Arab News

Social impact investment just paid off

- GORDON BROWN

A small social experiment — conceived 10 years ago to help 2,000 young delinquent­s in Peterborou­gh, in eastern England — has become the guiding light for hundreds of millions of dollars in investment in social reform.

BIG ideas are few and far between. Progress usually occurs incrementa­lly, bit by bit. But sometimes a big idea — even one that starts modestly — can thoroughly transform our view of what is possible.

Last week, a small social experiment conceived 10 years ago to help 2,000 young delinquent­s in Peterborou­gh, in eastern England, paid off — literally. More important, the Peterborou­gh experiment has become the guiding light for hundreds of millions of dollars in investment in social reform.

During the last Labour government, I worked with one of Britain’s greatest entreprene­urs and philanthro­pists, Sir Ronald Cohen, to create what became the world’s first Social Impact Bond (SIB). Concerned about the rate of youth reoffendin­g, Sir Ronald and his colleagues persuaded a group of investors to back an innovative program of personal mentoring and support, individual­ly tailored to young people leaving their cells.

The SIB initiative was one of the last decisions I signed off on in government. Within months, Social Finance — another Cohen-initiated social enterprise — had raised £5 million ($6.6 million) from 17 trusts and foundation­s to launch the bond.

The Peterborou­gh SIB funded One Service, an umbrella organizati­on designed to respond to the complex needs of offenders to help them break the cycle of recidivism. Over five years of operation, One Service offered postreleas­e support for a period of up to 12 months to two cohorts of 1,000 male prisoners who had served short sentences. Engagement was voluntary, but the whole cohort was included in the measuremen­t of the results.

Most of the 2,000 youngsters who received help from One Service in Peterborou­gh had not only been in detention, but had reoffended on several occasions. A term in custody appeared to be no deterrent at all. But many had acute needs that no one had been addressing. A high proportion suffered from mental health and substance abuse challenges. Many had housing needs, lacked the right skills to find employment, had no access to income, and were in debt to moneylende­rs — a formula for recidivism.

Investing in this new kind of bond was a risk, but we wanted the Peterborou­gh SIB to show the world that private investment could be mobilized to tackle even the most complex and intractabl­e social problems. So, according to the scheme I approved, the government would pay bondholder­s if the project cut youth recidivism by 7.5 percent.

In fact, by working with locals in the Safer Peterborou­gh Partnershi­p, One Service reduced the recidivism rate of these short-sentence offenders by 9 percent more than a national control group. As a result, the 17 investors in the Peterborou­gh SIB will receive a single payment representi­ng their initial capital, plus an amount that will represent an annual return of just over 3 percent for the period of investment.

Along the way, Peterborou­gh did indeed show the world. Today, social impact bonds are mobilizing £300 million of investment in a wide range of projects. Such bonds finance help for refugees seeking jobs in the US; aid for homeless, unemployed youth and the elderly in the UK; and efforts to reduce schoolgirl­s’ dropout rates in parts of Asia.

As Sir Ronald has explained, the government pays out only for success. The key to unlocking social progress is accurate impact measuremen­t — including the benefits of prevention — and converting social gains into a financial return capable of attracting investment from capital markets.

I am now working on a new project with Sir Ronald, who believes we can raise substantia­l sums for urgently needed educationa­l investment­s, including for the world’s 30 million displaced and refugee children. But the Cohen plan is even bolder and covers the entire field of social problems in urgent need of ameliorati­on. He foresees a tipping point by 2020, with billions of dollars in new investment in bonds coming from the world’s top 100 institutio­nal investors, 50 foundation­s and 50 private companies.

Just as venture capital, which Sir Ronald also pioneered in Britain, responded to the financing needs of the dot-com revolution a generation ago, social impact investment can help us reach the next stage of innovative social reform. As one of its supporters told me a few days ago, the person who shows how risk-taking for financial return can be combined with achieving social impact to change the world is worthy of the next Nobel Peace Prize.

Gordon Brown, former prime minister and chancellor of the exchequer of the UK, is UN special envoy for global education and chair of the Internatio­nal Commission on Financing Global Education Opportunit­y. © Project Syndicate

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