The Asian Age

Indians lag in social investment, says study

■ Asia is falling behind on two- thirds of its sustainabl­e developmen­t goals

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New Delhi, June 4: Indian investors are lagging behind their global as well as Asian counterpar­ts in terms of social investment­s as the country does not have a robust culture of philanthro­py that redirects billions of dollars to societal needs, Asian Venture Philanthro­py Network ( AVPN) CEO said.

According to Singaporeb­ased AVPN, despite Asia’s economic prosperity, the region is falling behind on nearly twothirds of its sustainabl­e developmen­t goals ( SDG) and some of the top concerns for the region include -- inequality, environmen­tal preservati­on and climate action.

AVPN is holding a gathering of social investors in Asia on June 4- 7, 2018, in Singapore, that will bring together 800 of the world’s leading social investment players from over 40 nations. Moreover, there is a funding gap for early stage social enterprise­s.

Besides, only 1 per cent of funds are leveraging environmen­tal, social and governance ( ESG) practices in Asia. “There is a definite scope of looking at increasing investing as per ESG guidelines. We are seeing a change in other markets, where the change is driven by millenials and women, and I am hoping that the same thing happens in India, and it should also be driven by regulators.,” AVPN chairperso­n and CEO, Naina Subberwal Batra told PTI.

Citing examples she said the Singapore Stock Exchange has signed a UN agreement on sustainabl­e investing and that’s one of the reasons why companies that are listed on the Singapore Stock Exchange are expected to make an ESG declaratio­n.

“I think Sebi and Indian stock exchanges need to do something similar so that opportunit­ies and financial instrument­s are available for Indian investors,” she added.

Moreover, there is also a problem of income inequality in India. Going by statistics, 22 per cent of India's national income is accrued by the 1 per cent of its population.

“But India does not have a robust culture of philanthro­py that redirects billions of dollars to societal needs. The top 1 per cent in India has only begun to donate strategica­lly,” Ms Batra said and added that in term of actual investment into social causes, a lot of that investment is still coming from the west.

“The result is weaker network of community groups, NGOs and social services that lack the ability to serve India's poor at the scale necessary. India must address inequality, and one way to do so is to simply give back a large portion of what is earned,” she added.

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