Executive Summary
At a time of heightened public interest in foreign investment,
it is critical that the Australian regulatory system provides certainty,
predictability, transparency and confidence. It is important that the
Australian public, and potential foreign investors, have confidence in
Australia's system for administering foreign investment applications.
The committee notes that one of the specified roles of the
Foreign Investment Review Board (FIRB) is to 'foster an awareness and
understanding, both in Australia and abroad, of the policy and the FATA' (Foreign
Acquisitions and Takeovers Act 1975). The committee believes that public
debate about foreign investment should be facilitated by the availability of
information and therefore in Chapter 2 recommends that FIRB do more to inform
the community of how Australia's foreign investment regime operates and how
Australia benefits from foreign investment.
Recommendation 1
The committee recommends that FIRB develop a more effective
communication strategy to improve public understanding of the risks and benefits
of foreign investment to Australia. This strategy should also provide
additional information about how foreign investment decisions are made and
provide information about the emergence of sovereign wealth funds and state-owned
entities internationally.
Confidence in the foreign investment review process could also
be strengthened through a higher degree of parliamentary scrutiny. The
committee acknowledges that FIRB publishes an annual report for tabling in
Parliament, which provides information on the administration of foreign
investment policy, the approval process, and statistics for applications and
decisions for the period. The committee notes that the last FIRB report was
tabled in parliament 14 months after the years to which it refers.
Recommendation 2
The committee recommends that the Minister require FIRB to be more
assiduous in producing a timely annual report.
Historically, one of the reasons Australia has relied upon
foreign investment is because it has had shallow domestic capital markets,
relative to the large size of its natural resources. This continues to be the
case particularly when it comes to capital intensive sectors such as the mining
industry. The committee considers that it is critical that Australia continue
to be seen as a country that welcomes foreign investment and that it remains an
attractive and competitive place to invest. The committee believes that foreign
investment is critical to the development of Australia's industries and
infrastructure and has significant benefits for the Australian community at
large.
The committee also believes that the best way for Australia to
manage the new capital flows that have stemmed from the emergence of sovereign
wealth funds and state-owned entities is through developing robust domestic
legislation. In Chapter 3 of the report the committee recommends that the
government look at tightening Foreign Acquisitions and Takeovers Act 1975 (FATA)
legislation to deal with complex acquisitions where takeovers of smaller
strategic assets may be masked by an application which, in total, does not
represent more than 15 per cent, and therefore does not trigger review.
Recommendation 3
The committee recommends that the government tighten the FATA
legislation to deal with complex acquisitions where takeovers of smaller
strategic assets may be masked by an application which, in total, does not
represent more than 15 per cent, and therefore does not trigger review. The
committee would like FIRB to give adequate consideration to the interaction
between the various components of an acquisition.
The committee believes that the current regulatory framework
for assessing foreign investment proposals, whether they are made by private
commercial interests, sovereign wealth funds or state-owned entities, is
sufficient. The committee considers that the combined powers of the Foreign
Acquisitions and Takeovers Act 1975, Foreign Acquisitions and Takeovers
Regulations 1989, Trade Practices Act 1974 and laws related to transfer
pricing and environmental and worker protection, are sufficient to provide for
the robust assessment of foreign investment applications and satisfactory
regulation of the conduct of foreign investors. The committee is also of the
belief that, having considered all the evidence, the system of case-by-case
assessment, based on the national interest, has also served Australia well.
The committee considers that the chief virtue of the national
interest test is its flexibility. Its unwritten or undefined character—the fact
that it is a negative test—enables it to adapt more easily to changing
circumstance. A prescriptive test with specific criteria would not allow this
degree of flexibility. The committee also believes that the national interest test
should continue to focus on the commercial use of an asset and not upon its
ownership.
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