PRI: Assessing the ‘S’ in ESG

Social issues have traditionally been viewed as the weakest link in investment analysis. In many cases, the absence of company data and robust regulation has hampered investors’ ability to assess the risks and opportunities such issues present to their portfolios. While some companies have made efforts to provide good quality disclosures, on the whole, investors have had limited information on which to base decisions.

This is changing. A plethora of new initiatives and engagement activity is driving more meaningful disclosure of data on human rights and labour standards by companies and across supply chains. Policymakers worldwide have a renewed enthusiasm for enacting hard laws and soft guidelines to expand the role and responsibilities of companies when it comes to social issues.

The Principles for Responsible Investment (PRI) recently responded to a government inquiry underway in Australia to determine whether the country should introduce its own Modern Slavery Act, which would complement recent legislation on human rights due diligence introduced elsewhere, such as the California Transparency in Supply Chains Act of 2010, the UK’s Modern Slavery Act 2015 and the European Union’s Non-Financial Reporting Directive. Earlier this year, France adopted its own Corporate Duty of Vigilance law, which requires its largest companies to assess and address adverse impacts on people and the planet, both in direct operations and throughout the supply chain.

Beyond national and state-based legislation are a series of soft laws – norms, standards and frameworks – launched in recent years to promote best practice and stamp out the most egregious violations. These guidelines have included the United Nations Guiding Principles for Business and Human Rights, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises and the International Labor Organization Fundamental Conventions.

More for investors

Such changes are giving investors better data. For example, the Committee on Workers’ Capital recently launched its own Guidelines for the Evaluation of Workers’ Human Rights and Labour Standards, which trade unions have developed to help investors scrutinise social issues such as labour relations in the investment chain. Better metrics on the treatment of workers, employee engagement, training and staff turnover can be strong indicators of the health of a business.

Sponsored Content

Early evidence suggests both the UK and California laws – which require companies to disclose on their websites the efforts they’re making to address risks of human trafficking and slavery by their suppliers – are providing a wealth of new data and insights to help investors better assess the ‘S’ in their portfolios and inform their engagement and integration strategies, while increasing senior-level corporate engagement, transparency and action on social issues.

More action from investors

Earlier in June, the PRI published a collection of case studies showing how investors are making use of this additional information, putting to rest the notion that investors can’t scrutinise social issues. ESG Integration: How are social issues influencing investment decisions? contains examples from a wide range of sectors – from retail to mining – highlighting methods being used to integrate social issues into listed equity investments.

At the same time, the PRI has facilitated a number of collaborative engagements to improve investors’ understanding of human rights risks and supply-chain labour practices. The findings and outcomes from these projects are captured in the PRI’s From Poor Working conditions to Forced Labour: What’s hidden in your portfolio? and Investor Expectations on Labour Practices in Agricultural Supply Chains.

Matt McAdam is head of Australasia for the PRI.

Leave a Comment

The future belongs to investors who can adapt

The future belongs to investors who can adapt

Canada's HOOPP has officially adopted the total portfolio approach since the start of 2026. Unpacking the move, the fund's managing director and head of total portfolio group Jacky Lee writes that while the approach doesn't magically make the return better, the fact that it frees the investment team from outdated processes and gives investment leaders the flexibility to act is what gives it an edge.

Sort content by

Precarious world needs effective G20

General secretary of the International Trade Union Confederation, Sharan Burrow, spoke to the Lowy Institute for International Policy in Sydney, Australia on Thursday August 1 about the need for an effective G20 in a precarious world. Ladies and Gentlemen, The global economy is no more stable today than it was six years ago, and the

Towards sustainable stock exchanges

Wall Street is not normally synonymous with sustainability. But today, the United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon will ring the closing bell at the New York Stock Exchange to welcome NYSE Euronext into the Sustainable Stock Exchanges Initiative, joining NASDAQ OMX and leading emerging market exchanges from Turkey, South Africa, Egypt, Brazil and India. Why would

Asset-backed funding: desperate or innovative?

On one hand, the decision by one of the United Kingdom’s leading foods businesses, Dairy Crest, to plug its £84-million ($130-million) pension deficit with cheese smacks of desperation. Any proactive investment strategy to get the $1.2-billion pension fund back on track has been abandoned for a funding measure using unconventional sponsor assets to plug investment

Gloom at NAPF attests to investor adventure

One year on and the job of trustees gathered at the United Kingdom’s National Association of Pension Funds, NAPF, annual investment conference in Edinburgh hasn’t got any easier. As the search for optimism in a low-return world endures, the conference seems to be caught in a time loop. Compared to last year, deciding on the

The smoking gun at CalSTRS

For a pension fund that describes itself as “ponderous”, the $154-billion California State Teachers’ Retirement System, CalSTRS, has moved uncharacteristically swiftly in recent months. The second largest public pension fund in the United States, the plan for teachers and faculty is in the process of divesting its holdings in gun manufacturers following the massacre at

Will infrastructure ever find wings?

It’s difficult to ignore the clamour around infrastructure investment, the asset class of the moment. Lloyds TSB and the London Pensions Fund Authority recently joined founder members of the Pensions Infrastructure Platform, PIP, a government initiative to encourage pension funds to invest more in infrastructure. The Universities Superannuation Pension Scheme, USS, just increased its allocation

Previous