Monday, October 15, 2012

New Tanzanian Mining Law Requires 50% Local Public Ownership



A new mining law, requiring foreign-owned companies to cede a 50 per cent stake to the public in Tanzania, is threatening to cripple the thriving $500 million Tanzanite gemstone business.  One company, TanzaniteOne, has rejected a demand by the government to relinquish half of its shares to the State Mining Corporation (Stamico), setting the stage for a major dispute.
TanzaniteOne, a multinational listed on the London Stock Exchange, said it could not dispossess its investors of their shares.  Instead, the firm, which extracts Tanzanite in the Mererani Hills, about 40 kilometres southeast of Arusha, offered to offload 20 per cent of its shares through an IPO at the Dar es Salaam Stock Exchange Executive chairman Ami Mpungwe said the firm’s shareholders comprised institutions like pension funds, whose interests could not be taken for granted. They could not be dispossessed of their shares through a “simple announcement.”  But Mr Mpungwe said the company was negotiating a solution with the State.
The new Mining Act of 2010, which became effective this year, requires foreign-owned companies to cede 50 per cent of their stake to the public or lose their mining permit.  The matter is urgent for TanzaniteOne, as its licence expired in August 2012 and the government is threatening not to renew it until the firm surrenders the 50 per cent shares.  Deputy Minister for Energy and Minerals Stephen Masele told The EastAfrican that the firm must relinquish the stake to Stamico as a precondition for renewing its operating licence.  “The company wants the state to buy the shares, but our position is that the firm ought to offload the stocks to Stamico free of charge or else lose the licence,” said Mr Masele.
The new law stipulates that gemstones will be exclusively mined by Tanzanian nationals, unless the mining requires heavy investments and sophisticated technology, where foreign investors will be allowed, but on condition they offload 50 per cent of their shares to the public.  Lusekelo Mwakalukwa TanzaniteOne corporate governance manager told The EastAfrican that the company has invested heavily in its designated mining block and has just started to realise profits.  He adds that the firm has also been paying revenue, including corporate taxes, royalties and other related income to the government.
Increased production
Bernard Olivier, chief executive officer of Richland Resources, which owns TanzaniteOne, says production at the   mine is still rising at a record 2.4 million carats in 2011 with decent grades.  The firm employs 650 people and has paid $26 million in tax over the past five years.C  ash costs per carat are rising too, however, from $1.41 a carat in 2005 to $3.69 in 2010. While the company made a $6 million profit in 2008, today that figure is less than $1 million. Mr Olivier says prices are still 20 per cent below those of 2008.
TanzaniteOne, operating in an eight square km block ‘C’ tanzanite site, planned to produce and export 2.5 million carats worth $24 million in 2012.  Records show that TanzaniteOne has invested over $100 million, but analysts say the company has provided marginal contributions to the communities surrounding its area of operation.  “I don’t see a significant impact of TanzaniteOne’s investment on nearby communities,” said Dr Gasper Mpehongwa, a lecturer in development studies at Tumaini University.  However, records show that TanzaniteOne provides over 2,000 villagers and 4,500 cattle with water at Neisinyai village in Mererani Hills.


Wednesday, May 23, 2012

EAC: U.S. Counters with New Trade Pact


Kenya and other East Africa economies could witness a huge inflow of investment and development support as the US moves to counter the gains made by the EU and surging Asian nations such as China and India. The US said it is crafting a new incentive-laden trade and investment treaty for the East African Community (EAC), which it has identified as a potential hub to host its regional business interests.

The proposed treaty would mark a major shift in America’s engagement with the region, which at present is anchored on a simple Trade and Investment Agreement (TIFA) signed with the EAC in July 2008. The TIFA’s main role is to strengthen the US-EAC trade and investment relationship, expand and diversify bilateral trade, and improve the climate for business between the two blocs. The framework further seeks to bolster partnerships in initiatives such as the African Growth and Opportunity Act, the World Trade Organisation’s Doha Round of negotiations, trade facilitation and skills building.

The US, however, said it was now pursuing a full treaty with the EAC, just six months after China signed a TIFA with the EAC to promote commodity trade, tourism, investment, infrastructure development and training.

“It is great that other parties such as China are looking more to East Africa and that shows the region has huge potential,” said Mr Camunez US Assistant Secretary for Commerce. “We however cannot hide the fact that America is also interested in the region.  ”China is particularly active in the construction and infrastructure development sector in East Africa and has since branched into other key economic areas such as manufacturing. “I’ve witnessed first-hand the skyrocketing level of investment that has come into Kenya from other parts of the world such as China, India, the Gulf region and elsewhere,” he said. “It’s easy to see why American exporters and investors simply must be more fully engaged.”

To claw back America’s influence in East Africa, President Barack Obama’s administration has taken on a fresh campaign to press for new trade and investment partnership with the bloc. “The proposal calls for the negotiation of a regional investment treaty, the creation of trade enhancing agreements in areas such as trade facilitation, and importantly the establishment of a new commercial dialogue that will facilitate engagement between public and private sectors,” the US official said. Mr Camunez said as part of the deal the US will press for good governance in key areas such as procurement and the adoption of asset protection and intellectual property rights enforcement policies. “We are hopeful that our proposed regional trade package will be accepted by Kenya and the greater EAC and we look forward to deepening our engagement here,” he said.

“Kenya is extremely well positioned to capitalise on this momentum. It holds great potential, enormous opportunity and extra ordinary promise and is a critical hub for American companies in Africa and it offers an important platform and hub for doing business in the continent,” Mr Camunez said.

Kenya hosts more than 60 US firms including giants like General Electric, IBM, Citi, Dow Chemicals, farm machinery maker John Deer, Google, Microsoft, Corn Products, General Motors East Africa and Coca-Cola.  An audit by consultancy firm, Ernest & Young showed that the US was the highest source of new foreign direct investment into projects in Kenya between 2003 and last year.

This move by the US is not surprising. Apart from the EAC-China agreement, we should not forget the EAC EPA with the EU which was initialled, remains unsigned and is still yet to be concluded.

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

EAC Stockbrokers Adopt Compulsory Certification Training

Both the East African Securities Regulatory Authorities (EASRA) and the East African Stock Exchanges Association (EASEA) have agreed that professional Capital Market employees will be required to take a certification course, whose curriculum the two bodies have agreed on. The certification aims to standardise qualification requirements for key market activities in the EAC such as trading, asset management, and investment banking. Since certification is being implemented at a regional level, it should be standardised and ideally recognised globally, which allows a graduate to work anywhere. In this regard, the EAC Common Market Protocol under Part D on Free Movement of Persons and Labour, provides provisions on Harmonisation and Mutual Recognition of Academic and Professional Qualifications (Article 11) and hence an advantage of the certification training is that certified staff in the EAC can work in other EAC stock exchanges.

This is also important because the EAC Common Market Protocol (CMP) provides for the Free Movement of Capital in Part G Articles 24-28. Certification is therefore also important with regard to regional integration and capital account liberalisation. The CMP provisions provide for the elimination of Restrictions on the Free Movement of Of Capital which are reflected in Annex VI (Schedule on the Removal of Restrictions on the Free Movement of Capital). The Schedule contains commitments in equity and portfolio investments, bank transactions, repatriation of proceeds from sale of assets and other transfers and payments relating to investment flows.

Formal certification procedures will also help the market players to have a clear understanding of market regulations and the requisite qualifications to perform their responsibilities. It is acknowledged that a lack of properly qualified staff and fraudulent trading of customers’ shares was blamed for the collapse of Kenyan stock brokerage firms between 2007 and 2010.

Scheduled courses under the programme include fundamental securities, market participants training, officers and directors course. The certification course was agreed upon during an EASRA consultative meeting that was held in Bujumbura, Burundi, in March however, rules on frequency of training, examinations and those to be exempted based on other courses taken are yet to be finalised.

There are, however, other programmes in the region that have been running on a voluntary basis and without certification such as those run by the Securities Industry Training Institute, which is based in Kampala.

The most outstanding achievement in terms of EAC capital markets integration so far has been the cross listing initiative that has made it possible for seven, five and three companies to cross list from the NSE to the USE, DSE and RSE respectively. A road map for the integration of the EAC capital markets has also been developed to guide the integration process in the EAC capital markets industry in light of the EAC Common Market Protocol and in preparation for the proposed East African Monetary Union.



Related information can be found on Business Day

EAC Common Revenue Management Model


Traders have blamed payment of taxes at every border point for increased cost of doing business. Border delays and the absence of laws to settle disputes and promote integration have also been cited as hindrances to the opening up of trade in East Africa. 

Well thats about to change.
The East African Community (EAC) 5 Heads of State have endorsed a revenue management model where tax will only be collected at the point of entry and imported goods transported to the final destination without stopping at national border points for customs charges or inspection. 
This approach is similar to that used in the South African Customs Union.
The decision raises hope for a speedy formation of a regional customs authority that would handle the smooth flow of goods across borders — handing traders an opportunity to save up to 15 per cent in extra transit costs that come with delays.
“The Summit adopted in principle the destination model of clearance of goods where assessment and collection of revenue is at the first point of entry and revenues are remitted to the destination partner states subject to the fulfilment of key pre-conditions to be developed by the high level task force,” the heads of state said in a communiqué at the end of a recent regional summit in Arusha.
Though the EAC launched its customs union in January 2010, disagreement over collection and sharing of revenue has frustrated efforts to establish a regional customs authority, slowing down cross-border trade. “We hope the decision brings some change this time by ending the controversy that has been with us for three years now,” Peter Njenga, a logistics officer said.
Kenya has been particularly reluctant to adopt the model that would see the Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) lose control of close to 35 per cent of its present annual collections. Some member states want the revenue be used to finance projects of common interest such as roads or power generation.
However, Kenya has further hardened its position as it would mean losing a large proportion of tax collection at a time when it faces huge budgetary challenges as it implements the new constitution.
In Nairobi, opposition to a regional customs authority has also come from the port of Mombasa, a key entry point, with Kenya Ports Authority maintaining that extending the facility’s function to include collecting customs revenues will further delay the discharge of cargo given the current levels of congestion.
The setting up of a common revenue authority for the EAC has also been delayed due to the fact that Burundi had not fully emerged from the ravages of a civil war and required time to set up sound national institutions to manage public finances.  For instance in 2008, just one year after it joined EAC, Burundi became the only country in the region to ever report loss of revenue from free movement of goods under the customs union protocol.
This position has since changed with the Burundian President Pierre Nkurunziza recently saying the country is ready for higher stages of integration after hiring the services of Trade Mark East Africa (TMEA) to set up new revenue administration institution—Office Burundais des Recettes.

South Africa's Skills Shortage Dilemma

There is no doubt that the conundrum of an acute skills shortage alongside mass unemployment constitutes the most critical issue threatening the future of South Africa. This year the country has recorded a growth rate of 2.7% and the unemployment rate is about 33%, including those who have given up looking for work. Seventy percent of those unemployed are said to be under the age of 35. A woman leaving school in Limpopo stands a one in eight chance of ever getting a job. 

The skills shortage and high unemployment interact with each other in a devastating way. It is insightful to note that SA’s key problem is how it is going to maintain the growth rate it needs to feed its growing population. SA won’t be able to use the method employed by the Southeast Asian ‘tigers’ of using cheap labour to undercut its export competitors while it grows its economy and expands its skills base, because its labour unions will prevent that.

One solution is to develop a skills-training model based on systems that have been used for years in Germany, Switzerland and several Scandinavian countries. This would involve not only vastly improving the education system but also integrating it with a system of apprenticeships. 

The essence of the German education system is that it is channelled into different streams. There are three streams, actually, but for our purposes we need focus only on two — an academic and a vocational stream. Students should be given a choice, after passing, say, grade 9 or 10, whether they want to continue in the academic stream and go on to university, or learn a vocational skill through an apprenticeship programme. 

Those who drop out of high school earlier should also have the opportunity of entering an apprenticeship course. 

These apprenticeships should be wide-ranging, from becoming a skilled baker or hairdresser, to a motor mechanic, a construction worker or an electrician. A student deciding to enter an apprenticeship must find an employer who will take him or her on to train for the career the individual has chosen — which is usually three years. 

During that time, the student will spend part of his time gaining practical on-the-job experience working for the employer, and part of it attending classes at a vocational school. The classes will focus mainly on the technical side of the job; the shop-floor work on the practical side. Running records have to be kept by both the employer and the vocational school instructors so that the training can be co-ordinated. 

The apprentices are paid a small salary throughout the apprenticeship period, which usually goes up a little each year as their skills advance. At the end, they have to write an exam run by the Chamber of Commerce and Industry. When they pass that they are qualified as a skilled professional in the chosen work category — and receive a certificate testifying to that. 

School-leavers in SA today have no craft certification of any sort, which makes getting that critical first-time job in the face of sceptical employers faced with labour regulation requirements cruelly difficult. 

However salary is the thing that troubles the trade unions. 

But the suggestion of how to get around this political problem is to enact a law establishing that the apprenticeship period falls under the Department of Education, not the Department of Labour. 

The Congress of South African Trade Unions actually recognises the need for on-the-job training at lower pay, but it has become so entrenched in its commitment to the principle of "decent work" that it can’t lose face by backing off from it. 

Classifying an apprenticeship as part of an individual’s education may be a way around that difficulty, because the labour regulations could remain unchanged and become applicable to the apprentice only after he has graduated from his apprenticeship. 

A further advantage of the German system is that, after successfully completing a full apprenticeship course, a student can continue at the vocational school for another year or two to acquire higher certification as a "master" baker, mechanic or whatever, which rates as the equivalent of matric — thus opening the way to go to university and, beyond that, to a graduate school of business for an MBA. 

SA's graduates would then be able to seek a job in management with the special advantage of knowing what life is like for workers on the shop floor and earning their respect in turn for having that knowledge. 

Flexibility is the essence of any such system, so that German students from the academic stream can also switch to become apprentices after passing matric if they so wish, enabling them to follow the same route to a job in management. 

SA is going to need skilled workers every bit as much as she needs to reduce the unemployment rate. 

Original Article by Allister Sparks: Business Day

Friday, April 27, 2012

Geographical Indications Bill Kenya

Business Daily reports that Kenya's Industrialization Ministry along with the Kenya Industrial Property Institute (KIPI) are currently reviewing the Geographical Indications Bill (GI) which will provide a legal framework for safeguarding products like tea, coffee, and handicraft by expressly attributing them a sign or appellation of origin.

A geographical indication is a sign used on goods that have a specific geographical origin and possess qualities, reputation or characteristics that are essentially attributable to that place of origin. Most commonly, geographical indications include the name of the place of origin of the goods such as agricultural products which typically have qualities that derive from their place of growth/production and are also influenced by specific local factors, such as climate and soil. Geographical indications may be used for a wide variety of products, whether natural, agricultural or manufactured.
Meanwhile an appellation of origin is a special kind of geographical indication. It generally consists of a geographical name or a traditional designation used on products which have a specific quality or characteristics that are essentially due to the geographical environment in which they are produced.  The concept of a geographical indication encompasses appellations of origin.

Whether a sign is recognized as a geographical indication is a matter of national law and as such geographical indications are protected in accordance with international treaties and national laws under a wide range of concepts, including trademark laws in the form of collective marks or certification marks, laws against unfair competition, consumer protection laws, or specific laws or decrees that recognize individual GIs.

The GI Bill is expected to help certify Kenyan products and market them exclusively in the speciality market, a strategy that will help distinguish Kenyan goods from those of other countries.  The likely scenarios once the Bill is enacted include marketing of origin-specific Kenyan exports such as Kericho tea, Mt Kenya coffee, Maasai jewellery, and Kisii soapstone carvings.
The draft GI Bill also proposes that producers and regulatory firms can apply to be custodians of a location specific trademark. Thus, the Kenya Tea Development Agency may apply to register tea variety trademarks.  Certification trademark of Kenyan products will avoid situations where foreign parties attempt to register such goods in other countries.
GI's are protected at the international level through a number of treaties mostly administered by World Intellectual Property Organization WIPO which provides for the protection of geographical indications, most notably the Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property of 1883, and the Lisbon Agreement for the Protection of Appellations of Origin and Their International Registration. In addition, Articles 22 to 24 of the WTO Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) deals with the international protection of geographical indications within the framework of the World Trade Organization (WTO).

Meanwhile Article 43 of the EAC Common Market Protocol has provisions on co-operation in Intellectual Property Rights of which geographical indications are included (Art 43.2(f)).

Friday, April 20, 2012

New Database On Global Value Supply Chains

The European Union has launched the new "World Input-Output Database" which allows trade analysts to assess the global value chains created by world trade. These added-value chains have become an essential feature of economic reality as trade is becoming increasingly globalised as today's traded products are not produced in a single location but rather are the end result of a series of steps carried out in many countries around the world. Instead of counting the gross value of goods and services exchanged, the new database reveals the value added embodied in these goods and services as they are traded internationally. The findings are significant as they change the perception of the competitiveness of certain sectors in some countries. 

In addition, policy makers and societies at large are facing increasingly pressing trade-offs between socio-economic and environmental developments. Increases in production induce growth in the use of non-renewable resources such as fossil fuels, materials, land and water. Furthermore, they generate higher levels of waste and emissions of environmental pollutants. Simultaneously, increasing global integration through international trade and technological developments creates a tension. In this regard, the database considers satellite accounts with environmental and socio-economic indicators, from which industry-level data can provide the necessary input to several types of models used to evaluate policies aimed at striking a suitable balance between growth, environmental degradation and inequality across the world.

Karel De Gucht, the EU commissioner for trade has said that the change in statistical accounting for trade applied in the database has been developed to determine the consequences of the fragmentation of supply chains. For example a third of world trade happens within firms while two thirds of European imports are not of final products but of intermediate goods and raw materials, to which EU firms add one or more layers of value before they are finally sold, often for export.  The EU trade commissioner gave the example of a Nokia smartphone, "it is listed as being made in China, but in reality 54% of its value comes from tasks that are carried out in Europe. Key components are produced in other parts of Asia and only the assembly itself actually happens in China.  Today, we measure trade by counting the total price of the good that is being exported or imported, but because we do this both for components and for final products we get a distorted picture of what is really happening.  Hence according to the database, when we look at trade in value as opposed to traditional statistics, EU trade deficit with China is reduced by 36%. In 2011, the trade deficit between the EU and China stood at EUR155.9 billion however using this new method China-EU deficit starts to look like less of a problem."

On services, interestingly when looking at trade in supply chain terms,  the classic distinction in trade policy between goods and services is increasingly artificial. This is because services represents almost 60% of the value European firms add to the products exported from Europe. 

The database covers 27 EU countries and 13 other major countries in the world for the period from 1995 to 2009. It is notable that not a single African country is included in the database which possibly says something about Africa's non-participation or rather minuscule contribution to global supply chains. In addition, all BRICS economies are included in the database with the notable exception of South Africa.  One wonders why the EU wants African countries to eliminate export taxes (under the EPAs) when in essence the contribution of African exports to global trade and supply chains is too insignificant to be in included in the database.

African countries generally export largely raw materials (e.g fuels, metals) and some agricultural products to the EU and generally lack capacity to add value domestically especially for manufactured products. Other supply capacity barriers to Africa's participation in global value chains include limited foreign ownership and lack of global networks which are a significant factor in characterizing the intensity of global exports but not necessarily for regional exports. The lack of technological advancement is also a significant barrier especially in global exports. Public infrastructure constraints, such as inferior power services and customs delays, seem to have more immediate impacts on regional exports as does customs efficiency and poor trade facilitation which is also hampers the competitive participation of African producers in global supply chain industries. 

In a related article, we saw that China overcame similar challenges by exploiting joint ventures.  China allowed foreign firms access to the domestic market in exchange for technology transfer through joint production or joint ventures. In fact, 100% foreign owned firms were a rarity among the leading players in the industry in China, unlike Export Processing Zones in Africa. China’s openness to foreign investment and its willingness to create Special Economic Zones (SEZs) where foreign producers could operate with good infrastructure and with minimum hassles must therefore receive considerable credit. However if China  welcomed foreign companies, she always did so with the objective of fostering domestic capabilities.

Thursday, April 5, 2012

EAC/EABC Monitoring of NTBs

The EAC in collaboration with EABC has developed the Non Tariff Barriers (NTBs) mechanism as envisaged in Article 13 of the EAC Customs Union Protocol. The mechanism provided for the establishment of the National Monitoring Committees in the Partner States and the Regional Forum on NTBs to assist in identifying, monitoring and the elimination of NTBs.  The mechanism is also replicated at a Tripartite level in the COMESA-EAC SADC NTB Monitoring Database. 

Currently the EAC has undertaken a study on the development of a legally binding enforcement mechanism based on international best practice for elimination of NTBs in the region.  The study is expected to analyse the effectiveness of the EAC mechanism on identifying, monitoring and elimination of NTBs as per the EAC Time Bound Programme.  The study is also expected to categorize NTBs into categories to be subjected to legally binding enforcement mechanisms based on proposed criteria and propose NTBs to be arbitrated by the East African Court of Justice.  Hence a key outcome of the study will be proposals to strengthen the EAC Mechanism through introduction of legal enforcement clauses in the current system.

In addition, EAC is coordinating preparation of an EAC position on the elimination Non-Tariff Barriers under the on-going negotiations for the Tripartite Free Trade Area to ensure that the issue of elimination NTBs in the FTA is well articulated.  In this respect the monitoring of services barriers should be included, which will expand on the approach which currently lends itself mainly to trade facilitation issues.

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Role of the Bank of Industry in Nigeria's Industrialization

Nigeria's Trade Policy Reforms


Bilateral Investment Treaties Entered Into by EAC States

EAC Partner States have entered into various Bilateral Investment Treaties (BITs) some of which are in force. This information is based on the UNCTAD Investment Database and it is noted that some of the BITs may no longer be in force. Hence for most current updates it is best to contact the Partner States themselves.  

Burundi has 5 BITs, Kenya 3 BITs (all EU), Rwanda 3 BITs, Tanzania 9 BITs (all European Economic Area (EEA) while Uganda has the most at 13 of which 8 are with EEA countries.  

As indicated most of the BITs are with EU countries notably Germany, UK, Belgium and the Netherlands.  Of the 34 BITs identified, 25 are with the EU region (almost 75%). Rwanda is the only country with a BIT with the US. Uganda has BITs  with other African countries e.g. Mozambique, Egypt, Sudan and Eritrea and is the only country with a BIT with China.  Burundi is indicated as having BITs with Mauritius and Comoros.

Below is an overall compilation of the BITs and the Parties. 

Burundi: Belgium, Germany, Mauritius, UK, Comoros and Netherlands
Kenya: Germany, UK, Netherlands
Rwanda: Belgium, Germany, US
Tanzania: Denmark, Switzerland, UK, Belgium, Finland, Germany, Italy, Netherlands, Sweden
Uganda: Denmark, Egypt, France, Netherlands, Switzerland, UK, Sweden, Germany, Belgium, Mozambique, Sudan, Eritrea, China

On global trends, its useful to note that the US and Germany are the top home sources of outflows of FDI while the US and China are the top host destinations for inflows of FDI (2010 data). Meanwhile the EAC and the US have concluded a Trade and Investment Framework Agreement which is a cooperative agreement. However, as a region, the EU is the world's leading host of FDI as well as the world's biggest source of FDI outside the EU. Consequently, the EU Member States together account for almost half of the investment agreements currently in force around the world (almost 1300).  See previous related post here on the new EU approach to investment and the EPA investment negotiations.

While international investment agreements have traditionally been negotiated by the relevant government ministry, there is now an emerging trend of inter-ministerial or inter-agency coordination. This process is particularly prominent at the European level and in EU member States. To the extent that countries are reviewing their BITs or that BITs need to undergo domestic ratification processes, the call for increasing transparency and inclusiveness of BIT-related decision-making is gaining additional traction.  Sectoral investment agreements are also a viable option where there is compelling justification to consider a BIT however using a more targeted and conservative approach.

Sunday, April 1, 2012

Rwanda-US Bilateral Investment Treaty and the EAC Common Market Protocol

The Rwanda-US Bilateral Investment Treaty (BIT) was signed in Kigali in 2008 and the United States Senate unanimously approved the treaty on September 26, 2011. Meanwhile, the EAC-US Trade and Investment Framework Agreement (TIFA) was signed in July 2008 between USTR and the EAC.  In addition, the EAC Common Market Protocol (CMP) to which Rwanda is a member came into force into force on 1st July 2010. 


The Rwanda-US BIT is the first to be concluded between the US and a sub-Saharan African country since 1998 (when a BIT was signed with Mozambique). Although there are over 40 BITs in force to which the US is a Party, this Treaty with Rwanda is only the second concluded on the basis of the ambitious 2004 U.S. model BIT. Other African countries with BITs currently in force with the US include: DRC, The Congo, Morocco, Senegal, Egypt, Cameroon and Tunisia. The BIT with Rwanda will remain in force for ten years after its entry into force and will continue in force unless terminated by a Party by providing one year’s advance notice to the other Party. 

The BIT provides investors with legal protections which include non-discriminatory treatment of investors and investments and the right to freely transfer investment-related funds.  Unlike the EAC CMP however, the BIT also provides for prompt, adequate, and effective compensation in the event of an expropriation; freedom from specified performance requirements, such as domestic content or technology transfer requirements; and provisions to ensure transparency in governance. The BIT also gives investors in all sectors the right to bring investment disputes to neutral international arbitration panels.  

In comparison, EAC CMP Article 29 on the Protection of Cross-Border Investments, undertakes to protect investors and their returns in a non-discriminatory manner however the modalities for doing so are not yet finalised. Article 29:3 proposes that within 2 years after the coming into force of the CMP, Partner States will take measures to ensure necessary protections in the Community.


In contrast, the EAC-US TIFA establishes a EAC-US Council On Trade and Investment to monitor trade, identify and remove impediments to trade and investment.

The BIT contains provisions on National Treatment and Most-Favoured-Nation Treatment whereby it protects investors of a Party and their covered investments from discriminatory measures by the other Party during the full life-cycle of an investment, including the establishment phase. Each Party commits to provide to investors of the other Party and to their covered investments treatment no less favorable than that which it provides, in like circumstances, to its own investors (National Treatment) or to investors from any third country and their investments (MFN Treatment). In this instance, Rwanda has committed in the BIT to give US investors similar treatment it is providing to EAC Partner States, in like circumstances, under the Common Market Protocol. 

In contrast however, the EAC CMP Article 13 on the Right of Establishment, EAC States have committed to the principle of MFN but not the principle of National Treatment. However in Article 16 on the Free Movement of Services, the principles of MFN and National Treatment are addressed. Hence National Treatment is applicable in the EAC CMP for investment in the services sectors but seemingly not investment in industrial sectors e.g. agriculture, manufacturing, hunting, and forestry, mining and quarrying, energy production/transmission and distribution. 

On Transfers, the BIT has free transfer obligations which require that a Party permit capital and other transfers related to an investment be made freely both into and out of its territory. Additionally, a Party must permit transfers to be made in a ‘‘freely usable currency,’’ as designated by the IMF, at the market rate prevailing at the time of the transfer. Parties may however prevent transfers through the equitable and non-discriminatory application of certain laws. The EAC CMP on the other hand has provisions on the Free Movement of Capital Articles 24-28 which corresponds to the CMP Schedule on the Removal of Restrictions on Free Movement of Capital (Annex VI).

On Performance Requirements, the BIT prohibits the imposition by the Parties of several requirements relating to the performance of investments, including a requirement to achieve a given level of exports or domestic content or requirements linking the value of imports or domestic sales by an investment to the level of its export or foreign exchange earnings. The Article also prohibits Parties from offering advantages, such as tax holidays, in exchange for a more limited set of performance requirements. In the WTO context, the Agreement on Trade Related Investment Measures (TRIMS) takes a similar prohibitive approach however only in the context of trade in goods. 

So as not to place U.S. and Rwandan investors at a competitive disadvantage, the disciplines on performance requirements also apply to all investments in the territory (non-discrimination) of a Party, including those owned or controlled by host-country investors (domestic investors) and those owned by non-Parties. The EAC CMP does not impose performance requirements however it would seem that by virtue of the BIT, Rwanda cannot impose such measures even in the services sectors vis a vie any third Party. In practice, Rwanda may want as a policy to impose some performance requirements e.g. the technology transfer in targeted sectors, vis a vie more developed countries and justifiably so, in order to meet key development objectives.  This provision is therefore not in the interest of Rwanda given her level of development. It should be mentioned that the development of China is linked to performance requirements (local content) the Chinese government put in place for foreign investors. See related piece here. Fortunately however Rwanda has exempted performance requirements in her Annex II on non conforming measures (discussed below).

On Senior Management and Boards of Directors, the BIT prohibits measures requiring that persons of any particular nationality be appointed to senior management positions in a covered investment. A Party may require that a majority of the board of directors of a covered investment be of a particular nationality, or that a director be a resident of the host country, so long as such requirements do not materially impair an investor’s control over its investment. This provision would prevent Rwanda from implementing broad-based local empowerment policy to foster development of its own nationals into senior management positions and fortunately Rwanda exempted this in her list of non conforming measures (discussed below). Meanwhile in this context, the EAC CMP does not discipline the composition of Boards of Directors and the nationality of Senior Management by virtue of the principles of free movement of workers and right of establishment. The CMP only requires that juridical persons be established in accordance with the national laws of a Partner State.  

In the Publication of Laws and Decisions the provisions in the BIT seek to promote transparency in the legal framework governing investment. It requires the Parties to ensure that laws, regulations, procedures, administrative rulings of general application, and adjudicatory decisions that relate to any matter covered by the Treaty are promptly published or otherwise made publicly available. The EAC CMP contains a mildly similar provision in the Free Movement of Services chapter Article 19 whereby notification is required but not publication and the notification only applies after the introduction of the measure. 

In the BIT, each Party is obligated, to the extent possible, to publish in advance any laws, regulations, procedures, or administrative rulings of general application with respect to matters covered by the Treaty that the Party proposes to adopt, and to provide interested persons and the other Party a reasonable opportunity to comment on the proposed measures. In the EAC CMP, provisions on advance publication and comments are not addressed.  In practice this means that the US would have the opportunity to view, comment  and make recommendations in advance, on Rwanda's proposed laws and regulations however EAC Partner States would not.


On the rules of origin (Denial of Benefits) the BIT establishes that a Party may deny the benefits of the Treaty to an investor of the other Party if persons of a third country own or control the enterprise and the denying Party either (1) has no diplomatic relations with the third country; or (2) adopts or maintains measures, such as foreign policy sanctions, with respect to the third country or to a person of the third country that prohibit transactions with the enterprise or that would be violated or circumvented if the benefits of the Treaty were accorded to the enterprise or to its investments. This provision impacts on third Parties that are on sanctioned lists of either Party.

The provisions on Denial of Benefits also establishes that a Party may deny the benefits of the Treaty to an investor of the other Party if the enterprise has no substantial business activities in the territory of the other Party and persons of a third country, or of the denying Party, own or control the enterprise. 

The Agreement also lists Non-Conforming Measures (equivalent to negative lists) and in these Annexes, each Party lists existing measures to which any or all of four key obligations of the Treaty do not apply, and sectors or activities in which each Party reserves the right to adopt future measures to which any or all of those obligations will not apply. Annex III of the BIT is reserved for financial services NCMs. 

Annex I:


Rwanda: Exemption from MFN and National treatment in all sectors to allow for differential minimum capital requirements for investment registration. Here Rwanda identifies "local investors" to include Rwandese and COMESA investors who are entitled to a lower capital threshold (USD 100,000) than "foreign investors" (USD 250,000). While EAC is not mentioned in the BIT given the common market was not yet in place, one can argue that the EAC falls in the "local investor" category since the common market is technically working towards a single market.

United States: Atomic Energy; Mining; Air Transportation; Customs Brokers; Radiocommunications Licenses; and restrictions on securities registration and OPIC insurance eligibility. 

Annex II 

Rwanda: Preferences for socially or economically disadvantaged communities and differential treatment pursuant to existing international treaties. Here Rwanda reserves the right to adopt  measures in all sectors that are not consistent with the provisions on National Treatment, Performance Requirements and Senior Management and Boards of Directors in order to accord rights or preferences to socially or economically disadvantaged communities. 


Rwanda also reserves the right in all sectors to deviate from MFN provisions in order to adopt or maintain any measure that accord differential treatment to countries under any bilateral or multilateral international agreement in force or signed before the BIT. For agreements signed or in force after the date of entry into force of BIT, Rwanda reserved the right to deviate from MFN treatment with regard to: (a) aviation; (b) fisheries; and (c) telecommunications.  

United States: Radio/Satellite Communications, Cable Television, Social Services, Minority Affairs, measures relating to U.S.-flagged maritime vessels, and differential treatment pursuant to existing international treaties. 

Annex III 

Rwanda: On insurance, Rwanda states that the entry shall cease to have effect on the earlier of: (i) the date that Rwanda enacts an insurance law that eliminates the non-conforming aspects of the measure as set forth above;' or (ii) September 1, 2009.

United States: Financial Services/Banking, Insurance, and general Financial Services. 

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Overall the US has more detailed sector specific Non Conforming Measures than Rwanda especially in the services sectors (transport (maritime, aviation), communication (audio visual, telecom), financial services (banking, insurance and other financial services). However Rwanda also made useful exemptions but at a sectoral level made general carve-outs in insurance, aviation, telecommunications and fisheries.  

The key take away from this comparison is the Rwanda-US BIT is highly asymmetrical and is more ambitious than the EAC CMP. Theoretically it can prejudice the regional processes given its objectives of MFN, National Treatment, Dispute Settlement (including Expropriation, Compensation), Intrusion in Law Making Processes (governance) and broad-based elimination of: performance requirements, empowerment measures including elimination of legitimate development oriented requirements for foreign investment and repatriation. 


Whether such comprehensive coverage is desirable for African countries is an important question, the answer to which is highly context- and situation-specific, and needs to be assessed against the overall objective of ensuring that investment treaties promote investment that actually exists or has the compelling potential to exist and that fosters sustainable development. The propensities to invest and hence the need for protection through an ambitious BIT is an important consideration before signing BITs as such needs may change over time. In closing its important to note that several countries receiving high FDI receipts in Africa e.g. Angola, Sudan have very few BITs and in a previous post we found that strict FDI provisions in BITs do not increase investment.

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

National Treatment and Kenya's Land Reform Following the New Constitution

Kenya has over time proved to be the preferred investment point in the East African region due to its strategic location and free market economy which places no significant restriction on the movement of foreign currency in and out of the market.  However there is one important change to the investment environment since the promulgation of the new Constitution of Kenya (the 'Constitution') found in Chapter Five Part 1 on Land and Environment.

The Constitution was brought into law on August 27 2010 and inter alia sets the reform agenda for better governance. In general the new Constitution will lead to the creation of new institutions that will promote good governance and in turn boost investor confidence. 

However, in one aspect, the Constitution contains articles that now limit the period that a foreigner may hold land to 99 years (Article 65 (1). This includes any company which has any element of foreign shareholding.  The Constitution also provides that any interest in land that is currently held by foreigners which is in excess of 99 years will have the term reduced to 99 years and freehold land will be converted to 99 years leasehold interest (Article 65(2)). Investors have indicated to Government that limiting the interest period to 99 years will not be conducive to foreign investors looking to invest in Kenya. There is also no provision for compensation to foreigners in the Constitution. The Constitution gives Parliament a time frame of eighteen months for the enactment of legislation relating to land and it will be interesting to see the impact the legislation will have on the business environment.

In the WTO Trade in Services context, Kenya made horizontal commitments in the Uruguay Round on market access in Mode 3 requiring that for commercial presence investors should establish their business locally.  There are however no horizontal limitations on national treatment to which limitations on foreign ownership of land would be reflected. In the sectors where Kenya has undertaken specific commitments, Telecommunications services, Financial services (including banking and insurance), Tourism & Travel related services and Transport services (air and road), mode 3 national treatment commitments are in some cases left unbound. However in the hotels and restaurants category, arguably a sub sector to which land is a determinant, Kenya has completely liberalised mode 3 both in the WTO GATs context and the EAC Common Market Services Schedule (Annex V).

Additionally, in the EAC Common Market Protocol, Article 13 on the Right of Establishment and Article 14 on the Right of Residence are relevant to the land question.  To the extent that they relate to access to and use of land premises, these provisions are subject to Article 15 which provides that land issues shall be governed by the national policies and laws of Partner States. Hence even in the common market, one could say that national treatment has not been extended to the land issue especially as it relates to establishment (investment).  

Thursday, March 8, 2012

Bileateral Investment Treaties (BITs) Coming Back To Bite

Published by TIA

See related blog post on ICSID

African governments once rushed into signing Bilateral Investment Treaties (BITs) to encourage FDI. Lawyers are however now calling for new models.

With much of Africa’s investment coming from abroad, how governments manage complaints from foreign companies is a vital determinant of the business environment. For decades, foreign investors depended on diplomatic protection from home governments in their overseas adventures, which occasionally gave rise to “gunboat diplomacy”. The US, for example, sent troops into Latin America 34 times to settle commercial disputes.

Since the 1960s, and spiking in the 1990s, a more formal investment approach was attempted in the form of bilateral investment treaties (BITs). These state-to-state agreements establish how governments handle investors from each other’s country, covering fair and equitable treatment, security, and compensation for expropriation, in assets but also, in some cases, in shares, stocks, bonds and other modalities. While BITs infringe sovereignty, in that disputes are settled in international tribunals and not domestic courts, many developing countries saw them as a way of signalling their attractiveness for foreign investment.

The number of treaties has grown exponentially, to around 2,500 today. The number of claims is growing too. Philip Morris, Total, Mobil, Shell, Siemens and Cargill have all taken states to arbitration, with Sri Lanka suffering the first award against a developing country in 1990. Twenty-six percent of new claims in 2010 had an African or Middle Eastern state party involved. In Africa, Zimbabwe, Tanzania, Namibia, Liberia, Algeria and Senegal have all faced actions. There are likely to be more disputes in areas such as mining, water and agriculture, according to Mahnaz Malik, an investment arbitration lawyer at the Chambers of Arthur Marriott QC at 12 Gray’s Inn Square. She warns that events such as the Arab Spring can generate a flood of claims.

But so far, South Africa is arguably the most prominent in the African context. Pretoria signed 30 BITs post-1994 to attract private investment. The new government had inherited a society that was among the most unequal in the world, where the vast majority of black South Africans had been excluded from meaningful economic activity under apartheid. As part of a set of initiatives to redress this inheritance and to meet the government’s constitutional obligation to create a more open and equitable society based on human rights, Black Economic Empowerment (BEE) programmes were initiated.

In 2007, a group of investors from Italy and Luxembourg filed a claim at the Convention of the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID), arguing that South Africa’s 2002 Minerals and Petroleum Resources Development Act (MPRDA) contained provisions that amounted to expropriation of their mineral rights, thus violating the BITs South Africa had signed with both countries. The MPRDA, a separate piece of legislation from BEE that aims to transform the minerals industry in South Africa, requires that holders of mineral rights undertake equity or equity-equivalent obligations; requirements emerging from consultations between the government and relevant parties, including representatives of the claimants. The South African government defended the MPRDA by arguing that it protected existing mineral rights and allowed for their uninterrupted use so long as companies also met the government’s wider transformational obligations in some accepted combination. In a punitive judgment, the Icsid tribunal dismissed the claimant’s case, ordered them to pay the legal costs of the South African government, and prevented claimants from bringing any such action again in future.

On the basis of similar reviews conducted internationally, notably, in the US, Norway, and certain Latin American states, South Africa launched a lengthy BIT review, the conclusion of which is that the country will not enter any new treaties unless there are “compelling economic reasons”, says Xavier Carim, deputy director general of the international trade and economic development division of South Africa’s Department of Trade and Industry. “The very fact that narrow, shortsighted commercial interests can subject progressive and laudable government policies to international arbitration, the outcomes of which are unpredictable, creates unacceptable risks that can have a chilling impact on legitimate public policy making,” he says, noting that there have been inconsistencies in the rulings taken by tribunals over similar cases.

It would be simplistic to characterise BITs as simply giving rise to clashes between progressive government policy and corporate interests. In some cases, such as a SOABI v. Senegal dispute, the problem was a largely technical disagreement over terms and conditions of a low cost housing programme.

In Zimbabwe, cases have been brought in objection to the ruling Zanu-PF party’s arbitrary and at times violent land reform programme. Broad and ambiguous terms have been a central problem of many agreements, says Jansen Calamita, senior research fellow in international trade and investment law at the British Institute of Comparative and International Law. “BITs are an agreement by the host state to accept the application of external standards to determine the legality of its actions – standards above and beyond the state’s constitution and national law. If the standards agreed are not clear – as they largely are not – it will be left to tribunals to give meaning and effect to those standards.”

Some lawyers believe the first wave of BITs were signed too fast, with text penned by a closely-knit group of Western lawyers. The majority of BITs reflect the texts developed to promote the 1960s anti-communist, post-decolonisation protection agenda for European investors, says Ms Malik. She believes capacity to understand complex investment law issues is not always present in developing country negotiators. She notes that the imbalance becomes more acute as negotiations are often based on the developed country’s model. In a speech at the London School of Economics, Randall Williams of the South African Trade Department claimed to have seen negotiators making agreements without the presence of a lawyer.

Latin American governments have come out strongly in opposition to prevailing norms. In 2009, Ecuador’s vice minister of foreign affairs, Lautaro Pozo, said BITs reflected a “fifty year old ideology” and that many countries signed them without sufficient understanding of their implications. BITs did not, in his reckoning, reflect the objectives of developing states, especially on issues of the environment and human rights.

In one case, Philip Morris tried to sue Uruguay for copyright infringement when it ruled that cigarette packets needed to carry health warnings. Bolivian President Evo Morales claims that international arbitration offends state sovereignty, with Bolivia, Ecuador and most recently Venezuela denouncing Icsid, the Washington-based arbitration body, part of the World Bank Group, which settles nearly half of claims. India and Mexico have both refused to be party to the Icsid Convention, and Brazil has not ratified any BITs.

Others are more upbeat. “I think the backlash against investment treaties is overstated,” says Anthony Sinclair, a partner at law firm Allen & Overy. “Countries continue to sign these treaties at a rate of about 50 a year.” Mr Sinclair acknowledges there is “fine-tuning and recalibrating” of text, especially in terms of public interest regulation. “At the same time, countries are in search of growth, for which foreign investment is key.”

There is no credible analysis proving the effect of BITs on investment, which would be very hard to quantify. Furthermore, BITs are not the sole determinant of investment. China is a prolific signatory, but continues to invest in countries without BITs – in contrast to Germany, where risk insurance is only issued to companies if they are operating in a country with a German treaty. Yet whenever governments and investors are discussing major cross-border investment, “everybody” on both sides is talking about investment treaties, Mr Sinclair claims.

The focus on treaties should not draw attention away from domestic reforms which could lessen the investment risk. Guinea-Bissau has undertaken domestic reform, turning a single court system dealing with everything from divorces to commercial disputes, into a more differentiated structure with commercial courts run by appropriately trained legal teams and judges, says Raimundo Pereira, speaker of the Parliament of Guinea-Bissau. Nonetheless, bilateral frameworks do appear to be of growing importance to investors.

Despite the frustrations, there is little that can be done about existing treaties until they expire, at which point clearer text can be negotiated, or countries can withdraw. Pulling out of active treaties altogether is unlikely. Even South Africa has not done so, given the diplomatic downsides. The goal of African legal teams is to improve the text in future agreements.

To date, many African governments employed international law firms to advise on treaties. While this helps buffet their expertise in negotiations, capacity-building of African government lawyers is needed. Rukia Baruti recently founded the African International Legal Awareness (AILA) programme, which in late 2011 organised a week long BIT training workshop. Participants included lawyers from Liberia, Ghana, Uganda, the Gambia, Egypt and South Africa. Baruti organised the workshop, held in London, after attending an investment conference in Mauritius, where many African attendees were unfamiliar with investment treaty arbitration.

“By building capacity and increasing awareness of the consequences of concluding investment treaties, African states will, before signing such treaties, carefully examine the meaning and consider the provisions. This would go a long way to avoiding disputes involving African states.”  Mr Sinclair speaks approvingly of AILA, in which his firm participated. “There is no shortage of good will on the part of international lawyers to contribute on a pro bono basis. The issue is whether there are enough people with sufficient inspiration and energy, like Rukia, to organise these activities. Otherwise busy lawyers in firms or chambers, or in academic careers, may not be able to produce something like this themselves.”

Aila has since been approached by African governments to deliver training in-country. Similarly, the International Institute for Sustainable Development has conducted training courses for African government officials in country and at a regional level.  It is important to note that while bilateral treaties have been overwhelmingly North-South in the past, that is changing in reflection of growing South-South economic interaction. Current BITs between developing countries include Mozambique-Indonesia, Djibouti-China and Eritrea-Uganda. South-South deals provide a platform to create more development-orientated texts, but often the European template is copied over. Regional treaties on the other hand tend to create more bespoke texts.

“I have found that debate is healthier in regional dynamics compared to a bilateral context,” says Ms Malik. A recent COMESA Agreement treaty contains more nuanced obligations than those found typically in bilateral treaties, she claims, including provisions to allow tribunals to take greater account of the development status of the host state. The COMESA treaty also omitted the full protection and security standard, a controversial feature in many BITs which puts hefty responsibilities on states. Algeria was taken to tribunal to pay damages related to civil unrest during the civil war. Similarly, Congo faced a claim for riots on the streets of Kinshasa.

The COMESA treaty, and new model texts, exhibit the potential for designing modern templates, says Ms Malik. “It shows African countries that they are not tied to the old European model. It paves the way for innovation in terms of making the treaties better balanced.”

Published by TIA : 05 March, 2012