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Govt looking at new restrictions under the Overseas Investment Act

Author
Newstalk ZB, NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Tue, 19 Nov 2019, 5:57PM
David Parker announced the changes today. (Photo / NZ Herald)

Govt looking at new restrictions under the Overseas Investment Act

Author
Newstalk ZB, NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Tue, 19 Nov 2019, 5:57PM

The Minister of Finance is set to be given new powers to block foreigners from buying key infrastructure, military technology or major media companies.

Associate Finance Minister David Parker outlined the second round of changes to the Overseas Investment Office on Tuesday, which would also create new tests for investors wishing to export water, following public concern prior to the election.

The most significant change would see the creation of a national interest test, which will mean sales of infrastructure of a certain scale will be subject to Government approval.

Parker said the threshold for considering infrastructure sales would be $500 million if the buyer was Australian, $200m from a CPTPP country and $100m from other countries.

"The [current] rules under the Overseas Investment Act only allow the Government to take into account the financial capability of the investor and their integrity/reputation," Parker said.

"So long as they're not corrupt and they have the financial capability to manage the investment ... there's no way the Government can turn down an investment currently."

The national interest test would be similar to that of Australia, Parker said.

"That's a broad discretion for the Government to reach into those transactions when it wants to and decline to approve it where we think it's not in the interest of the country."

Investments likely to be subject to the tests was infrastructure with "monopoly characteristics" such as airports, ports, electricity lines companies and monopoly providers of water.

"If these things were ever to be sold, we think the Government should have the right to say they have to be sold to a New Zealand entity rather than to a foreign entity."

Parker said sales which might be considered under the rules might have included the failed attempt by Canadian investors to buy a major stake in Auckland Airport - which was ultimately turned down because the airport was on sensitive land - and the sale of Wellington Electricity to the Hong Kong-owned Cheung Kong group of companies.

Other changes would also include a "call in" power, with no investment threshold for proposed sales of "our most strategically important assets" such as companies developing military technology or suppliers to defence and security agencies.

Parker said the test could also apply to media companies.

Foreign investors wanting to buy sensitive land for the purpose of bottling water for export would have their applications considered for "the impact on water quality and sustainability" of a water bottling enterprise.

The Government has also pledged to charge a royalty on exports of bottled water. Parker said on Tuesday that the work was progressing separately from the Overseas Investment Act reform.

Other changes include a sharp increase in fines for non-compliance with the act, raising from a maximum of $300,000 under the current rules to $500,000 for individuals and $10m for corporate investors.

In 2018 the Government amended the Overseas Investment Act to make it much harder for foreign buyers to purchase a residential home as well as adding restrictions on the purchase of pastoral land.

Parker said the first round of changes had been a "huge success".

 

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