Jordan – U.S. Bilateral Investment Treaty (BIT)

Jordan – U.S. Bilateral Investment Treaty (BIT)

Jordan – U.S. Bilateral Investment Treaty (BIT) was signed on July 2, 1997. The BIT was ratified by the Jordanian Parliament in 1998, and by the U.S. Senate in 2000. The instruments of ratification were exchanged on May 13, 2003, bringing the Treaty into force after a period of 30 days (i.e. June 11, 2003).

The BIT promotes private sector development by providing an open and secure investment environment.

The BIT guarantees protection for investors from both sides starting from the pre-investment phase through the life of the investment. Whereby a national or company from one party investing or planning to invest in the other party can benefit from the Bilateral Treaty.

It provides reciprocal protection of investment, as such it is consistent with the highest international investment protection standards, as well as with U.S. principal objectives in bilateral treaty negotiations. It provides protection of investors from performance requirements, the placements of restrictions on transfers and arbitrary expropriation.

The BIT is committed to the stimulation of economic development; higher living standards; promotion of respect for internationally-recognized worker rights; and maintenance of health, safety, and environmental measures.

Brief of the BIT provisions:

    • National and MFN Treatment. The treaty requires each Party to treat investors from the other Party equal to domestic investors (National Treatment), or equal to the treatment of other foreign investors (MFN treatment), whichever is most favorable in like circumstances.
    • The Parties must ensure that state-run enterprises allow national and MFN treatment to their goods and services from covered investments as well as guarantee fair and equal treatment, full protection and security to covered investment.
    • The BIT prohibits Parties to take unreasonable and discriminatory measures on management, conduct, operations and sales of covered investments. Parties must ensure that laws, regulations, administrative practices and procedures that cover investments are updated and published (or made publicly available).
    • International Property Rights are of crucial importance in the BIT.
    • The BIT prohibits expropriation or nationalization of covered investment, from any Party, directly or indirectly through expropriations or nationalization measures, except for public propose. Expropriation needs to obey to international law standards.
    • Expropriation shall be done in a non-discriminatory way, upon payment of prompt, adequate and effective compensation and in accordance with the law. The expropriation compensation must be equal to the fair market value on the date of expropriation, plus interest accrued from that date until the date of payment. Assets from expropriation must be fully and freely transferable.
    • The Parties must ensure national and MFN treatment in relation to losses of investments experienced in the given territory caused by war, conflict, and state of national emergency, civil disturbance, etc.
    • Each Party will allow a free and non-delay-able transfer of assets, including: contributions to capital, profits, dividends or proceeds from the sales of parts or of investment, interest, royalty and other fees and forms of income.
    • Nationals of the other Party can enter, stay and be employed for purposes of investment establishment, development, administration and operation advising. Parties will have the benefit of hiring top management of their choice, regardless of nationality.
    • Parties can settle disputes through consultations or negotiations. If these fail, the Parties will refer the dispute to courts or administrative tribunals of one party, or further, to the arbitral tribunal for biding decision in accordance with the applicable rules of international laws.
    • More favorable treatment to covered investment than specified in the BIT is allowed, if the domestic country has more national/international regulations in place. Companies owned/controlled by non-Party nationals can be subject to denial of benefits due to political disaccord with either U.S. or Jordan and/or if a non-Party national company has no substantive business activity.
    • A national or company can submit a dispute for arbitration given that tax matters involve expropriation, having priory referred to the taxation authorities.
    • Each party has the right to take measures that protect its security interests or that the Party has to abide in relation to its international peace and peace maintenance obligations; these refer to war and national emergency and correspond to UN standards.
    • Each Party can prescribe its rules for reporting covered investment, incorporation requirements or transfer of funds if these rules do not oppose any previously established Treaty or Law.
    • All subdivisions of the government have to abide by the BIT. In the United States however, due to U.S. Federal System requirements, Jordanian firms will be treated no less favorably in a specific State as an out-of-State enterprise. State enterprises exercising government authority must do so consistently based on the Party’s obligations to the Treaty.
    • In case of Treaty termination purposes all covered investment will continue to be protected for duration of 10 years.

Pursuant to the treaty annex, the U.S. government may adopt restrictions to Jordanian companies for national or MNF treatment in specific sectors such as atomic energy; customhouse brokers; licenses for broadcast, common carrier, or aeronautical radio stations, air and maritime transport, banking, while the government of Jordan has the right to reciprocate in the sectors they judge crucial. Every specific and newly added sector is listed in the annex of the Treaty