How Investors Can (and Can't) Create Social Value

P. Brest, R. Gilson, Mark A. Wolfson
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引用次数: 62

Abstract

Most investors have a single goal: to earn the highest financial return. These socially-neutral investors maximize their risk-adjusted returns and would not accept a lower financial return from an investment that also produced social benefits. An increasing number of socially-motivated investors have goals beyond maximizing profits. Some seek investments that are aligned with their social values (value alignment), for example by only owning stock in companies whose activities are consistent with the investor’s moral or social values. Others may also want their investment to make portfolio companies create more social value (social value creation). The thrust of this essay is that while it is relatively easy to achieve value alignment, creating social value is far more difficult. The literature published by asset managers, foundations, and trade associations voices considerable optimism that socially-motivated investors can create social value, particularly through non-concessionary investments. We are skeptical about many of these assertions; their language is often too loose to support a disciplined assessment whether social value was created, and the absence of fees keyed to social, rather than financial, value creation fuels that skepticism. To address this problem, we first offer a taxonomy of socially-motivated investments so that investors can clearly articulate their goals, and asset managers can clearly articulate what they offer and how their performance should be measured. We then address three big questions. First, can investments in public companies create social value whether or not with concessions on return? Second, can investments in private companies create social value, again whether or not with return concessions? Third, can investors, working with socially motivated stakeholders, cause public companies to create social value?
投资者如何创造(或不能)社会价值
大多数投资者只有一个目标:获得最高的经济回报。这些社会中立的投资者将其风险调整后的回报最大化,不会接受同时产生社会效益的投资的较低财务回报。越来越多具有社会动机的投资者的目标不仅仅是利润最大化。一些人寻求与他们的社会价值观一致的投资(价值观一致),例如,只持有那些活动与投资者的道德或社会价值观一致的公司的股票。其他人可能还希望他们的投资能使投资组合公司创造更多的社会价值(社会价值创造)。这篇文章的主旨是,虽然实现价值一致性相对容易,但创造社会价值要困难得多。资产管理公司、基金会和行业协会发表的文献都相当乐观地认为,具有社会动机的投资者能够创造社会价值,特别是通过非优惠投资。我们对这些断言中的许多都持怀疑态度;他们的语言往往过于松散,无法对是否创造了社会价值进行有纪律的评估,而缺乏与社会价值创造(而非财务价值创造)相关的费用,助长了这种怀疑。为了解决这个问题,我们首先提供了一个社会激励投资的分类,这样投资者就可以清楚地表达他们的目标,资产管理公司也可以清楚地表达他们提供什么,以及他们的表现应该如何衡量。然后我们讨论三个大问题。首先,对上市公司的投资能否创造社会价值,不管回报是否有所让步?第二,对私营企业的投资能否创造社会价值,无论回报是否有让步?第三,投资者能否与具有社会动机的利益相关者合作,促使上市公司创造社会价值?
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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