Participants in the workshop confirmed the hypothesis of the high financial relevance of ESG issues to companies based in emerging markets. At macroeconomic level, there are observable effects on economic growth rates associated with such issues as political stability, governance, regulatory frameworks, corruption and education levels.
The two guest speakers, Katja Karas from BankInvest Gruppen and Alan Nesbit from First State Investments, introduced a lively discussion. It touched on ESG issues representing both risks and financial opportunities, on how investors can engage positively with companies, and on how academic research can support practitioners' work.
One interesting conclusion from the workshop was that these issues affect not only companies based in emerging markets, but increasingly also multinational companies with growing production and sales volumes in those countries. From an investor's point of view, this has major implications. Not only are such issues as environmental pollution in India, water scarcity and human rights issues in China, investor rights in South Korea and climate change impacts in various countries — to name but a few — relevant to emerging markets investments; they can also affect vast parts of global equity and fixed-income portfolios.
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Report from the workshop "Emerging markets investments: do environmental, social and governance issues matters? Download pdf (pdf, 380 kB)