The Free Movement of Capital and Foreign Direct Investment
The Scope of Protection in EU Law
ISBN13: 9780199572656ISBN10: 0199572658
Hardback,
464 pages
Aug 2009,
In Stock
Price:
$155.00 (06)Description
The scope of protection offered to foreign investors by EU law has become a matter of intense political debate. Neo-protectionist policies are on the rise within EU Member States, who are struggling to acclimatize to increasing inward direct investment from developing countries. Strict regulations are being implemented to control the flow of this investment, undermining the principle of free movement of capital. Are such policies permitted under EU law? What impact does EU law have on foreign direct investment? This book addresses these questions through a coherent doctrinal reconstruction of the EC Treaty provisions on free movement of capital in a third country context.Opening with a timely restatement of the central features of the EU law of free movement of capital, the book then asks the central question: What rights does a private market participant, engaged in cross-border direct investment originating from or directed to a non-EU Member State, enjoy by virtue of the EC Treaty? The book argues that in principle, the provisions on free movement of capital apply the same liberal standards irrespective of whether intra Community or third country direct investment is involved. Hence, those who participate in third country direct investment enjoy essentially the same guarantees by virtue of the provisions on free movement of capital as those active in intra Community direct investment. Having established the legal doctrine, the book then examines the limits on restrictions to free movement, including financial regulation and discriminatory tax regimes.
Features
- Presents the first full-length analysis of the protection of foreign investors under EU law
- Provides a timely reconstruction of the case law on free movement of capital, at a time when the principle is being undermined by the rise of neo-protectionism in Member States
- Offers a valuable analysis of the relationship between EU internal market law and the international law of foreign investment
About the Author(s)
Steffen Hindelang studied law and economics at the Universities of Bayreuth, Sheffield and Marburg. He was admitted to the degree of Master of Laws in International, European and Commercial Law of the University of Sheffield in 2001 and to the degree of Doktor iuris (Ph.D.) of the Eberhard Karls University Tubingen, School of Law in 2008. He is currently qualifying for the Bar in Germany.


