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Foreign Investment and Shared Sovereignty

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  • Angus Armstrong

Abstract

This study investigates how the legal provisions contained in Bilateral Investment Treaties (BITs) affect foreign direct investment inflows in OECD countries. This stands in contrast to the existing literature on two counts: first, we examine separate investor protection provisions contained in BITs; and second we cover OECD economies only. We also take account of the existence of investment clauses in Preferential Trade Agreements. Additional attention is paid to the role of trade in the gravity model, estimated using a Poisson Pseudo Maximum Likelihood estimator. We find that it is the inclusion of Investor State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) provisions contained within BITs that matter most for foreign direct investment flows. In particular, the interaction of restrictive provisions contained in ISDS matters most for investment inflows. Our empirical analysis shows that BITs with ISDS provisions with both binding rules and a wide coverage for claims may increase investment flows by 73%. We believe that this is the first study to show the importance of ISDS provisions for direct investment inflows in advanced economies. However, the inclusion restrictive provisions can be interpreted as ceding sovereign control, making them politically controversial.

Suggested Citation

  • Angus Armstrong, 2017. "Foreign Investment and Shared Sovereignty," National Institute of Economic and Social Research (NIESR) Discussion Papers 475, National Institute of Economic and Social Research.
  • Handle: RePEc:nsr:niesrd:475
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