World
Investment Report 2015 - Overview -
25 Jun 2015, 581.1 KB
Preface, Key
Messages and Overview - 14 Pages, 221KB
Report is particularly timely in light of the Third
International Conference on Financing for Development in Addis Ababa – and the
many vital discussions underscoring the importance of FDI, international
investment policy making and fiscal regimes to the implementation of the new
development agenda and progress towards the future sustainable development
goals.
The World Investment Report tackles the key challenges in
international investment protection and promotion, including the
right to regulate, investor-state dispute settlement, and investor responsibility.
Furthermore, it examines the fiscal treatment of international investment,
including contributions of multinational corporations in developing countries,
fiscal leakage through tax avoidance, and the role of offshore investment links.
The Report offers a menu of options for the reform of the
international investment treaties regime, together with a roadmap to
guide policymakers at the national, bilateral, regional and multilateral
levels. It also proposes a set of principles and guidelines to ensure coherence between
international tax and investment
policies.
CHAPTER I Global
Investment Trends - 28 Pages, 1873KB
Global foreign direct investment (FDI) inflows fell by
16 per cent in 2014 to $1.23 trillion, down from $1.47
trillion in 2013. The decline in FDI flows was influenced
mainly by the fragility of the global economy, policy
uncertainty for investors and elevated geopolitical
risks. New investments were also offset by some large divestments. The decline in FDI flows was in contrast
to growth in GDP, trade, gross fixed capital formation
and
employment (table I.1).
CHAPTER II
Regional Investment Trends -
72 Pages, 5617KB
Global foreign direct investment (FDI) inflows fell by
16 per cent overall in 2014 to $1.23 trillion, down from
$1.47 trillion in 2013, but with considerable variance -
between country groups and regions.
FDI flows to developing economies increased by 2
per cent to reach their highest level at $681 billion
in 2014, accounting for 55 per cent of global FDI inflows
(table II.1). Five of the top 10 host economies now are
developing ones. However, the increase in developing country
inflows is, overall, primarily a developing Asia
story. FDI inflows to that region grew by 9 per cent
to $465 billion, constituting the lion’s share of
total FDI in developing economies. Africa’s overall inflows
remained flat at $54 billion, while those to Latin
America and the Caribbean saw a 14 per cent decline to $159
billion, after four years of consecutive increases. FDI
to transition economies dropped by more than half
to $48 billion. Inflows to developed economies as a
whole fell by 28 per cent to $499 billion, decreasing
both in Europe and North America. Flows to Europe
fell by 11 per cent to $289 billion, one third of their
2007 peak, while in North America FDI dropped 51 per
cent to $146 billion.
CHAPTER III
Recent Policy Developments and Key Issues - 18 Pages, 1563KB
Countries’ investment policy measures continue
to be predominantly directed towards investment
liberalization, promotion and facilitation. Measures
geared towards investment in sectors important for
sustainable development are still relatively few.
In 2014, according to UNCTAD’s count, 37 countries -
and economies adopted 63 policy measures affecting
foreign investment. Of these measures, 47 related to
liberalization, promotion and facilitation of investment,
while 9 introduced new restrictions or regulations on
investment (table III.1). The share of liberalization and
promotion increased significantly, from 73 per cent in
2013 to 84 per cent in 2014 (figure III.1).
Chapter III -
(Annex tables I and II) - 5 Pages, 317KB
CHAPTER IV - 56 Pages, 1676KB
Growing unease with the current functioning of the
global international investment agreement (IIA) regime,
together with today’s sustainable development
imperative, the greater role of governments in
the economy and the evolution of the investment
landscape, have triggered a move towards reforming
international investment rule making to make it better
suited for today’s policy challenges. As a result,the IIA
regime is going through a period of reflection, review
and revision.
As evident from UNCTAD’s October 2014 World
Investment Forum (WIF), from the heated public
debate taking place in many countries, and from
various parliamentary hearing processes, including
at the regional level, a shared view is emerging on
the need for reform of the IIA regime to ensure that it
works for all stakeholders. The question is not about
whether to reform or not, but about the what, how and
extent of such reform.
CHAPTER V
International Tax and Investment Policy Coherence
- 44 Pages, 1811KB
Intense debate and concrete policy work is ongoing in
the international community on the fiscal contribution
of multinational enterprises (MNEs). The focus is
predominantly on tax avoidance – notably in the
base erosion and profit shifting (BEPS) project. At the
same time, sustained investmentis needed in global
economic growth and development, especially in light
of financing needs for the Sustainable Development
Goals (SDGs). The policy imperative is, and should
be, to take action against tax avoidance to support
domestic resource mobilization and to continue to
facilitate productive investment.
The fiscal contribution of MNEs, or the avoidance
thereof, has been at the centre of attention for some
time. Numerous instances of well-known firms paying
little or no taxes in some jurisdictions despite obviously
significant business interests have led to public protests,
consumer action and intense regulatory scrutiny. Action
groups and non-governmental organizations (NGOs)
have brought to light cases of abusive fiscal practices
of MNEs in some of the poorest developing countries.
Broad support in the international community for
action against tax avoidance by MNEs has led to a
G20 initiative to counter BEPS, led by the Organization
for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD),
which is the main (and mainstream) policy action in the
international tax arena at the moment.
Chapter V (Annex
I: Establishing the baseline: estimating the fiscal contribution
of multinational enterprises) - 25 Pages, 719KB
Chapter V (Annex
II: An FDI-driven approach to measuring the scale and economic
impact of BEPS) - 28 Pages, 1212KB
Chapter V (Annex
III: Policy action against tax avoidance by MNEs: existing
measures and ongoing discussions) - 8 Pages, 223KB
ANNEX TABLES - 20 Pages, 1073KB
Methodological Note - 60 Pages, 449KB
|