Foreign Investments and Developing Countries - Macedonia as a Case Study - IX
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Foreign Investments and Developing Countries - Macedonia as a Case
Study - Part IX
A dialog with Nikola Gruevski, former Minister of Trade and Finance
of the Republic of Macedonia
By Sam Vaknin
Author of "Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited"
Nikola: The possibility for certain privileges on the basis of the
invested foreign capital is provided in the Law of Customs Officials
(The Gazette of the Republic of Macedonia no. 20/93, 1/95, 24/95,
31/95,63/95,40/96 and 15/97) and in the Income Tax Law (Gazette of
RM no. 80/93..71/96) which are not sufficiently compared to the same
laws in some other countries in transition.
At first sight, article 33 of the Income Tax Law provides some
benefits, but when one analyzes the article, one sees that only a
small number of foreign investors (those who plan to keep the
capital in Macedonia for a period longer than 6 years) are able to
enjoy these benefits. According to this article, to the three years
of tax exemption, at least three more years should be added, in
which the capital must not leave the firm of the foreign investor in
order not to have to return the tax exemption to the state. Again,
the speculators that are needed so much at this moment are
discouraged.
It is interesting that the new laws (for example the Law of Business
Associations) that replaced some old ones (Law for Foreign
Investments) do not have any particular planned modifications for
improving the conditions for attracting foreign capital.
The transfers of the deposit and the profits of a foreigner are
regulated in article 28 of the Law for Business Associations,
paragraph 2 and in article 48 of the Law for Working with Foreign
Capital (Gazette of RM no. 30/93 and 40/96). Again, these are all
right at first sight, but when it is scrutinized, many unascertained
things are revealed.
Some countries, Poland for example, which are very successful in
promoting shareholding and their domestic companies, introduced tax
benefits in the years when their stock exchanges were forming. They
exempted from taxation the capital gain realized with issuing
securities through brokerage firms. Besides that, countries like
France and Great Britain offered tax benefits for collective
investment programs. The objective of Macedonia must be to create
the most favorable environment for attracting foreign capital. The
means for achieving this, must not have any negative effect on the
budget income, and should contribute to the global development of
the national economy in the country.
Actually the main problem in the tax sphere is not the low degree of
exempting foreigners from taxes, but the large and slow bureaucratic
procedures in carrying it out, the indetermination and the ambiguity
of the Macedonian laws.
For example, on the question how many percent should the legal
persons - foreign investors pay on interest income from bonds, on
dividends and capital gains in Macedonia, one Macedonian expert
answered: "maybe they will pay 15% and maybe nothing. Many details
in this field are not regulated, so if they don't pay nobody will
charge them . except, if they are in the way"...
Is it all accidental, or is it a result of a thought-out policy in
Macedonia?
Sam: I, personally, am no fan of conspiracy theories. There is a
famous "Hanlon's Razor" which says "Never attribute to malice that
which can be adequately explained by stupidity". I think that in the
case of Macedonia, a shock was involved, so enormous, that it
paralyzed the elites. Short term thinking is the daughter of
insecurity. People began to seize whatever they could, as though
there will be no tomorrow. The legislation reflected the total chaos
that ensued. I see no policy in the mess that Macedonian laws are -
I see human beings cast into a totally unknown situation, fearsome
and awesome, with enormous potential and even greater risks.
Nikola: Besides the provision for unlimited participation of
foreigners (in the Law of Business Associations) in an enterprise
partly or wholly foreign-owned, foreigners can not obtain a majority
stake in other associations.
If this case, the rights of the association which holds the majority
will be limited at the depending association based on the number of
shares.
The bureaucratic procedure for foreign capital according to the same
law is too complicated. The investments of foreigners in the newly
founded or the existing association must be registered at the
Ministry for Economic Relations with Foreigners. On the request of
the foreigner, the authorized ministry will issue a permit for the
foundation of an association which is totally in the ownership of
one or more foreigners, meaning that they have the majority (article
27 from LBA). If within 60 days from the day of submitting the
request, the authorized ministry does not issue a permit then the
permit for foundation i.e. foreign holding is deemed to be denied
(!!!). When the foreigner does not reach or exceed a major holding,
the participation in the newly formed that is the existing
association is only registered in the Register of Foreign
Investments, in this Ministry.
The question is asked:
What will happen to the prices of the shares of a Macedonian private
company on the stock exchange, when one whole Ministry (which means
the entire public) will find out that a certain foreign company
intends to buy the majority of the shares? (especially if the
domestic company is totally privatized through an employee buyout
scheme). We must not forget that Macedonia is a small country, and
news travel fast. We are forced to conclude that the small
shareholders will ask for a higher price for their shares, even
before the foreign company asks for a permit from the ministry. This
is a serious reason why the foreign investor should reexamine his
intention. This method is acceptable (in a milder form) for taking
over a domestic bank or specifically determined legal entities which
are of a strategic importance for the state. But does Macedonia need
this kind of barriers in its present conditions?
Sam: When I go to a hotel with my Macedonian girlfriend, I pay twice
as much as she does, in the best case. My passport is confiscated
and my details are immediately reported to the police on a special
form. This is discrimination, not to say xenophobia. The law should
treat locals and foreigners in the same way as far as ownership is
concerned. Trading shares, buying and selling them from other
shareholders voting rights, capital rights - there should be no
difference. That there is still a registrar of foreign investors is
outlandish. That a foreign investor should depend for his investment
on a bureaucrat who usually is not qualified or educated to deal
with these matters is surrealistic. These things, these remnants of
a dark past of idiocy should be immediately and unconditionally
abolished if Macedonia wishes to become a respectable (European .)
member of the family of economic nations. There is nothing to fear.
Foreign investors don't bite and most of them do not even have
horns. This is provincial thinking of the worst kind.
Nikola: Legislating a law of investment funds is one of the
conditions for the creation of a free and liquid market. The
investment funds are an ideal medium for saving, through which the
domestic and foreign investors will be able to invest money in
Macedonia. These funds will allow the potential investors to
diversify the risk and through one policy of long-term investments
to contribute to the stabilization of the prices.
In the Macedonian law the term "open funds" does not exist, and the
status of the trusts is not regulated. Although conditions for
proper forming and regulating investment funds can be created with a
law, their formation and operation can not be brought about only by
a law. Additionally, a market for their functioning can not be
provided by making a law in this field.
The segment into which Macedonia can attract foreign investments the
quickest, is state and municipal bonds. But the legislator created
a "riddle" here both for those who want to issue the bonds and for
those who are interested in investing their money in them. In the
Law for Changing and Supplementing the Law for Building Terrain
(Gazette of RM no. 21/91) the legislator, in article 5
declares: "the terrain in the cities and other regions prepared for
housing construction and other complex construction for which an
urban plan is made belongs to the republic."
This means that the communities don't nave their own property - in
the form of territory, and if they want to construct with their own
and/or borrowed money (bonds) they have three negative alternatives:
First, to tear down an old building on already existing locations
that belong to them and with an alteration to the urban plan, to
construct anew with the taxpayers money. This is a very long and
complicated procedure, and in most cases impossible.
Second, to ask the republic (government) to award them a land plot
for construction, which is even more complicated and the probability
for realizing it is smaller. When one considers the bureaucracy,
politics and the incomplete concept regarding when, where and to
whom the state can (not) award land. and
Third, not to build, which means to stagnate. This is the most
likely variant, judging by my conversations with several mayors of
the biggest communities in Macedonia. Who is winning and who is
loosing? It seems that everybody is loosing (the state, people,
municipality, investors etc.) and nobody is winning.
The arguments "for" this law, which later is incorporated in several
other laws, is not to endow the municipalities with greater power,
especially those whose leaders have "suspicious intentions". But
there are many other methods and means for the state to control the
municipalities and their leaders, then to take away their land.
Sam: In very few countries is the majority of the land mass owned by
individuals or even by municipalities. In countries as diverse as
China, the United Kingdom and Israel the situation is very similar
to Macedonia. Again, I think that the problem is not the land, or
the construction, or the laws. I think that the basic isue is that
of the breakdown of trust. In the USA "munis" (municipal bonds) are
issued against future tax receipts or against future income from
specific projects. People believe each other, they believe the
issuing municipalities and, above all, they believe the financial
markets. True, municipalities here do not own land and hardly have
any tax receipts and this is bad. But no investor - foreign or
domestic - would lend his money to a Macedonian municipality. They
are mismanaged, corrupt, unreliable. Would you put your money in a
construction project initiated by a municipality, even if the land
was owned by it? Allow me to doubt it. The more realistic approach,
would be to act in partnership with big private firms within well-
defined specific projects with Western advisory services and
auditing involved. These projects can be financed by issuing
municipal bonds, because they have a projected or even a guaranteed
stream of income. Such future income should go into a "sinking fund"
under the control of a Western auditing firm. Legally, the whole
things has to be tightly wrapped up. Sewage treatment plants, local
toll roads, municipal hospitals, water treatment facilities, a
shopping mall - all are such possible projects.
Nikola: When a serious investor wishes to invest his funds in
another country, among the first things that he does, is to consult
an in-house legal expert or to engage a lawyer, to make his idea
legally possible and profitable. This lawyer will correspond with a
local lawyer who will provide him with all the relevant laws in the
country, translated and with his opinion. After joint consultations
of both lawyers, the potential investor will develop or forget the
idea for investing in that country.
I hope that this explains the present situation with foreign
investments in Macedonia, and why the foreign investors are
bypassing Macedonia. But that is not all.
(continued)
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AUTHOR BIO (must be included with the article)
Sam Vaknin ( samvak.tripod.com ) is the author of Malignant
Self Love - Narcissism Revisited and After the Rain - How the West
Lost the East. He served as a columnist for Global Politician,
Central Europe Review, PopMatters, Bellaonline, and eBookWeb, a
United Press International (UPI) Senior Business Correspondent, and
the editor of mental health and Central East Europe categories in
The Open Directory and Suite101.
Until recently, he served as the Economic Advisor to the Government
of Macedonia.
Visit Sam's Web site at samvak.tripod.com
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