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9 Eur. Bus. Org. L. Rev. 1 (2008)

handle is hein.journals/eunbuioiz9 and id is 1 raw text is: 











European Business Organization Law Review 9: 1-27                             1
© 2008 T.MC.ASSER PRESS     DO10.1017/S1566752908000013


Perils   of Success? The Case of International
Investment Protection


Anne   van  Aaken*


1.        Introdu ction ........................................................................................... . .   2
2.        International investment law: an overview  .............................................  4
3.        The success of international investment law...........................................  8
4.        The econom ic logic of B ITs  ................................................................... 10
5.        T he peril of  success  ..............................................................................  16
6.        Conclusion and outlook ........................................................................  26


Abstract
Foreign  direct investment forms   an ever  more  important part  of globalised
market  structures, and international investment law has become one of the most
successful and judicialised areas of public international law. In order to attract
investment, States commit   themselves to treaties that restrict their regulatory
sovereignty in ways  that are sometimes unpredictable, owing  to vague terms in
the treaties and the broad use by investment tribunals of their delegated discre-
tion.
    This article uses economic contract theory in order to understand whether the
commitment   problem  ex ante and  the flexibility problem ex post are optimally
solved. It is hypothesised that the participation constraints on States may  be
overlooked  by investment tribunals, thereby leading to an undesired weakening of
protection of investors in the long run due to reactions by States. First, States
may  opt out of the system, for example by exiting treaties or by non-compliance.
Second,  they may  also water  down  the substantive or procedural  protections.
Third, whereas  investment treaties were seen in the beginning as a restraint on
developing  countries, investment increasingly flows to equally highly regulated
developed  countries. As legal protection is reciprocal but the capital flows used


    * Max Schmidheiny Tenure Track Professor of Law and Economics, Public Law, Interna-
tional and European Law at the University of St. Gallen, Switzerland, Guisanstrasse 36, CH-
9010 St. Gallen, e-mail: anne.vanaaken@unisg.ch. I would like to thank the participants of the
Amsterdam  Center for Law and Economics (ACLE) workshop, the participants of the faculty
workshop of Vanderbilt Law School as well as Christoph Engel, Larry Helfer, Christian
Kirchner, Rekha Oleschak, Stephan Schill and Stefan Voigt for helpful comments.

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