THE PROMOTION AND PROTECTION OF INVESTMENT BILL
The Department of Trade and Industry has just published the latest version of the Promotion and Protection of Investment Bill. The Bill has its origins in the government’s wish to reassure foreign investors who were alarmed by South Africa’s decision three years ago to terminate its Bilateral Investment Treaties (BITs) with a number of European countries. Its purpose is supposedly to provide for “the legislative protection of investors” and the “promotion of investment”.
It is unlikely to achieve either of these purposes.
Its main reassurance to foreign investors is the undertaking that “subject to national legislation, foreign investors and their investments must not be treated less favourably than South African investors in like circumstances.”
Aye, there’s the rub: there is now a raft of legislation trundling through Parliament that threatens to dilute the property rights of South Africans and foreigners alike - so it is hardly reassuring to foreigners that they will not be treated less favourably than their South African counterparts. The legislation includes
The 2013 Private Security Industry Regulation Amendment Bill which requires foreign-owned, private security companies to sell 51% of their shares to South Africans. It has been stalled by the fact that its provisions may contravene South Africa’s commitments in terms of GATT and AGOA;