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University of New South Wales Faculty of Law Research Series |
Last Updated: 5 October 2012
China and Investor-State Arbitration
Leon Trakman, University of New South Wales
This
paper is available for download at http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2157387
Citation
This article can be referenced as [2012] UNSWLRS
48.
Abstract
Notwithstanding China’s endorsement of
investor-state arbitration more than a decade ago, few investor claims have been
initiated
against it and none has concluded with an award. This does not
necessarily mean that foreign investors will not make such claims
in the future,
but rather that proceeding against China, from an economic rationalist
perspective, is likely to be contentious, costly
and dilatory. However, these
concerns are not peculiar to China. Economically and politically powerful
states, not least of all the
United States, are less frequently subject to
investor-state arbitration than poorer states for much the same
reason.
What is increasingly likely is that China is preparing itself and
its investors abroad for investor-state proceedings in the future.
This is
evident, for example, in China’s growing interest in the functioning of
the International Center for the Settlement
of Investment Disputes
(‘ICSID’), among other institutions, in its inclusion of
investor-state arbitration in its Model
Bilateral Investment Agreement and in
various regional and bilateral agreements it has concluded.
China is also
aware that the price of attracting global investment is the prospect that
investor claims will inevitably be lodged
against it in the future. However,
China is also aware that the benefits may well outweigh the costs. After all,
China has grown
into the second largest economy in the world. It is the second
largest recipient of foreign investment. It is sixth in outward direct
foreign
investment. It appreciates the economic rationalist reasons for promoting
foreign direct investment, as well as the risks.
This paper has three
primary purposes. The first purpose is to explore these developments primarily
in relation to China’s history
and practice in concluding bilateral
investment agreements (‘BITs’) with foreign countries. The second
purpose is to
examine China’s limited experience with investor-state
arbitration under such BITs. The third purpose is to identify how China
is
likely to develop its investor-state agreements and dispute resolution regime
through strategic investment alliances with other
states without sacrificing its
distinctive national interests including those of its investors abroad.
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URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/UNSWLRS/2012/48.html