Lauren Kaufmann, an assistant professor of business administration at the University of Virginia's Darden School of Business, and Helet Botha of the University of Michigan-Dearborn, explore whether "impact investors" assess if their strategy is having a positive effect
Impact investing aims to generate financial returns while also creating positive social or environmental outcomes.
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Investors can aim not only to make money but to benefit society while doing so. But few of those impact investors follow up on whether their strategy is having a positive impact, we found in a study published in the Journal of Business Ethics.
Impact investing aims to generate financial returns while also creating positive social or environmental outcomes. But having the intention of doing good by selecting the right assets doesn’t guarantee that you will. We call this uncertainty “impact risk.”
After conducting 124 interviews with impact investors and an experiment with 435 participants, we found that, rather than evaluate impact risk directly, many impact investors presume that they will succeed at having a positive effect on the world when they assess their investment options.
In other words, they assume that certain businesses, such as solar energy companies or microfinance initiatives, are inherently good for society. This “win-win” mindset leads investors to focus primarily on financial performance rather than on evaluating whether their investments are achieving social or environmental impacts. Often, this means that investors can’t determine whether specific investments perform better than others on social metrics.
We found that this mindset discourages investors from seeking information that might point to shortcomings in an investment’s social performance.
[This article has been reproduced with permission from University Of Virginia's Darden School Of Business. This piece originally appeared on Darden Ideas to Action.]