OVERSEAS INVESTMENT OFFICE GOOD CHARACTER PROCESS REVIEW
What NZ Needs Is A Bouncer, Not A Doorman
Land Information NZ released today the independent review of the Overseas Investment Office’s “good character” process
in the wake of its 2014 approval of the sale of Onetai Station to buyers who figure in the Panama Papers.
Once again the people in question were deemed to be of good character by the OIO, despite evidence to the contrary.
And the review caught the OIO out, stating that its’ search of the Internet for anything relevant to the good character
of the Onetai applicants had actually found something of relevance but it did not advise the respective Ministers of
that.
Nor could the actual online item be found when the independent reviewer requested it.
The review has made some minor procedural recommendations.
But the review was only ordered in the first place because the OIO was caught out by the Panama Papers leak. The review
does nothing to address the larger problems of the OIO.
The major “good character” weakness is that it only applies to individuals.
In the case of transnational corporate applicants it only applies to the individuals who own or control the company. Not
to the corporation itself.
As far as the Overseas Investment Act is concerned, it doesn’t matter if the transnational corporation has a record as
long as your arm. It’s all above board so long as the people owning and/or controlling it are good blokes.
Another major weakness is that it is a “self-reporting” process, which relies heavily on the applicant signing a
statutory declaration, filed by an NZ lawyer on his or her behalf, saying “I’m of good character”. Presumably the Onetai
Station applicants signed one of those.
Don’t take our word for it. To quote Martin van Beynen in the Press (7/5/15, “OIO Useless For A Reason”, http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/politics/opinion/79663424/governments-have-wanted-the-overseas-investment-office-to-be-useless): “The tireless Murray Horton and Bill Rosenberg, at the Campaign Against Foreign Control of Aotearoa, have been making
lack of good character complaints to the OIO and its predecessor for nearly 20 years”.
This link to our Website http://www.sitelevel.com/query?query=good+character=0c76d290=SiteLevel+Search takes you to the result of a keyword search for “good character”. Pages and pages and pages of articles we’ve written
about different cases over many, many years.
And what is the common denominator to all our “good character” complaints – the OIO has never upheld any single one of
them.
Even in the case of individual applicants who have a record overseas, the OIO has gone into bat for them to urge the
Ministers to put to one side the “not of good character” evidence and approve the application. The classic recent
example of that was Kim Dotcom. Refresh your memory with this Foreign Control Watchdog article “Kim Dotcom And The Good Character Test” at http://www.converge.org.nz/watchdog/30/06.html Our source for that was the complete OIO file on Dotcom’s application.
Above All Else, Review Says OIO Must Not Offend “High Profile Persons”
And the review shies away from anything that might really work. There is a most revealing section headed “Police
Checks”, which says, in part: “…Police checks are used internationally in immigration matters and Police authorities
around the world are equipped to provide such a document. This suggestion is put forward for consideration by the OIO
and is not put forward as a recommendation….An added difficulty for OIO is that applications for investment often involve high profile persons and the request for a
Police check could create tensions and be perceived as offensive. To provide OIO with a discretion whether or not to require a Police check creates an awkward situation where refusal to
exercise the discretion could increase the tension. This therefore is a matter that is best left to the OIO to consider
having regard to all relevant factors” (emphasis added). So, the OIO must not offend “high profile persons” (like Kim
Dotcom, presumably) or use any tools that might actually work. Martin van Beynen was spot on with his headline “OIO
Useless For A Reason”.
That reason is quite simple – both the Government and the OIO see its function as being that of a doorman (doormat would
be more accurate), a facilitator of the transnational corporations and other foreign applicants. Definitely not an
overseer, regulator or investigator.
This role has been delegated to the OIO by successive governments headed by both major parties throughout the 40+ years
of its existence (first as the Overseas Investment Commission). It has fulfilled the role with exemplary enthusiasm: of
the very few applications where Ministers have exercised their rights to make the final decision, the OIO has always
argued for approval, even when the arguments for refusal are overwhelming. The most recent example of this was the
Government’s 2015 refusal to allow a Chinese buyer to purchase Lochinver Station – the OIO wanted it approved.
The OIO is well past its use-by date.
CAFCA says there needs to be a real review, which needs to look at the following:
• the OIO’s process for deciding whether an applicant is “of good character” (this review out today has passed the
buck on this)
• exactly how the OIO substantiates an applicant’s claim that their application will be of economic benefit to New
Zealand;
• what OIO processes are in place for monitoring compliance with conditions imposed by the OIO and undertakings
made by the applicant;
• what OIO processes are in place for third-party (TP) interests, i.e. determining a TP interest, notification to
TPs, receiving submissions from TPs, and keeping TPs informed, particularly after a Decision (approval) has been made;
• OIO criteria for giving retrospective consent.
Let’s have a bouncer, not a doorman.
But the OIO is only part of the problem of NZ’s incredibly laissez faire foreign “investment” policy (which translates
as “come on in and help yourselves”). The whole regime, not just the rubber stampers, needs an overhaul. And to be
replaced by one which puts the interests of the New Zealand people first and foremost.
When the Crafar Farms sale to Chinese buyers first became a major political issue several years ago, John Key said that
he didn’t want to see New Zealanders “become tenants in our own country”. CAFCA very rarely agrees with anything Key
says but we’re happy to quote him on that one. In the owner-tenant relationship, there is no doubt about who holds the
upper hand. Ownership means political power. Foreign control means recolonisation, but by company this time, not
country.
Murray Horton
Secretary/Organiser
ENDS