As has become something of a commonplace, the general consensus among those who manage the narrative of the global economy (such as "it" is and to the extent that one can describe "it" in the singular) that the pandemic can serve as an accelerator of a trend they have been nudging along to more deeply embed ESG (environmental, social, and governance) in their operations (at least in the way they identify and incorporate cost and value in their operations).
Again, one must understand this movement as initially focused on narrative. Narrative building, in turn, consists of two broad approaches.
The first involves meaning making through stories and understandings of right and wrong (social, economic, and political morals), that are consistently delivered and curated by the vanguard cohort of meaning makers vested (by virtue of their position, authority, or power) with legitimacy. Storytelling through norm making has now been deeply embedded into the culture of international organizations and within the operations of the largest transnational economic and civil society organs (in the West--Marxist Leninist meaning making takes a different route)).
The second involves meaning making through institutional and operative reorganizations. These changes, at least in their initial stages take on a set of uniform forms. They include the development of policy (from the top down; from the bottom up, etc.--it differences in the end except to the extent that either complies with the procedural expectations of a particular culture). They also include the development of forms of "response" built into (mostly) narrative or qualitative institutional measures meant to highlight (or signal) the greater centering of emerging values into the operational equations that constitute the way that values are applied (and factors added to core analytics) of the process of producing value. In less abstract English--it produces the tendency toward the construction of "National Action Plans," of reporting and compliance (risk mitigating) measures; of systems of internal surveillance--in short of variations of human rights due diligence systems that by their operation effectively inject policy (normative narrative) into patterns of institutional behavior (operational narrative).
One of the great vanguard organizations in this process is OMFIF, the
Official Monetary and Financial Institutions Forum, an independent think tank for central banking, economic policy and public investment. It is an important vanguard if only because it serves as an important window on the way in which institutions that control financial markets that power global production chains are reshaping the normative (values) universe within which they and their clients operate. See OMFIF's Report,
Global Public Investor 2020.
Chapter 9 of that Global Public Investor 2020 Report,
Sustainable Investment, presents the findings and analysis of two surveys. It is used to support the idea that conclusion that "GPIs have gradually incorporated environmental, social and governance factors in their portfolio management and wider activities. Most of them now have specific ESG investment policies in place or are in the process of developing one, according to a study of sovereign funds and public pension funds conducted by OMFIF and BNY Mellon." (Ibid., p. 3).
The two surveys that are the basis of the study are worth careful study. The Press Release announcing the distribution of the survey results (reproduced below) notes that OMFIF GPI Survey 2020 was "conducted between March-June, and reflects the responses of 50 central banks, 11 sovereign funds and 17 pension funds with combined assets under management of $7.2tn. Five questions from the survey focus explicitly on sustainable investment issues." It also explains that the OMFIF ESG integration survey "included 25 questions on ESG investment and was conducted in association with BNY Mellon between August-November 2019. . . [reflecting] responses of 27 sovereign and pension funds with a combined AUM of $4.7tn." The surveys were anonymous and permitted opt out.
The survey results and their analysis, the process of constructing both normative and operational narrative, are bound up in the animating motivation expressed in Chapter 9 (pp 3-4).
Within the GPI community, investors are realising that adopting ESG criteria can protect portfolios from non-financial sources of risk. They are opting to integrate ESG considerations to mitigate the risk of reputational damage, and to better align their values and investments. The expectation of superior risk-adjusted returns was a predominant motivation for ESG criteria integration among GPIs, according to the OMFIF-BNY Mellon survey. Generally, GPIs are aware that ESG factors can present underlying investment risk. For example, non-sustainable investments might become ‘stranded’ or lose value over time, or a company’s operations could become compromised if subject to a climate-related disaster. Survey respondents also cited the need to align investment strategies with organisational values or minimise reputational risks as a driver of ESG implementation.
Both Chapter 9 (
Sustainable Investment) and the larger OMFIF report (
Global Public Investor 2020) are well worth reading, if not for the "truths" of what is provided then certainly for the power of its meaning making through narrative and the techniques of social science. For those committed to the continuing transformation of the values universe applicable to economic activities, the reports provide some good news; though for those who are less patient, the slow progress in the "right" direction may be maddening slow.
Press Release follows.