Business Day

PIC failed in its early promise to become force of transforma­tion

Research shows that responsibl­e investment has better social and environmen­tal outcomes

- Tracey Davies and Dugan Fraser /Sunday Times/James Oatway ● Davies is executive director of Just Share, a nonprofit organisati­on that uses shareholde­r activism to drive better corporate behaviour. Fraser is an independen­t monitoring and evaluation adviser

CHANGE MANAGEMENT REQUIRES SUSTAINED, ETHICAL LEADERSHIP AND THIS HAS NOT BEEN IN PLACE

It would be hard to overstate the importance of the Public Investment Corporatio­n (PIC) to the SA economy and our society more broadly. Its website notes that it is one of the largest investors in SA equities, with investment­s contributi­ng towards about 12.5% of the market capitalisa­tion of the JSE.

Most of the PIC’s assets under management are entrusted to it by the Government Employees Pension Fund (GEPF). It also manages money for 23 other public bodies.

The PIC is the nation’s enormous piggybank, investing the money public servants put away for their retirement. It’s so big and such an important player in the financial market that its behaviour and ethics have the inevitable effect of shaping the whole investment ecosystem.

If we want to understand why the SA investment industry has failed to play a transforma­tive role in our country, we have much to learn from the PIC’s journey over the past 15 years.

In the early 2000s it seemed as if the PIC was going to take up the challenge of driving change in the private sector. It became a signatory to the UN-backed principles for responsibl­e investment, adopted the code for responsibl­e investing in SA and participat­ed in the UN Global Compact, all of which are aimed at making business more accountabl­e for its impacts on people and the environmen­t.

Had the PIC delivered on that early promise it is possible our society could look quite different from the way it does today.

More than 50% of South Africans live in poverty. After a decline in poverty levels between 2006 and 2011, the situation has worsened. By 2017 more than 55% were poor, according to Stats SA.

We can’t know definitive­ly whether different behaviour by the PIC would have had an effect on poverty levels, but a growing body of internatio­nal research shows that responsibl­e investment leads to equal or better returns, as well as better social and environmen­tal outcomes. So if a player of the size and importance of the PIC had been more focused on driving better corporate behaviour and less focused on using its assets as a slush fund for rewarding cronies, we may have seen the emergence of a private sector much more concerned with promoting inclusive growth to reduce poverty.

The other major issue confrontin­g our society, whether our government admits it or not, is climate change. Had the PIC leveraged its powers to make this a priority, SA could now be a global leader in realising the Paris agreement’s goal of a just transition to a resilient low-carbon economy that drives job creation, reduces inequality and builds social stability.

What does the PIC experience teach us? First, and most obviously, it teaches us that change is really hard and almost impossible without inspired leadership. The idea of “path dependence” explains how decision-making is often shaped by previous decisions and events, even when circumstan­ces are different.

The PIC is the perfect example of an institutio­n that has proved to be entirely path dependent: despite saying all the right things, it has done almost none of them, performed badly, and ended up with a severely compromise­d reputation.

Change management requires sustained, tenacious, ethical leadership and this has not been in place at the PIC. Two of the three CEOs since 2003 have had their integrity called into question: Brian Molefe and Dan Matjila.

Second, the PIC experience teaches us that implementi­ng responsibl­e investment requires strong, clear policies and guidance on how to approach all three elements of environmen­tal, social and governance factors holistical­ly, and that focusing on the governance piece alone is not enough.

While a review of the proxy voting reports on the PIC website shows that it has voted against some governance­related company resolution­s, the PIC has never demonstrat­ed any significan­t leadership on a single social or environmen­tal issue. This is appalling especially in light of its many claims to be a leader in responsibl­e investment.

Third, the PIC experience teaches us the importance of transparen­cy. It is often noted that the best disinfecta­nt is sunlight, and the PIC has for many years been a very shady place. Too many of its engagement­s have been undertaken behind closed doors and agreements, policies and positions have not been disclosed.

We need the PIC to communicat­e better, to be transparen­t about the agreements it reaches with its big investees, and to make public its policies and positions on big issues such as climate change and inequality. Its opacity also deprives it of the opportunit­y to demonstrat­e leadership to the rest of the financial sector.

The beating heart of responsibl­e investment is the asset owners and their asset managers, who have agreed on what is important and who take action on those issues. There are therefore huge questions about the GEPF’s role in adequately mandating the PIC and in carrying out its fiduciary duty to oversee the investment of its assets.

But ultimately the PIC’s biggest problem has been its failure to act on what it said it knew was important. The overall impression from the Mpati commission of inquiry into the PIC is that it has been doing pretty much everything other than managing its assets diligently and conscienti­ously, in accordance with the trust placed in it by millions of pensioners, public servants and taxpayers.

The only time we truly fail is when we don’t learn from what has happened before, and the findings of the Mpati commission will present SA with an important teachable moment.

The integrity and leadership abilities of the people who are chosen to drag the PIC out of its mire will be critical if the damage is to be reversed. Unless the PIC purposeful­ly and honestly takes on the challenge of becoming the leader in responsibl­e investment it has so long claimed to be, it will be far harder for business in SA to achieve its potential to play a transforma­tive role in our society.

 ??  ?? Under a cloud: Dan Matjila was CEO of the Public Investment Corporatio­n from 2014 until recently.
Under a cloud: Dan Matjila was CEO of the Public Investment Corporatio­n from 2014 until recently.

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