US Department of Labor slams OECD on ‘Marxist’ ESG policies

Justin Danhof

The US Department of Labor has publicly condemned the OECD for “pushing members to politicise their pension systems by integrating ESG factors unmoored from returns”.  

The Employee Benefits Security Administration, a DoL agency that oversees more than $14 trillion of the nation’s private retirement assets, launched a fresh attack on the OECD and its responsible investment principles for pension funds, declaring that it will withdraw support for such policies and that ESG is “nothing but a Marxist march through corporate culture”.  

Justin Danhof, senior policy adviser at EBSA, delivered the searing words as part of a speech outlining President Trump’s pension investing priorities to an OECD pension conference in Paris on Tuesday to a gasping crowd, one source attending the event told Top1000funds.com. 

Danhof, who is a staunch “anti-woke” crusader and previously called BlackRock, Vanguard and State Street “behemoth ideological cartel” over their ESG investment policies, said the US would not “support these policies, even tacitly”. 

“ESG, at its core, looks a lot like a Marxist march through corporate culture. What is the point of Marxism? The complete destruction of capitalism,” Danhof said. 

“If America and other OECD member companies hamstring our nations’ capital markets and pension systems with superfluous ESG costs, it only serves to benefit authoritarian regimes that do not engage in such frivolity,” he said. 

Sponsored Content

“America faulted with ESG. We are now on the mend. We invite you to join us.”  

Danhof also made a swipe at diversity, equity and inclusion which he said is a concept “that killed meritocracy leading to corporate mediocracy, which, in turn, sacrifices investment and pension returns”. 

The US DoL, under the Trump administration, is seeking to roll back a Biden-era regulation which explicitly allowed private pension funds to consider ESG factors when investing assets under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA). The Democratic rule already received several state-level challenges, including a lawsuit from a coalition of red states led by Utah in a Texas court, which was ultimately dismissed.  

The DoL under Trump intends to finalise new rules by May 2026, which will require pension plans to invest “based only on financial considerations relevant to the risk-adjusted economic value of a particular investment, and not to advance social causes”, according to the latest EBSA regulatory agenda.  

The US pension system will focus on the “exclusive purpose” of providing benefits to plan participants, Danhof said, highlighting the limited adoption of ESG investing in corporate retirement plans (ERISA qualified funds) as a result of its “clear standards” against “politically motivated investments”.  

“That’s because ESG is not just some side-bar political or policy issue. It’s about sovereignty and security as well. Authoritarian leaders love when our member nations embrace ESG. Why? Because it lessens your prosperity and makes you less competitive,” Danhof said.  

Danhorf’s criticism of the politicisation of pension investing should be viewed in the context of US public pension plans which have elected officials as board members and over recent years have been criticised for restricting or directing pension investments. [See The politicisation of investments at US public funds] 

An OECD spokesperson declined to comment. 

In a separate speech at the OECD conference on Thursday, the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) chair Paul Atkins also took aim at the European Union’s sustainability reporting requirements for corporates, describing them as “prescriptive” and “burdens” to US companies.  

“As Europe seeks to promote its capital markets by attracting more companies and investment, it should focus on reducing unnecessary reporting burdens on issuers rather than pursuing ends that are unrelated to the economic success of companies and to the well-being of their shareholders,” he said.  

Leave a Comment

Temasek likely to miss 2030 climate target dragged by aviation, energy investments

Temasek likely to miss 2030 climate target dragged by aviation, energy investments

Temasek chief executive Dilhan Pillay says the sovereign investor is likely to miss its 2030 interim climate target, as exposures to the aviation and power generation sectors are crimping the investor’s ability to reduce portfolio target emissions. But the $339 billion fund is sticking to its net zero by 2050 goal, stressing the slower decarbonisation pace "reflects the realities of the broader global economy."

Sort content by

NBIM dethrones GPIF to become the world’s largest asset owner

Norway’s sovereign wealth fund is now the world’s largest asset owner according to the Thinking Ahead Institute's annual Asset Owner 100 report, which also outlines the similarities and challenges among top capital allocators globally. 

Sweden’s AP2 and AP6 conflict over PE investments

The Swedish government’s plans to streamline the country’s pension system and merge the $8 billion buffer fund AP6 with its larger and more diversified sibling, the $48 billion AP2, have hit a bump in the road. Major points of contention include AP6's large private equity exposures and staff integration. 

Iceland’s pension funds: Consolidation continues but size of sector a worry

Merger mania continues to grip Iceland’s pension sector, but economies of scale and greater efficiency don't solve the problem of the size of an industry now larger than the country's banking system and insurance sector combined, and more than sufficient to buy all listed investments.

Limited alternatives keep global capital anchored to the US

Singapore’s Temasek said while US exceptionalism may be “fraying”, there aren’t many alternative markets that can handle the same volume of global capital. Meanwhile, fellow sovereign fund GIC believes the greenback’s reserve currency status remains solid even though currency swings could spell trouble for foreign investors.

Minnesota overhauls governance as CIO gets more mandate power

Chief investment officer of the $150 billion Minnesota State Board of Investment will gain authority to hire and fire managers without board approval in a governance overhaul approved this week that will sharply fast-track decision-making. The change follows an 18-month asset allocation study which has resulted in some portfolio finetunes.

AUM at LPPI, Border to Coast and Central swell as UK mega pools take shape

UK pension funds LPPI, Border to Coast and LGPS Central are soaking up assets from Brunel and ACCESS as the country takes the next step towards creating mega pools in Local Government Pension Schemes, which collectively manage £392 billion ($522 billion).

Previous