miércoles, 30 de septiembre de 2015

An Appeal to Bankers

The United Nations, supported by 193 UN members recently adopted the Sustainable Development Agenda, which features seventeen ambitious goals aimed at radically improving our planet by 2030; making it more sustainable and more equitable for all.

Relevant and significant goals for a world in need of deep change.

However, the adoption of those goals by the United Nations, while an important milestone, is not enough. We need a majority of countries collaborating to adopt the seventeen sustainable development goals, and that adoption needs to be supported by citizens, and the political and economic sectors, to facilitate lasting change.

If there is one sector whose commitment to sustainable development goals is of a paramount importance, it is banking.

Although, it would indeed help, I do not mean that all banks should be devoting a small part of their profits to charitable initiatives in line with the sustainable development goals. I’m talking about something else, something deeper, and something that could radically change the face of our planet.

Banks are economic players, intermediaries of savers/investors and borrowers/investees. Banks have an opportunity to rethink their role in society, to place themselves back in service of the people, organisations and communities that entrust them with their hard earned cash. Banks can be incredibly powerful catalysts for positive economic, social and environmental change.  And banks can have it both ways: maximizing good profits for shareholders and stakeholders in the long term, and supporting a more equitable, healthier and balanced world. 

A great first (and simple step) for banks is to incorporate positive screening criteria in their lending policies to ensure they invest in more responsible and transparent ways. A second step is to use criteria based upon the sustainable development goals to ensure they are finding ways to invest their people, capital and resources to create positive impact.

Banks belonging to the GABV (www.gabv.org) have been successfully and profitably practicing this kind of banking for decades.

Why isn’t all banking done this way?

If the banking industry shifted even some of their activities to support the UN’s sustainable development goals in the way described above, trillions of USD would be invested in organisations and initiatives all over the world in a way that would also gently push borrowers/investors to act in a way more aligned to the UN’s Sustainable Development Agenda.


This would really make a change, this is worthwhile. So, what are you waiting for?

domingo, 27 de septiembre de 2015

GABV partners with GEFF2015 event to grow values-based banking

The Global Alliance for Banking on Values (GABV) is proud to have participated as an associated partner at the Global Ethical Finance Forum (GEFF2015) in Edinburgh, Scotland at the beginning of September. I also had the personal pleasure of participating as a speaker in the inaugural plenary session on Making the Case for Values in a Post-Financial Crisis World.

It’s always great to see appetite and activity building around the concept of values-based banking (also known as ethical, regenerative, or sustainable banking), and the GEFF2015  event really highlighted this trend.  

Hosted by the Scottish government and organized by Middle East Global Advisors with the cooperation of Thomson Reuters; the event focused on Convergence and Collaboration by calling for the harmonization of approaches to ethical and responsible finance across the world. More than 65 global leaders and 250 participants including bankers, asset managers, central bankers, pioneers in standards, issuers of green bonds and global networks; participated in ground-breaking dialogue on the future of the ethical finance industry, with a more in-depth look at ethical Islamic finance.

The main conclusions of the event are very much in line with the work and aspirations of the GABV.  Two of which are important to highlight:

-       The need to build on the opportunity of convergence between the variety of approaches in ethical finance e.g. Socially Responsible Investing (SRI); values-based or ethical banking; environmental, social and governance sectors; and the faith-based finance sectors. By building a harmonized approach we will increase collaboration, awareness and appetite for this type of financing.
-       The need to develop common standards and principles for the industry that will support this harmonization.

The GABV is already playing a role in the convergence of approaches to responsible finance and in setting the standards for the industry. For example we have built and promote a common set of guidelines for values-based banking members through the Six Principles of Sustainable banking, and in developing a banking Scorecard that we anticipate will become the common standard for all banks reporting on banking operations based on the above principles.

No less important is the work of the GABV in other fields: initiating the SFRE Fund to  deploy much needed growth capital to values-based banking institutions across the world, which helps GABV members and non-member financial institutions create more economic, social and environmental impact; and initiatives like the Leadership Academy that’s training the next generation of values based banking leaders.