The Philippine BIT Program and Investor-State Disputes - ARIA - Vol. 28, No. 2
Originally from American Review of International Arbitration - ARIA
I. INTRODUCTION: PHILIPPINES FDI INFLOWS AND OUTFLOWS
In recent years, the Philippines has emerged as a “[Foreign Direct Investment (FDI)] powerhouse,” largely due to sharp increases in public-private partnerships for massive infrastructure projects. The biggest share of FDI in the first half of 2016 went to the Philippines, with a 245% year-on-year surge in new FDI. The World Bank’s chart of net FDI inflows for the Philippines demonstrates a steep rise of FDI volumes from slightly above US$0.1 billion in 1970 to around US$6 billion a year as of 2015. The major country sources of FDI to the Philippines are the British Virgin Islands, the United States, Japan, the Netherlands, Singapore, South Korea, the Cayman Islands, and Australia. The main sectors for foreign investment are manufacturing, electricity, water and gas, transport and storage, hotels, services, and infrastructure. The Philippines’ high investment attractiveness can be explained by many factors, such as being one of the youngest and fastest growing economies in Asia with a high literacy rate, demographic and educational advantages with a large proportion of English speakers, and the private sector’s receptivity to innovation, among others. Recent developments suggest further substantial foreign investment from the People’s Republic of China of around US$24 billion, although details on specific investment projects are still lacking as of this writing.
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This article discusses the Philippines’ investor-State disputes in light of lingering pathologies in the country’s prevailing BIT architecture, such as the absence of waivers and other safeguard mechanisms against investors’ automatic resort to investor-State arbitration, and the dearth of other public policy innovations that enable host States to maintain regulatory prerogatives without breaching investment treaty protections. Significantly, the evidence does not show that the Philippines entered into BITs with other States as a matter of imposition by foreign powers on terms similar to those in contracts of adhesion. Rather, as seen from the presidential policies and political announcements of the ruling elites from the 1980s post-dictatorship reconstruction period up to the liberalization and privatization heyday of the 2000s, the Philippines strategically courted FDI and purposely extended generous terms of investment protection as incentives to attract foreign investment.
However, it does not appear from publicly available records that Philippine decision-makers programmatically scrutinized the short-term and long-term strategic costs of investor-State arbitration on the country’s future ability to sustainably incentivize FDI. These practical costs include not just the direct costs of engaging foreign counsels, and of defending itself in arbitration and parallel disputes before local courts and the Philippine Supreme Court. It also includes numerous indirect costs ...