Sauce for the gander

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| P&O runs ports in India, and no one in the government was concerned about the Dubai takeover. In the US, DP World and P&O had asked for, and obtained, unanimous clearance from an official committee that looks specifically into the security aspects of investment deals. DP World also got endorsement from an Israeli shipping firm. And if the concern is terrorism, Dubai and other ports of the United Arab Emirates play host to more American naval ships than any other port outside the US. So is the American reaction fear of terrorism, racism, Islamophobia, or simply the old rule that what is sauce for the goose is not sauce for the gander? There is only one way to find out: DP World should sell its holdings to, say, a Korean or Indian or Russian firm, and watch the response. |
| The objections and roadblocks are amusing when the developing countries are regularly lectured on the virtues of allowing foreigners to buy their companies, including in the "strategic" sectors. Indeed, when the Indian government raised national security concerns about the foreign handling of airport cargo, it was severely criticised. Recall that the Americans had blocked the Chinese company CNOOC's buying of Unocal, though no one has objected to Chinese firms operating ports in the US, as they do. A Dubai company, meanwhile, wants to buy a British firm that supplies parts to American defence suppliers, and the same American security committee is looking at the deal. The Mittal-Arcelor stand-off adds a European-Indian dimension to the issue. |
| A study by two economists shows that recent Chinese attempts to buy assets in the US and the EU have not been successful. The paper discusses what it calls "the implications for global arrangements over cross border acquisitions" and concludes that issues like subsidies for foreign acquisition, the actual against the apparent owners, and national security concerns have not been covered by existing OECD/WTO investment policy. Obviously not, because who would have thought that the boot could be on the wrong foot, or what is the same thing, the money in the "wrong" pockets? Since more money will continue to go into the wrong pockets, more such episodes will occur. The issue regarding the role that governments can or should play in deciding who can buy domestic assets and who can't, will therefore gain legitimacy. The effect will be to increase governments' discretionary power. Already, in the context of the controversy over the foreign shareholding of a telecom company, the question must be asked: Should India have its equivalent of the Committee on Foreign Investments in the United States? |
First Published: Mar 13 2006 | 12:00 AM IST