Skip to main content
About HEC About HEC
Summer School Summer School
Faculty & Research Faculty & Research
Master’s programs Master’s programs
Bachelor Programs Bachelor Programs
MBA Programs MBA Programs
PhD Program PhD Program
Executive Education Executive Education
HEC Online HEC Online
About HEC
Overview Overview
Who
We Are
Who
We Are
Egalité des chances Egalité des chances
HEC Talents HEC Talents
International International
Campus
Life
Campus
Life
Sustainability Sustainability
Diversity
& Inclusion
Diversity
& Inclusion
Stories Stories
The HEC
Foundation
The HEC
Foundation
Summer School
Youth Programs Youth Programs
Summer programs Summer programs
Online Programs Online Programs
Faculty & Research
Overview Overview
Faculty Directory Faculty Directory
Departments Departments
Centers Centers
Chairs Chairs
Grants Grants
Knowledge@HEC Knowledge@HEC
Master’s programs
Master in
Management
Master in
Management
Master's
Programs
Master's
Programs
Double Degree
Programs
Double Degree
Programs
Bachelor
Programs
Bachelor
Programs
Summer
Programs
Summer
Programs
Exchange
students
Exchange
students
Student
Life
Student
Life
Our
Difference
Our
Difference
Bachelor Programs
Overview Overview
Course content Course content
Admissions Admissions
Fees and Financing Fees and Financing
MBA Programs
MBA MBA
Executive MBA Executive MBA
TRIUM EMBA TRIUM EMBA
PhD Program
Overview Overview
HEC Difference HEC Difference
Program details Program details
Research areas Research areas
HEC Community HEC Community
Placement Placement
Job Market Job Market
Admissions Admissions
Financing Financing
Executive Education
Home Home
About us About us
Management topics Management topics
Open Programs Open Programs
Custom Programs Custom Programs
Events/News Events/News
Contacts Contacts
HEC Online
Overview Overview
Degree Program Degree Program
Executive certificates Executive certificates
MOOCs MOOCs
Summer Programs Summer Programs
Youth programs Youth programs
Article

Who owns the money? A movie on SRI | HEC Ideas #2

Finance
Published on:

What if you were to ask your bank for greater transparency in the way it uses your money? In this second part of the HEC Ideas series, Diane-Laure Arjaliès and Afshin Mehrpouya, Professors at HEC Paris, call for citizens to mobilize and demand an investment policy from their banks, pension funds and other financial players that can contribute to building a more just and sustainable society. Watch the video and you will understand that if you want to change the world, the main lever at your disposal could be your money!

Who owns the money? A movie on SRI | HEC Ideas #2

At a time when Socially Responsible Investment (SRI) is constantly growing among institutional investors, when an increasing number of pension funds, asset managers and social rating agencies are promoting a more sustainable approach to finance, and when the government is demanding enhanced transparency from financial players, there is one essential player in the working of financial markets which is still missing: individual financial services customers, that is me and you. And yet, we individuals hold over 70% of the assets under management in the international financial markets, through our savings, pensions and insurance premiums.

This lack of involvement does not mean however, that citizens are not concerned about the social & environmental impact of their money/investments. When they were surveyed in France for example, 77% of retail investors responded that more stringent environmental, social and governance (ESG) requirements in investments are essential (EIRIS-FIR study, 2013).

Much remains to be done before all financial stakeholders effectively strive to contribute to a more sustainable, fairer society by financing a real and sustainable economy. The search for short-term financial performance and the technical complexity & cost of analyzing environmental and social aspects of investments – often qualitative – and financial tools that are more inclined to use quantitative mathematical models, are key obstacles to growth of SRI.

This lack of attention from the majority of large investors and their frequent focus on short-term profits in their dealings with their investment portfolio companies is at times preventing and frequently not persuading those companies to take greater account of environmental and social issues in their strategies and operations. However, the key lever for change towards having a more responsible financial sector is not within the sector, but the wider society, that is the financial services customers – who are all citizens. As of now, they have not taken on the major role they could play in financial markets by fostering more appropriate use of their money by financial organizations.

How many individuals today are aware of the companies and projects that are being funded by their life insurance or pension schemes?

How many clients have ever asked their bank about the use it is making of the money in their and their children’s checking and savings accounts? How many have asked their financial advisers for investment funds which take into consideration environmental and social factors? Millions of citizens are making the effort to recycle, to buy fair-trade products, to donate to or work for associations and to encourage bartering in the name of more sustainable development… but seem unaware of what is perhaps the most effective lever at their disposal if they want to change society: their money.

This is while attention to environmental and social factors in investments, besides helping achieve a more sustainable economy and society, can also lead to higher long-term returns for our financial organizations, which frequently invest across global economy, and by extension can yield superior financial returns for the individual financial services customers.

For far too long, financial markets have been perceived as a world apart, one that is highly technical, difficult to understand and, ultimately, somewhat disconnected from our daily lives. The financial crisis of 2008 showed that the opposite is true: financial markets do indeed have an impact on the real world. All too often, however, this impact appears to us in a negative light – job losses, pollution, stress, offshoring, etc. – and this has perhaps made us forget that, ultimately, the money that they manage is ours. It is therefore our responsibility, too, to make sure that our investments finance the society that we want to live in and leave to future generations.

To achieve this, individuals must ask their banks, their insurance company and their pension fund for greater transparency as to how they invest their money, and demand that these investments take into account the social & environmental issues that are of concern to them, such as climate change, preserving local communities, respecting people’s fundamental rights and liberties around the world, and fighting corruption. Although it may be true that one individual has little chance of convincing his/her bank to change its investment policy, if millions of savers, pensioners, workers and insurance customers were to do the same thing, it is highly probable that change would come.