Showing posts with label Dispute Settlement. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dispute Settlement. Show all posts

Thursday, March 10, 2016

India Files WTO Challenge Against US Visa Fee Increases

India has has filed a dispute against the US under the WTO Understanding on Rules and Procedures Governing the Settlement of Disputes (DSU) which constitutes Annex 2 of the WTO Agreement and has requested consultations with the US.

According to the dispute, under the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2016, Washington increased fees for L-1 type visas by US$4500 and for H-1B type visas by US$4000 for companies with 50 or more employees in the US, if more than 50 percent of their employees are non-immigrants employed on such visas. It was signed into law by President Barack Obama in December 2015, with the measures in place through September 2025.

H1B is work permit for temporary specialty workers while L1 visas are issued for intra-company transfers that allows companies to relocate qualified employees to US offices.

India claims that these measures, along with earlier fee increases between August 2010 and September 2015, appear to violate the US’ commitments under its Schedule of Specific Commitments under the WTO’s General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS) – the set of global rules involving services trade- along with being inconsistent with other GATS provisions. 

India claims that the visa fee increases: 

appear to: (i) be inconsistent with the terms, limitations and conditions agreed to and specified by the United States in its Schedule of Specific Commitments under the GATS, (ii) accord to juridical persons of India having a commercial presence in the United States treatment that is less favorable than that accorded to juridical persons of the United States engaged in providing like services in sectors such as the Computer and Related Services sector with respect to which the United States has taken commitments in its Schedule of Specific Commitments, and (iii) affect the movement of natural persons seeking to supply services in a manner that is inconsistent with the United States' commitments in its Schedule of Specific Commitments. These measures also appear to nullify or impair the benefits accruing to India directly and indirectly under the GATS. 

In its complaint, India said that the current measures (of visa fee hike) result in less favorable treatment for Indian companies with commercial presence in the US in comparison to US companies engaged in providing like services and according to the GATS Schedule. 

This violates the principle of ‘national treatment’ embedded in multilateral trade rules, which lays down that foreign companies will be treated on a par with local firms. 

The Government of India is of the view that these and comparable measures, taken by the United States are not in conformity with at least the following provisions of the GATS: Articles XVI, XVII, XX, and paragraphs 3 and 4 of the GATS Annex on Movement of Natural Persons Supplying Services. These measures also appear to be inconsistent with Articles III:3, IV:1 and VI:1 of the GAT 

Furthermore, New Delhi is also claiming that recent US changes to its numerical commitment for H-1B visas – specifically due to modifications Washington has made under FTAs with Singapore and Chile – also are inconsistent with its GATS schedule. 

According to the consultations request, the US included under its horizontal commitments regarding mode 4 – that involving the movement of natural persons – that it would permit up to 65,000 people annually on a worldwide basis under the category of fashion models and specialty occupations. 

Under the two FTAs mentioned above, these “numerical commitments” have allegedly been changed. According to India, US homeland security officials must now set country-specific limits for both countries, with these numbers taken away from the global total of 65,000 receiving H-1B visas.

Thursday, June 13, 2013

Kenya Nominates Renowned Scholar to the Appellate Body of the WTO

The government of Kenya has nominated Professor James Thuo Gathii a renowned international scholar for appointment to the Appellate Body of the World Trade Organization (WTO), for a slot opening up after David Unterhalter's term comes to an end in December this year.

Professor Gathii is currently a professor of Law at Loyola University Chicago where he holds the distinguished Wing-Tat Lee Chai in International law. He teaches International trade law, facilitates international law student and faculty exchanges, plans and develops international programs and conferences. Gathii has also consulted for a variety of United Nations agencies on WTO law and is a graduate of the prestigious Havard Law School with  SJD (Phd.) 1999

The WTO Appellate Body was established in 1995 under Article 17 of the Understanding on Rules and Procedures Governing the Settlement of Disputes (DSU) and is a standing body of seven persons that hears appeals from reports issued by panels in disputes brought by WTO Members. The Appellate Body sits in Geneva Switzerland and Members appointed by the DSB to serve, do so for four-year terms, with the possibility of being reappointed once. The Appellate Body membership is broadly representative of the Membership in the WTO.




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.

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

Sunday, August 8, 2010

Investment Arbitration- ICSID

At ICSID this year, there have been investment dispute developments involving African parties to Bilateral Investment Treaties (BITs), such as: South Africa's Mining dispute under the Italy-South Africa BIT and Belgo-Luxembourg-South Africa BIT; Egypt's hotel industry dispute under the Denmark-Egypt BIT; Ghana's cocoa production dispute under the Germany-Ghana BIT. Previously, we considered a working paper by the WTO, which found that stricter dispute settlement provisions in BITs do not necessarily result in higher FDI inflows.

ICSID is the International Center for Settlement of Investment Disputes which is an autonomous international institution, considered the leading international arbitration institution devoted to investor-State dispute settlement. ICSID's Membership consists of one hundred and forty  four (144) member States that have deposited their instruments of ratification, acceptance or approval of the Convention and have become ICSID Contracting States.  Overall however, there are currently 155 signatory States to the ICSID ConventionThe ICSID Convention is a multilateral treaty formulated by the Executive Directors of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (the World Bank). It was opened for signature on March 18, 1965 and entered into force on October 14, 1966. 

ICSID has released this years caseload statistics Report, which shows that: 

Bilateral Investment Treaties (BITS) have a usage rate of 62% and thereby form the substantial basis for consent invoked to establish ICSID's jurisdiction in registered cases. Other legal basis for consent includes: investment contracts between the host state and investor (22%); investment laws of the host state (5%); free trade agreements e.g. NAFTA (6%) and the Energy Charter Treaty (5% )


Click Figures to enlarge.

  
The South American region has the largest number of disputes handled at 30% while Sub Saharan Africa's caseload is 16%, and is the third highest after Eastern Europe and Central Asia (22%).


In terms of sectors, gas, oil, mining (25%) and electricity and other energy (13%) and transport (11%) sectors  have the highest number of disputes.  Other highly disputed sectors are water, sanitation and flood protection (8%), finance (8%) and construction (7%).

The distribution of appointments of Arbitrators, Conciliators and ad hoc Committee Members appointed in ICSID Cases is about three quarters (71%) from the west i.e. North America (23%) and Europe (48%), while the rest of the world shares a quarter. Latin America holds a 10% share while Sub Saharan Africa takes a share of only 2%.
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This Report can be accessed here.

In a previous discussion we considered the EC's proposal to accede to the ICSID Convention as part of its new EC Wide investment policy. However that would require the modification of the Convention which currently, is open only to Member States of the World Bank and any State which is a party to the Statute of the International Court of Justice, on the invitation of the ICSID Administrative Council by a vote of two-third of its members.  

Friday, July 9, 2010

New EU-Wide Investment Policy

As a region, the EU is the most significant global investment player. It is the world's leading host of Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) as well as the world's biggest source of FDI outside the EU. By 2008 outward stocks of the EU FDI amounted to € 3.3 trillion while EU inward stocks accounted for € 2.4 trillion. 


According to a recent press statement, the EC has now formulated a comprehensive investment policy which will seek to integrate investment liberalisation and investment protection.  Under the Lisbon Treaty, investment is one of the areas covered by the EU common commercial policy which is developed and managed at the European level giving the EU a strengthened negotiating leverage. However, there are 1200 Bilateral Investment Treaties (BITs) concluded by individual EU Member States and other countries. In addition, the European Commission (EC) as a legal entity is also negotiating investment agreements, for instance with African countries, as part of the Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs). 

To address this anomaly, the  EC has released a comprehensive investment package which consists of: 

(2) a draft regulation which sets up transitional arrangements offering guarantees to existing or pending BITs concluded between EU and Non-EU countries prior to the enforcement of the Lisbon Treaty. Here, the Commission has provided legal security for European and foreign investors, without hampering the EU's ability to negotiate new investment treaties at EU level.  

The EU Member States together account for almost half of the investment agreements currently in force around the world. However, not all Member States have concluded such agreements, and not all agreements provide for the same high or equivalent level of standards. According to the EC, this leads to an uneven playing field for EU companies investing abroad, depending on whether they are covered as a "national" (granted national treatment) under a certain Member State BIT or not. 


Another feature of the agreements of individual EU Member States is that they relate to the treatment of investors “post-entry” or “post-establishment” only. This implies that Member States’ BITs provide no specific binding commitments regarding the conditions of entry, neither from third countries regarding outward investment by companies originating in EU Member States, nor vice versa. Here the EC might want to be guaranteed non discriminatory pre-establishment MFN Status.  Gradually, the European Union has begun the process of filling the gap of "entry" or "admission" through both multilateral and bilateral agreements at EU level, covering investment market access and investment liberalization, ensuring the non-discriminatory treatment of investors upon entry to a third country market.

The EC recognizes that a one-size-fits-all model for investment agreements with 3rd countries would be neither feasible nor desirable. Therefore the EC will have to take into account each specific negotiating context. However since actual trade and investment flows are in and of themselves important determinants for defining priorities, the EC indicates that they should go where its investors would like to go, through the liberalisation of investment flows. The policy paper identifies some candidates for a full investment agreement including India, Canada, Mercosur and where possible China and Russia, but also states that should a comprehensive, across-the-board, investment agreement with a country, or a set of countries, prove impossible or inadvisable, sectoral agreements may be an option whose desirability, feasibility and possible impact would have to be further assessed.

On the specifics of the approach, the EC would look beyond FDI and protect all the operations that accompany investment and make it possible in practice e.g. payments, the protection of intangible assets such as Intellectual Property Rights, etc. Enforcement is also addressed and identified as a key issue in the new policy. Currently, the EC has included in all of its recent FTAs, an effective and expedient state-to-state dispute settlement system. In addition, investor-state dispute settlement will be featured since it is a key part of the inheritance that the Union receives from its Member State BITs.  

However there is a uniqueness of investor-state dispute settlement in international economic law which impacts the EC's mandate in this area. For example, the Convention on the Settlement of Investment Disputes between States and Nationals of Other States (the ICSID Convention), is open to signature and ratification by Member States of the World Bank or those party to the Statute of the International Court of Justice. The European Commission does not qualify under either.  This new investment policy paper however proposes that the EC could seek accession to the ICSID, but notes that this would require modification of its convention.


A key outcome of this policy is that the EC may request renegotiation of existing BITs by individual member States. "The Commission will review the existing MS BITs. If it finds clauses that are incompatible with EU law (e.g. transfer clauses that would hamper the implementation of EU financial restrictions against a certain third country), it would ask the Member State to renegotiate such clause. If this proves impossible, the authorisation may be withdrawn as a matter of last resort.  Likewise, authorisations can be withdrawn if the EU negotiates an investment treaty at European level, and recourse to Member State BITs with the same third country is not necessary anymore."

While FDI will be within the full competence of the EC, the expectation is that by following available best practices, they would ensure that no EU investor would be worse off than they would be under Member States' BITs. Member States will however have scope to pursue and implement investment promotion policies that complement and fit well alongside the common international investment policy. In addition, BITs maintained by Member States may require amendments in order to bring them in compliance with EU law. The same framework is intended to be available also for Member States that would like to negotiate and conclude new investment treaties with countries, which are not targeted for EU-wide investment agreements, e.g. for foreign policy purposes.  

Overall, this is an interesting development in the wake of the EPA services and investment negotiations and should be studied carefully in light of the scope of the EC's investment text which covers all economic sectors including services i.e.: A) Agriculture, hunting and forestry; B) Fishing; C) Mining and quarrying; D) Manufacturing; and E) Production, transmission and distribution on own account of electricity, gas, steam and hot water. It is therefore useful to note that sectoral agreements rather than comprehensive investment agreements could be considered a viable option where feasible. 


One should also note that on "policy space" the EC's approach will be to ensure that the EU common investment policy fits in with the way the EU and its Member States regulate economic activity within the Union and across its borders. ...."EU investment policy has to be consistent with the other policies of the Union and its Member States, including policies on the protection of the environment, health and safety at work, consumer protection, cultural diversity, development policy and competition policy.African States negotiating investment chapters in the EPA could opt to also ensure compatibility of proposed EPA investment provisions with their own development policies.