Robert A.G. Monks

Corporate America has pretty much had its way in Washington for the past couple of years. Its CEOs and lobbyists got the Wall Street bailout. They got the auto bailout. They set the terms of the health care bill. They blunted financial regulation. They blocked climate legislation. If they were tied to the defense industry, they enjoyed a surge of military outlays. Of course they preserved the tax cuts for the rich. They did all of this, mind you, after the Democrats swept the 2006 and 2008 elections and gained control of  Congress and the White House.

Remarkable, isn’t it?

Now, with business-friendly Republicans in control of the House, the most powerful corporate lobbies—the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the Business Roundtable and the National Association of Manufacturers—have even more clout. They can, at minimum, stop just about anything they don’t like.

But they would be well advised to use their power sparingly.

I write this as a rational optimist, and as an unabashed believer in the power of business to do good—by creating jobs, generating wealth, satisfying people’s wants or needs, and enabling an unprecedented wave of economic growth during the past half century. (See China, cappuccino and cell phones, my first blogpost of 2011) But it’s hard for me to ignore the fact that the benefits of that growth are not being as broadly shared as they should be, at least here in the U.S., and that the reason for that, at least in part, is business’s outsized power in Washington.

The growth of inequality is especially troubling in the aftermath of the great recession. Wall Street is booming again, the stock indexes are up, corporate profits are growing…while the middle class and especially the poor—43.6 million of them, one in seven Americans—are being left behind. [click to continue…]

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You want a car that gets good gas mileage and you want energy-efficient appliances (or at least I hope you do). But do you want a low-carbon investment portfolio?

The Green Century Balanced Fund is betting that you do. The Boston-based mutual fund says it is the first U.S.-based fund to disclose its carbon footprint, which is 66% less than the carbon intensity of the S&P500 Index.

GCFLogo

Let’s be clear what we’re talking about here. This isn’t an accounting of how much energy the mutual fund company uses in its offices or how often its staffers get on planes. It’s an analysis of the tons of carbon emissions per million dollars of revenue that are generated by the companies held by the Balanced Fund, compared to the firms in the S&P500.

Why would you care? Not merely because you want to invest in mutual funds and companies that are greener and cleaner than average (although, again, I hope you do) but because those funds and companies will over time outperform their peers—an arguable but much iffier proposition.

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How could smart people be so dumb? That’s the overarching question raised by the Bernie Madoff-with-the-money affair. But because the decision to entrust one’s entire fortune to a black-box operation like Madoff’s is a triumph of greed over common sense, it’s hard for me to get worked up about the suffering of the Palm Beach society types who invested millions with Madoff.

Far more troubling are the losses suffered by foundations and nonprofits—because they raise important questions about how these institutions invest their money. Among those that have been forced to shut down are The Picower Foundation and the JEHT Foundation (the name stands for justice, equality, human dignity and tolerance) and the Fair Food Foundation. Others that have suffered substantial losses include The Elie Wiesel Foundation for Humanity, the Ramaz School, Yeshiva University, Stephen Spielberg’s Wunderkinder Foundation, Hadassah and the Carl and Ruth Shapiro Family Foundation, according to this roundup in The Washington Post.

There is lots to say about all this. See, for example, this excellent story in The New York Times about the campus debates at Yeshiva University, about the scandal and Jewish values. But the screamingly obvious lesson, to me, is that nonprofits and foundations have been woefully deficient when it comes to aligning their investments with their broader purpose. This problem extends well beyond Madoff.

Think, for instance, of that JEHT Foundation, which supported such human rights groups as Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and Human Rights First. You’d think a group like that would want to invest its money only with companies that respect human rights by, for example, refusing to do business with Sudan, or pressing for freedoms in China. But there’s a disconnect between the way groups like JEHT invest their money and how they give it away.

The same goes for Jeanne and Kenneth Levy-Church, who were behind the Fair Food Foundation, a group that had generated lots of buzz in the sustainable food world. You would think the couple would want to make sure that their money was invested in companies that respect the environment. Instead, they turned it over to Madoff, and like everyone else, had no idea how he made his money.

This isn’t a new issue. You may recall that a few years ago the Los Angeles Times looked into the investments of The Gates Foundation and found that some of the companies it was supporting undermined the purposes of the foundation. For example:

The Gates Foundation has poured $218 million into polio and measles immunization and research worldwide, including in the Niger Delta. At the same time that the foundation is funding inoculations to protect health, The Times found, it has invested $423 million in Eni, Royal Dutch Shell, Exxon Mobil Corp., Chevron Corp. and Total of France — the companies responsible for most of the flares blanketing the delta with pollution, beyond anything permitted in the United States or Europe.

More generally:

The Times found that the Gates Foundation has holdings in many companies that have failed tests of social responsibility because of environmental lapses, employment discrimination, disregard for worker rights, or unethical practices.

You can read the long L.A. Times series here.

Steve Viederman, the former president of the Jessie Smith Noyes Foundation, has for years been calling upon foundations to align their investments with their mission. Foundations, he has noted, tend to be passive investors. They rarely throw their weight around when it comes to shareholder resolutions aimed at getting companies to be more socially and environmentally responsible. Here’s an essay by Steve about the issue.

Another who has sounded this alarm for years is the shareholder activist Robert A.G. Monks. Monks has griped that university endowments manage investments that are entirely unrelated to their values and missions. See, for example, To Harvard With Love, a letter that Bob wrote to Larry Summer, who was then the president of his beloved alma mater, back in 2003. He wrote:

Harvard has become an “owner” of virtually all of those enterprises whose collective functioning impacts life on earth perhaps more than any other institutions. The question is the extent of Harvard’s responsibility as owner. What is Harvard doing now? Does she ensure optimum value? What should she do in the future?

The fact that people like Steve Viederman and Bob Monks and a group called the Sustainable Endowment Institute have been making this argument for so long and getting so little traction is, among other things, a reflection of the weakness of the socially responsible investment industry. SRI investment pros have simply failed to make the case that values-driven investing is the best way to invest.

If there is any benefit from the Madoff scandal, it will be that nonprofits and  foundations pay a lot more attention to how and where their money is invested. They can’t just be responsible donors. They need to be responsible owners as well.

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