the developments of the last two decades. ISDS just isn't what it used to be.

Type
Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Aisbett, E, Busse, M and Nunnenkamp, P (2018) Bilateral investment treaties as deterrents of host-country discretion: the impact of investor–state disputes on foreign direct investment in developing countries. Review of World Economics 154(1), 119155.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Allee, T and Peinhardt, C (2011) Contingent credibility: the impact of investment treaty violations on foreign direct investment. International Organization 65(03), 401432.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Andersen, JJ, Fiva, JH and Natvik, GJ (2014) Voting when the stakes are high. Journal of Public Economics 110, 157166.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beugelsdijk, S et al. (2010) Why and how FDI stocks are a biased measure of MNE affiliate activity. Journal of International Business Studies 41(9), 14441459.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blanchard, O and Acalin, J (2016) What Does Measured FDI Actually Measure? Washington, DC: Peterson Institute for International Economics.Google Scholar
Busch, ML and Reinhardt, E (2000) Bargaining in the shadow of the law: early settlement in GATT/WTO disputes. Fordham International Law Journal 24, 158–172.Google Scholar
Damgaard, J and Elkjær, T (2017) The Global FDI Network: Searching for ultimate Investors. Working Paper No. 120. Copenhagen: Danmarks Nationalbank.Google Scholar
De Mestral, A (ed.) (2017) Second Thoughts: Investor State Arbitration Between Developed Democracies. Toronto: McGill-Queen's Press.Google Scholar
Dunning, T and Lundan, S (2008) Multinational Enterprises and the Global Economy. Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar.Google Scholar
Flores, G (2018) Duration of ICSID Proceedings. Deputy Secretary-General, ICSID Inter-sessional Regional Meeting on ISDS Reform.Google Scholar
Fortier, LY and Drymer, SL (2004) Indirect expropriation in the law of international investment: I know it when I see it, or caveat investor. ICSID Review 19(2), 293–227.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gertz, G (2018) Commercial diplomacy and political risk. International Studies Quarterly 62(1), 94107.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gray, J (2018) Reputations Revisited: What do Investor Count as a Credible Commitment? Paper presented at the 2018 Southern Political Science Association Conference, New Orleans, LA.Google Scholar
Hafner-Burton, EM, Puig, S and Victor, DG (2017) Against secrecy: the social cost of international dispute settlement. Yale Journal of International Law 42(2), 279.Google Scholar
Hau, R et al. (2008) The description–experience gap in risky choice: The role of sample size and experienced probabilities. Journal of Behavioral Decision Making 21(5), 493518.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
International Monetary Fund (2003) Foreign Direct Investment Statistics: How Countries Measure FDI. Washington, DC: IMF Press.Google Scholar
Karcher, S and Steinberg, DA (2013) Assessing the causes of capital account liberalization: How measurement matters. International Studies Quarterly 57(1), 128137.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kerner, A (2009) Why should I believe you? The costs and consequences of bilateral investment treaties. International Studies Quarterly 53(1), 73102.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kerner, A (2014) What we talk about when we talk about foreign direct investment. International Studies Quarterly 58(4), 804815.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kerner, A and Lawrence, J (2014) What's the risk? Bilateral investment treaties, political risk and fixed capital accumulation. British Journal of Political Science 44(1), 107121.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kerner, A and Pelc, KJ (2021) Replication data for: Do Investor-State Disputes (Still) Harm FDI?. https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/DHL5UR, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:xrOJHPhvTwaYf8Xa3mYgfA== [fileUNF].CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Koepke, R (2015) Fed policy expectations and portfolio flows to emerging markets (31 July). Available from https://ssrn.com/abstract=2456288 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2456288.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kurtz, J and Nottage, L (2015) Investment treaty arbitration down under: policy and politics in Australia. ICSID Review 30(2), 465480.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mansfield, ED, Milner, HV and Rosendorff, BP (2002) Why democracies cooperate more: electoral control and international trade agreements. International Organization 56(3), 477513.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Parish, MT, Newlson, AK and Rosenberg, CB (2011) Awarding moral damages to respondent states in investment arbitration. Berkeley Journal of International Law 29, 225245.Google Scholar
Pauwelyn, J (2008) Optimal Protection of International Law: Navigating Between European Absolutism and American Voluntarism. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pauwelyn, J. (2014) At the edge of chaos? Foreign investment law as a complex adaptive system, how it emerged and how it can be reformed. ICSID Review 29(2), 372418.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pelc, K (2014) The politics of precedent in international law: a social network application. American Political Science Review 108(3), 547564.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pelc, K (2017) What explains the low success rate of investor–state disputes? International Organization 71(3), 559583.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pelc, KJ and Urpelainen, J (2015) When do international economic agreements allow countries to pay to breach? The Review of International Organizations 10(2), 231264.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Poulsen, LNS and Aisbett, E (2013) When the claim hits: bilateral investment treaties and bounded rational learning. World Politics 65(2), 273313.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Regan, A and Brazys, S (2017) Celtic phoenix or leprechaun economics? The politics of an FDI-led growth model in Europe. New Political Economy, 23:2, 223238.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ripinsky, S and Williams, K (2008) Damages in International Investment Law. London: British Institute of International and Comparative Law.Google Scholar
Schwartz, WF and Sykes, AO (2002) The economic structure of renegotiation and dispute resolution in the world trade organization. The Journal of Legal Studies 31(S1), S179S204.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sharman, JC (2009) The bark is the bite: international organizations and blacklisting. Review of International Political Economy 16(4), 573596.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Simmons, BA and Danner, A (2010) Credible commitments and the international criminal court. International Organization 64(2), 225256.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Simmons, BA (2014) Bargaining over BITs, arbitrating awards: The regime for protection and promotion of international investment. World Politics 66, 1246CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Strezhnev, A (2017) Why Rich Countries Win Investment Disputes: Taking Selection Seriously. Working Paper.Google Scholar
Sutherland, D and Anderson, J (2015) The pitfalls of using foreign direct investment data to measure Chinese multinational enterprise activity. The China Quarterly 221, 2148.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thompson, A, Broude, T and Haftel, YZ (2019) Once bitten, twice shy? Investment disputes, state sovereignty, and change in treaty design. International Organization, 122.Google Scholar
Tørsløv, TR, Wier, LS and Zucman, G (2018) The Missing Profits of Nations (No. w24701). Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
UNCTAD (2009) Investor–State Disputes: Prevention and Alternatives to Arbitration UNCTAD Series on International Investment Policies for Development. Available from https://unctad.org/en/docs/diaeia200911_en.pdf (accessed 24 September 2020).Google Scholar
UNCTAD (2018) IIA Issues Note: Recent Developments in the International Investment Regime. Available from http://investmentpolicyhub.unctad.org/Upload/Documents/IIA-recent-developments-2018.pdf.Google Scholar
UNCTAD (2002) Methods of Data Collection and National Policies in the Treatment of FDI. Available from http://unctad.org/en/Pages/DIAE/Methods-of-Data-Collection-and-National-Policies-in-the-Treatment-of-FDI.aspx.Google Scholar
von Borzyskowski, I and Vabulas, F (2017) The Punishment Phase: IGO Suspensions to Sanction Political Backsliding. Working paper.Google Scholar
Wellhausen, R (2018) International Investment Law and Foreign Direct Reinvestment. Working paper.Google Scholar
Wellhausen, RL (2015) Investor–state disputes: when can governments break contracts? Journal of Conflict Resolution 59(2), 239261.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Supplementary material: Link

Kerner and Pelc Dataset

Link