[GA, Failed] - Repeal: “Sophisticated Investors Protocol”

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Repeal: “Sophisticated Investors Protocol”
Category: Repeal | GA #642
Proposed by: The Ice States, Co-authored by: Kardashev III Civilization | Onsite Topic
Replacement: < None >​


Praising the intent of the "Sophisticated Investors Protocol" to reserve high-risk investments to those qualified to competently act in response to their risk factors;

Finding, however, that the resolution is worded in such a manner that it fails to achieve its goals to any substantive degree, instead hindering the ability of the World Assembly to enact stronger protections to this end;

The World Assembly notes the following facts.

  • Section 1 requires member nations to "define, if desired in writing by the said investor, to be 'sophisticated'" should an investor meeting Sections 1a - 1c request that in good faith, without specifying that member nations define the investor themselves as sophisticated, as presumably intended. This subtle flaw in the resolution's wording means that member nations merely have to inform such investors of the definition of "sophisticated" on request. This renders the provision ineffective in its goal, ie to require member nations to classify investors meeting Sections 1a - 1c as sophisticated.
    • In addition to rendering Section 1 ineffective in its goal, this drafting error also harms freedom of information: under the resolution, member nations need not publish their definition of "sophisticated", they must only provide their definition to those wealthy (inter alia) enough to meet Sections 1a - 1c. Knowledge of the law should not be limited to the rich.

    • In a member nation which is already publishing its definition of "sophisticated", the process of verifying that an investor indeed meets Sections 1a - 1c, and then providing them with the publicly accessible definition, is an unnecessary waste of resources. Member nation resources are not infinite to be spent on such frivolity as personally sending rich people publicly available definitions.

  • Section 2 contains a number of ambiguities which severely hinder interpretation of the resolution. Most importantly, it is unclear as to whether the "classified as a sophisticated investor based on the aforesaid criteria" qualifier applies to the member nation or to the investor. The presumably intended interpretation is that it applies to the investor; however, this interpretation would lock nearly all investments behind a requirement of being "sophisticated" inasmuch as there is any risk whatsoever that a cent more than the value of the original investment is lost. An individual who is not "sophisticated" would be prohibited from placing one dollar in a savings account with interest due to the possibility of a bank failure which cannot be covered by deposit insurance.

  • A member nation can also reasonably interpret the qualifier as applying to "a member state". This avoids the situation of active harm, however it also means that a member nation need only classify itself as a sophisticated investor in order to freely make available the instruments and products specified in Section 2, regardless of whether they are being provided to sophisticated investors. This, again, renders Section 2 nugatory.

  • As the final blow to its effectiveness as a resolution, the target's Section 3b prevents a member nation from prohibiting sophisticated investors from investing with a particular institution in another member nation. This includes institutions based in non-compliant, genocidal member nations, as well as a member nation one is actively at war with. "Administrative Compliance Act" requires member nations to fully sanction all trade with member nations which refuse to pay fines for non-compliance; member nations are unable to enforce this effectively if they are forced to permit a portion of investors to invest with such member nations' institutions.

  • The only way for a member nation to simultaneously avoid the issues in Sections 3b and 2 is for that nation to classify itself and no other entity as a sophisticated investor. Under this interpretation, the resolution would have very little effect on any member nation.

For the above reasons, the World Assembly strikes out the "Sophisticated Investors Protocol".
Note: Only votes from TNP WA nations, NPA personnel, and those on NPA deployments will be counted. If you do not meet these requirements, please add (non-WA) or something of that effect to your vote. If you are on an NPA deployment without being formally registered as an NPA member, name your deployed nation in your vote.
Voting Instructions:
  • Vote For if you want the Delegate to vote For the resolution.
  • Vote Against if you want the Delegate to vote Against the resolution.
  • Vote Abstain if you want the Delegate to abstain from voting on this resolution.
  • Vote Present if you are personally abstaining from this vote.
Detailed opinions with your vote are appreciated and encouraged!


ForAgainstAbstainPresent
21102
 
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Overview

This proposal is to repeal GA#642, the ‘Sophisticated Investors Protocol’, which is a resolution that seeks to reserve high-risk investments to those fully aware on how to competently act in response to the risk factors of those investments. However, this repeal proposal claims that the bill fails to achieve its goals primarily due to an unsuitable wording. Specifically, the proposal notes that clause 1 of the resolution is wrongly worded so that investors will be given a definition of ‘sophisticated’ rather than a confirmation that they are ‘sophisticated’ by the government. The proposal also accuses the resolution of preventing a member nation from prohibiting sophisticated investors from investing with an institution in another member nation. This is amongst many other examples of perceived ambiguities in the proposal

Recommendation

Whilst these perceived ambiguities in the resolution are largely correct, it is our view that they are very much pedantic and specious points to raise. Many of these errors are quite simply not severe enough to warrant a repeal of this resolution. As well as this, many of the clauses of the resolution where errors are raised would realistically still be interpreted correctly through the common sense of the reader, as the intended result of such sections would be the only legitimate result of them.

For the above reasons, the Ministry of World Assembly Affairs recommends a vote Against the GA proposal at vote, "Repeal: ‘Sophisticated Investors Protocol’".
 
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Present. The repeal is for a resolution that I wrote with IA as co-author. On the one hand, I already conceded that the section 1 grammatical ambiguity as mentioned in the repeal is accurate, because I missed it during proofreading. On the other hand, I personally don't think the error is serious enough to warrant repeal (and should remain readable) but the error does exist, and that fault is mine and mine alone.

For reference, IA's comment is below:

I think these arguments are all rather specious and would be discarded under the typographical error correction doctrine. [2023] GAS 5 ¶ 4. However, the number of grammatical errors is sufficient in this resolution that I am not myself very opposed to its repeal.

The only reasonable interpretation of section 1 is to mask investors as sophisticated if they request it. Avoiding that interpretation raises surplusage issues and is contraindicated by the canons of construction. Section 2 clearly applies to investors; reading it as member nations contravenes the standard presumption against binding the sovereign.
 
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It's a long-standing GA convention that intent is secondary to the plain language of the resolution. There's no doubt about the intent here, but still, the law says what the law says. It's a regrettable error but it is definitely there and does severely undermine the intent of the resolution. I also have to admit that I completely missed the nuance myself back when the targeted resolution was debated and voted on, possibly because I read the intent into it. It's easy to get tunnel vision.
As such, on this repeal: For.
 
I find myself in full agreement with AS on this matter. The letter of this law does not achieve its intent. Therefore, voting for a repeal is justified.
 
Repeal "Sophisticated Investors Protocol"" was defeated 6,302 votes to 5,007.
 
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