Paper
Social Investors on the Sidelines
Can social investors be the vanguard for micro and small enterprise investments?
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8 pages
This paper analyzes the reasons for low private investments in Micro and Small Enterprise (MSE) development and the potential role of Socially Responsible Investment (SRI) professionals.
Based on a survey by Enterprising Solutions Global Consulting (ESGC) and expert interviews, the paper states that:
- SRIs worth US $24 billion await MSEs;
- Over 200 development agency-financed 'model funds' created for MSEs in 1990s expected private sector investments to follow;
- However, such investments remain insignificant.
It identifies the major impediments as:
- High fund management costs and low capital bases;
- Lack of:
- Strong track record to establish as a credible asset class,
- Benchmarking,
- High returns.
- Low access to reliable information;
- Relative abundance of development agency finance;
- Overly aggressive social objectives of funds.
The paper also states that:
- SRIs could be the vanguard for MSE investments as more than 60 % of the SRI professionals would be satisfied with a 5% to15% annual return which small enterprise funds can achieve;
- Finding the right investment vehicle is a challenge as survey suggests 75 % respondents prefer an investment company model while 67% prefer a specialty mutual fund;
- Investments need to be publicly and widely available with:
- At least US $30 million managed nationally,
- Up to 20% portfolio in microfinance institutions and the rest in MSEs.
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