Socially Responsible Investing

August 29, 2008 • Volume 18, Issue 29
Can investors do well by doing good?
By Thomas J. Billitteri

Introduction

Investments in tobacco and other sin stocks are being avoided by a growing number of investment funds, pension plans and other investors. Above, a cigarette vendor on a street in Hong Kong.  (AFP/Getty Images/Philippe Lopez)
Investments in tobacco and other sin stocks are being avoided by a growing number of investment funds, pension plans and other investors. Above, a cigarette vendor on a street in Hong Kong. (AFP/Getty Images/Philippe Lopez)

Socially responsible investing, which combines financial goals with the aim of improving society through stock screening, shareholder activism and other methods, has grown into a multi-trillion-dollar industry. Concerns about climate change, worker rights and other issues are prompting big institutional accounts as well as small investors to put more and more emphasis on social, environmental and corporate-governance factors in weighing investment decisions. But critics say stock-screening methods used by mutual funds are subjective and that socially responsible investments tend not to perform as well as conventional ones. Some of the harshest criticism has been directed at public pension funds using social-investing approaches, such as the California State Teachers' Retirement System, which uses a "double bottom line" approach to investing.

ISSUE TRACKER for Related Reports
Stock Market
Aug. 29, 2008  Socially Responsible Investing
Jan. 16, 2004  Stock Market Troubles
May 02, 1997  The Stock Market
May 20, 1994  Mutual Funds
Dec. 18, 1987  Spotlight on Wall Street
Aug. 08, 1986  Global Stock Market
Oct. 08, 1969  Wall Street: 40 Years After the Crash
Jul. 26, 1967  Mutual Funds in the Market
Dec. 24, 1934  Corporate Publicity For Protection Of Investors
Feb. 01, 1930  Stock Exchanges and Security Speculation
Jan. 01, 1925  The Stock Market Boom and Public Investment
BROWSE RELATED TOPICS:
General Social Trends
Investment and the Stock Market