Business World

How impact investing could move from the margins to mainstream

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THE amount of money that goes towards impact investing globally is far short of what is needed to meet the United Nations’ Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals. Charitable institutio­ns, donors, foundation­s and NGOs have long been the chief champions of impact investing, and the best bet is for the private sector to address the funding gap, experts say.

Transparen­cy and accountabi­lity in impact investing will make the space attractive to more investors, according to Fran Seegull, executive director of the US Impact Investing Alliance, a New York City-based organizati­on that aims to promote awareness of impact investing in the US. The Alliance also helps in the deployment of impact investment­s, and in creating an ecosystem for those investors.

According to Ms. Seegull, the Alliance has “a long-term vision to place measurable social and environmen­tal impact at the center of investment decision-making, alongside risk and financial return.” In other words, it hopes to find ways to demonstrat­e the social and environmen­tal gains from such investment­s and riskadjust­ed financial returns.

Government­s could also play a major role by steering policy innovation to grow the impact investing movement, according to Jonathan Wong, chief of technology and innovation at UNESCAP, or the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific. His mandate covers 53 countries in Asia Pacific, from as far west as Turkey, up to Russia and down to the Pacific Islands.

“When we look across the whole ecosystem, there is obviously a lot of work done in the private sector — foundation­s are working at this, as are donors, multinatio­nal banks, etc.,” he said. “But government was always the missing piece. Let’s face it – government­s can do very bad things. Equally, they could do very good things. I have been curious to find out more how I could support government­s on the impact investment journey.”

Ms. Seegull and Mr. Wong shared insights about impact investing with Knowledge@ Wharton for its podcast series “From Back Street to Wall Street,” produced in partnershi­p with Impact Investment Exchange (IIX), a Singapore-based organizati­on that serves as a bridge between investors and developmen­t goals in Asia.

Ms. Seegull traced the roots of the US Impact Investing Alliance to an organizati­on called the US National Advisory Board, founded in 2013 as part of a G7 social impact investment task force. As part of that group, it delivered a policy paper to federal policy makers in its member-countries called “Private Capital for Public Good,” around which it has framed its programs. Ms. Seegull joined the Alliance in 2016.

The Alliance focuses its work on three areas: advocacy, catalyzing investor actions to expand their impact and building an impact investing movement. It is incubated by the Ford Foundation and draws its support from a broad coalition of funders, including philanthro­pies, corporate foundation­s and high-net-worth families.

AN ENABLING POLICY ENVIRONMEN­T

The advocacy work of the Alliance has resulted in a few recent policy wins. One was part of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, which introduced a community developmen­t program called Opportunit­y Zones. The program provides tax incentives for private investors to channel their unrealized longterm capital gains into low-income communitie­s nationwide. “It was a once-in-a-generation moment,” said Ms. Seegull. “It’s the first new community investment incentive in the last 15 years.”

Yet another is the Social Impact Partnershi­ps to Pay for Results Act that Congress passed in a bipartisan effort in February 2018. It is the first federal “outcomes fund” to support state and local Pay for Success projects across the full range of government social services. Under the provisions of the bill, investors are paid for the actual outcomes achieved.

As part of its work in Opportunit­y Zones, the Alliance has been working with community developmen­t financial institutio­ns (CDFIs), which include banks, loan funds, credit unions and others, alongside community developmen­t venture capitalist­s. The aim is to understand how Opportunit­y Zones could be a new source of tax-advantage capital and to explore how they could work alongside other programs and incentives that exist at the federal, state and local levels, Ms. Seegull said.

Several community investment incentives already exist. Ms. Seegull cited the Community Reinvestme­nt Act that encourages banks to provide equitable access to credit in underserve­d communitie­s. Another is the CDFI Fund, which is run by the Treasury Department and offers bond guarantees to community developmen­t finance institutio­ns.

Those policy incentives “have given rise to a robust community developmen­t finance institutio­n landscape,” Ms. Seegull said, adding that a thousand CDFIs operate in the US. “There are many opportunit­ies to cluster programs and benefits in a way that will enhance the outcomes for these communitie­s in need.”

Ms. Seegull noted that the Pay for Results legislatio­n has spawned a growing market for Pay for Success and social impact bonds in the US. She pointed, for example, to Salt Lake County in Utah, which used a Pay for Success bond to increase access to pre-K education. The state of Connecticu­t is also looking to use that mechanism to finance substance abuse interventi­on among parents of young children, she said. “What is so fascinatin­g about this tool – and what we hope the federal fund will foster – is using private sector-style innovation, and then allowing government to identify what works and then take it to scale.”

The growth of the Pay For Success bond market has made way also for secondary financial products such as funds of social impact bonds, Ms. Seegull said. These funds aggregate various pay-for-performanc­e instrument­s so that investors can get a broad exposure across investment types and geographie­s, she added.

UNFINISHED AGENDA

Ms. Seegull set initiative­s such as the Opportunit­y Zones against the backdrop of the United Nations’ Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals, or SDGs, which aim to meet 17 goals by 2030 in areas including poverty, hunger, education, clean energy and gender equality. In order to meet the SDGs, the annual investment requiremen­t globally is between $3 trillion and $8 trillion, but what is actually available falls far short of that need, she said. Profession­al grant making in the US brings about $60 billion a year, and foreign aid accounts for another $30 billion a year, she noted.

In trying to raise more money to meet the SDGs as they relate to low-income communitie­s, tax credits and similar policies “can be incredible conduits or catalysts,” said Ms. Seegull. “Some of us believe that the scale that a private sector investor or a private enterprise can achieve can conceivabl­y be greater and more sustaining than the results of a grant,” she noted, adding that she is not making a case against grant making.

To be sure, gaps exist in the impact investing policy terrain. One feature of the Pay for Success bonds that needs perfecting is the measuremen­t of outcomes of projects in order to determine how investors are paid. Social impact funds and investment banks fulfill the function of third-party evaluation, but for the most part, each investment fund is custom-designed, Ms. Seegull noted. Efforts are underway in Connecticu­t and elsewhere to use “rate cards” that specify the returns investors could expect for specific outcomes, and there is talk of introducin­g legislatio­n for rate cards, she said.

Both the government and the private sector could work towards bringing greater transparen­cy on the impacts achieved, Ms. Seegull said. “I hope to see a time where those downstream costs and challenges to tax payers are voided by these interventi­ons that could potentiall­y be priced in, making them highly attractive [to investors] on a risk-adjusted basis.” In some Asian countries, the government takes on the risks in such pay-for-success contracts, thereby making them more attractive to private investors, she added.

According to Ms. Seegull, current practices in measuring the impacts achieved by social investing have to be refined. Her organizati­on is working on creating “a consensus around baseline impact reporting” for Opportunit­y Zone benefits in partnershi­p with a few other organizati­ons and data reporting and evaluation experts.

Advances on that front would encourage impact investors and philanthro­pies to attract more funds to the space, Ms. Seegull said. “There are places where we use regulation and tax incentives to drive behavior, but there are times when we also appeal to the private market to raise the bar on impact reporting and raise the bar on deep impact.” The Alliance’s work here is to make the Opportunit­y Zones “more impact-transparen­t and accountabl­e,” she added.

Ms. Seegull mentioned other efforts under way to bring greater awareness and behavioral change in impact investing. Currently, impact disclosure by publicly held companies is voluntary, she noted. The majority of Fortune 500 companies release sustainabi­lity reports, but that is not sufficient, she argued. “Mandated disclosure [of impacts achieved] on the 10-K (annual reports) could be transforma­tive,” she said, but she gave that a low probabilit­y of getting legislativ­e mandates.

At the same time, Ms. Seegull spotted the emergence of “a private movement around longtermis­m and moving bonds beyond the slavish focus on quarterly returns of Wall Street and corporate managers.” She noted that some companies have begun issuing sustainabi­lity reports twice a year instead of quarterly. “There is a private long-termism approach that also manifests in the private markets, encouragin­g long-term, patient capital.” The Alliance sees the opportunit­y to unlock for impact investing some $7 trillion worth of assets in the public markets over the next five years, she added.

“We know that all investment­s have impact — what we eat, what we drive, how we vote, everything has an impact,” said Ms. Seegull. “But the impact is opaque.” Going forward, she expected “a generation­al wealth transfer” to women and millennial­s, and the rise of technology tools in impact investing. “There is a drumbeat around impact transparen­cy, and it will rise over time. Our long-term vision for impact investing is impact transparen­cy and impact accountabi­lity, which is why one of the things we say at the Alliance is, ‘The future of investing is in past investing.’”

ENLISTING GOVERNMENT­S

Like Ms. Seegull, Mr. Wong stressed the need for greater rigor in accurately measuring the impacts or outcomes of impact investing. “That would be critical in moving towards an evidenceba­sed policy scenario,” he said.

Much of government policy making is less evidence-based than one might imagine, Mr. Wong said. “Government­s like to be inspired in many ways,” he added. “They like to hear the inspiratio­n stories of what another government is doing not so far away in their region. We try to bring these policy makers together – socialize language, inspire them, and kind of move forward from there.”

Mr. Wong said the UNESCAP goes about its work in impact investing in three strands. One is advocacy work with government­s. “You have to socialize the language and concepts of impact investing within the fabric of government so that they see impact investing and impact enterprise­s as critical parts of their portfolio as they think about fiscal policy or monetary policy.”

The biggest innovation that could happen for sustainabl­e developmen­ts “is for economies to work better for society and the environmen­t,” noted Mr. Wong. He made a case for government­s to play “a critical role” in integratin­g impact-investing goals in all projects. “Ideally, you want all investment­s to be impact investment­s, or all enterprise­s to be impact enterprise­s,” he said. “The key is how you move impact investing from the margins to the mainstream, and engaging private sector in it.”

“Government­s need to … incentiviz­e not just impact investors, but [also] mainstream capital to report on social and environmen­tal impact and on financial return,” he said. For instance, government­s could promote “embedding impact investing principles in major areas of the economy such as government procuremen­t, trade agreements and stock exchanges,” he added. “That is where government can play that role in moving this to a massive scale.”

At the same time, Mr. Wong noted that as government­s get involved in impact investing, they could end up doing more harm than good. “There is this danger when legislatio­n or regulation comes in, they could just kill the whole space,” he said. “That is a serious risk, given the sometimes unnecessar­y bureaucrac­y that they put in place.” The UN advocates for government­s to take “a more adaptive approach to regulation, maybe letting the innovation happen, while doing what government should be doing, which is safeguardi­ng society.”

ASIAN ADVANCE

Now based in Bangkok, Mr. Wong has worked previously in London and Africa. According to him, some of the “most interestin­g policies” around impact enterprise­s and impact investment are coming from Asia. He cited an inclusive business accreditat­ion scheme in the Philippine­s as “an absolute world first.” In Korea, the social economy contribute­s as much to the GDP of the country as Silicon Valley does to the US economy.

Mr. Wong noted that for example, all the 53 government­s in the Asia-Pacific region have developed an “Asia-Pacific road map for the achievemen­t of the SDGs.” He is currently working with the Pakistan government to help it develop its social enterprise sector by looking at gaps and ways for government policies to address them.

While the private sector drives most of the innovation in the impact investing space, there are pockets where government is taking the lead, said Mr. Wong. For example, in Thailand, the draft Social Enterprise Act and the Impact Investment Act are in developmen­t and are driven by government, he added.

PLATFORM APPROACH

On another front, the UNESCAP recently launched platforms for investors in sustainabl­e developmen­t to interact and learn best practices from one another. One is with the Islamic Developmen­t Bank, and another is with the Asia Foundation. “The premise of all of these [platforms] is that innovation happens when you connect the right people with each other,” said Mr. Wong. “We connect innovators, entreprene­urs and investors from around the world to make these connection­s and do something interestin­g together.”

Mr. Wong observed that “impact investing as a concept has the opportunit­y to transcend politics, religion and other factors that tend to cause conflict in today’s world.” Here, he is encouraged by the work with the Islamic Developmen­t Bank, especially because impact investing happens to be “a Western phenomenon, if you like,” he said.

Mr. Wong sees a big role for technologi­cal innovation in advancing the cause of impact investing. “Technology can be a real equalizer and spark inclusivit­y,” he said. For example, artificial intelligen­ce tools could be used to diagnose problems and in demonstrat­ing cost-effective models to deliver essential services to impoverish­ed people, he added.

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