1st Edition

Promoting and Managing International Investment Towards an Integrated Policy Approach

Edited By J Anthony VanDuzer, Patrick Leblond Copyright 2020
    304 Pages
    by Routledge

    304 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book provides an overview of international investment policy and policy-making, drawing upon perspectives from law, economics, international business, and political science.

    International investment is a complex phenomenon with significant effects worldwide. Developing effective policies and strategies to attract investment in sufficient quantities and marshal it to contribute to sustainable development is a critical challenge for governments at all levels. This book’s interdisciplinary approach provides fresh insights into the mix of policy options available to governments seeking investment to support their country’s (or region’s) development. As well as identifying ways to effectively design, implement, and assess policies to attract foreign investment, it explores how to manage foreign investment’s effects. Various dimensions of international investment policy are discussed, including benefits and costs (economic, environmental, social, and political) of foreign investment, the significance of global value chains, state-owned enterprises and sovereign wealth funds, and the role of tax policy, investment promotion, and policy advocacy, location branding, investment treaties, and national security considerations.

    Through its contributions to a new interdisciplinary understanding of international investment policy-making, this book will benefit students and scholars working in areas such as international business, international economic law, international economics, development economics, international development, and international political economy as well as being a valuable resource for policy-makers.

    Acknowledgments

    List of acronyms

    Notes on contributors

    1 Introduction to International Investment Policy and Rationale for an Interdisciplinary Approach

    J Anthony VanDuzer, Patrick Leblond, and Stephen Gelb

    Part I   International Investment’s Changing Context

    2 Trade and Foreign Direct Investment in the 21st Century

    Ari Van Assche

    3 Actors, Institutions, and Policy in Host Countries

    Krista Nadakavukaren Schefer

    4 State-Owned Enterprises and Sovereign Wealth Funds: An Economic AssessmentSteven Globerman, Phillip Hensyel, and Daniel Shapiro

    Part II   Promoting International Investment

    5 The Economics of Foreign Direct Investment and International Investment Agreements

    Eugene Beaulieu and Kelly O’Neill

    6 Attracting Foreign Direct Investment: Location Branding and Marketing

    Leila Hamzaoui-Essoussi, Nicolas Papadopoulos, and Alia El Banna

    7 FDI Policy Advocacy and Investor Targeting

    Matthew Durban

    8 Tax Competition as an Investment Promotion Tool

    Allison Christians and Marco Garofalo

    Part III   Managing Foreign Investment

    9 National Security and the Political Economy of International Investment Policy

    Patrick Leblond and Sébastien Labrecque

    10 International Investment Agreements

    Lukas Vanhonnaeker

    11 Investor–State Dispute Settlement

    J Anthony VanDuzer and Patrick Dumberry

    12 Social and Environmental Issues in Foreign Direct Investment: A Legal and Policy Perspective Lorenzo Cotula

    Part IV   Conclusion

    13 Moving Beyond Disciplinary Silos: Toward an Integrated Approach to International Investment Policy

    J Anthony VanDuzer, Patrick Leblond, and Stephen Gelb

    Index 

    Biography

    J Anthony VanDuzer is a Professor and Hyman Soloway Chair in Business and Trade Law at the University of Ottawa, Faculty of Law in the Common Law Section, as well as an Adjunct Research Professor at the Carleton University’s Norman Paterson School of International Affairs. Previously, he was Vice Dean of Research at the University of Ottawa. He has also taught at the Queen’s University International Studies Centre in England, the Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität in Germany, and the University of Waikato in New Zealand. He was a Member of the Academic Advisory Council to Canada’s Deputy Minister for International Trade from 2002 to 2006. Professor VanDuzer has written widely on investment and trade in services issues and participated in technical assistance projects in these areas in transition and developing economies around the world. His most recent book on investment law is J Anthony VanDuzer, Penelope Simons, and Graham Mayeda, Integrating Sustainable Development into International Investment Agreements: A Guide for Developing Country Negotiators (Commonwealth Secretariat, 2013).

    Patrick Leblond is CN – Paul M. Tellier Chair on Business and Public Policy and Associate Professor in the Graduate School of Public and International Affairs at the University of Ottawa. He is also Senior Fellow at the Centre for International Governance Innovation (CIGI), Research Associate at CIRANO, and Affiliated Professor of International Business at HEC Montréal. Dr Leblond is an expert on economic governance and policy with a particular focus on Canada, North America, and Europe. He has published extensively on financial and monetary integration, banking regulation, international trade, and business–government relations. He is the co-editor, with Demosthenes Ioannou and Arne Niemann, of European Integration in Times of Crisis: Theoretical Perspectives (Routledge, 2016). Prior to moving to Ottawa, he taught international business at HEC Montréal and was director of the Réseau économie internationale (REI) at the Centre d’études et de recherches internationales de l’Université de Montréal (CERIUM). Before embarking on his academic career, he worked in accounting and auditing for Ernst & Young as well as in corporate finance and strategy consulting for Arthur Andersen & Co and SECOR Consulting.