Financing the Transition to Sustainability: SMART Reform Proposals

Jay Cullen, Jukka Mähönen, H. R. Nilsen
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

Financial markets are fundamental to a successful transition to sustainable market activity. Addressing unsustainable financial practices is vital to realizing the EU’s commitments on sustainability, as expressed for instance in the European Green Deal of December 2019. Yet, investments in unsustainable projects – routinely funded by large EU banks – have not been addressed sufficiently by EU financial regulators, in spite of the introduction of the EU Sustainable Finance Initiative (SFI) in 2018. The SFI lacks a systematic integration of sustainability factors in the actions proposed, limiting focus on selected environmental issues, especially climate change. It also relies too much on the existing incentive structures for private actors in financial markets. Such reliance is unlikely to deliver sufficient sustainable investments. On the other hand, the EU has made considerable progress regarding to prevent ‘greenwashing’ of financial products, and the development of consultative processes and expert groups speaks of a genuine commitment to deliver, which may be realized in the present EU Parliament and Commission. However, the legitimacy and effectiveness of this EU action needs to be assured, and there is a danger the SFI will not achieve its goals, due to limitations in the proposals under it. In this Report the SMART Project presents its analysis and reform proposals on regulation governing the funding of investments both in the EU and between the EU and third countries. The regulation discussed concentrates firstly on the banking system, including central banks and private banks but also private and public institutional investors, as much of the short-term and narrow pressure for maximization of returns to investors comes from the investment supply chains of financial markets and institutional investors. The SMART Project also proposes revision of the European Central Bank mandate and operations, guidelines for bank risk assessment, and regulation of banks. Secondly, the SMART Project proposes broadening and strengthening the SFI with proposals of amendments in the recent Taxonomy, Disclosure and Benchmarks Regulations to cover all economic activities and financial instruments and all market actors, both public and private, obliging them take into consideration sustainability in their investment decisions as well as benchmarks provided by index and benchmarks providers. In the final part of the Report the increased focus on foreign investments outside the EU is discussed.
向可持续发展过渡的融资:SMART改革建议
金融市场是成功过渡到可持续市场活动的基础。正如2019年12月《欧洲绿色协议》所表达的那样,解决不可持续的金融做法对于实现欧盟对可持续性的承诺至关重要。然而,尽管2018年推出了欧盟可持续金融倡议(SFI),但欧盟金融监管机构并未充分解决不可持续项目的投资问题。这些项目通常由欧盟大型银行提供资金。SFI在提议的行动中缺乏可持续性因素的系统整合,限制了对选定环境问题的关注,特别是气候变化。它还过分依赖金融市场中私人行为者的现有激励结构。这种依赖不太可能带来足够的可持续投资。另一方面,欧盟在防止金融产品“漂绿”方面取得了相当大的进展,协商过程和专家小组的发展表明了真正的承诺,这可能在目前的欧盟议会和委员会中实现。然而,这一欧盟行动的合法性和有效性需要得到保证,并且由于其提案的局限性,SFI有可能无法实现其目标。在本报告中,SMART项目提出了对欧盟内部以及欧盟与第三国之间投资融资监管的分析和改革建议。所讨论的监管首先集中在银行系统,包括中央银行和私人银行,也包括私人和公共机构投资者,因为投资者回报最大化的短期和狭隘压力大部分来自金融市场和机构投资者的投资供应链。SMART项目还建议修订欧洲央行的任务和业务、银行风险评估指南和银行监管。其次,SMART项目建议扩大和加强SFI,对最近的《分类、披露和基准条例》提出修订建议,以涵盖所有经济活动和金融工具以及所有公共和私人市场参与者,要求他们在投资决策中考虑可持续性以及指数和基准提供商提供的基准。报告的最后一部分讨论了对欧盟以外外国投资的日益关注。
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