Des fonds de placements qui changent les comportements
Les pionniers Les 'big caps' passés au crible Dialogue engagé Des résultats concrets Rendement financier
Les pionniers Les 'big caps' passés au crible Dialogue engagé Des résultats concrets Rendement financier
The second G8 Conference on Remittances was held in Rome on 9 November 2009. It gathered representatives from international organisations, national ministries, embassies, Central Banks, and representatives from civil society. The conference was a follow-up to the initial conference held two years ago in Berlin.
The International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) and the African Development Bank gathered a multi-stakeholder forum that made six recommendations to improve dramatically the African remittances market.
A number of WSBI member institutions in the developing world have raised concerns about the constraints to their business resulting from the implementation of Anti Money Laundering (AML) and Combating the Financing of Terrorism (CFT) regulations. WSBI has put together some proposals to ensure that the AML/CFT international framework fulfils its goals of efficiently combating money laundering and terrorism financing without inhibiting access to finance for vulnerable groups of clients. Implementation challenges in developing countries WSBI calls for a proportionate AML/CFT framework Standards should be tailored to a national context
"This survey combines and builds upon two earlier streams of analysis on attitudes to socially responsible investment (SRI) among fund managers and financial analysts in Europe and the UK.
The survey presents the first comprehensive European picture on how social and environmental performance informs decisions and attitudes both amongst mainstream fund managers/analysts and investor relations officers (IROs) in major companies.
Highlights include indications that CSR will become a significant aspect of mainstream investment decisions and those companies' communication practices on CSR, despite improvement over the past two years, need further improvement to satisfy the financial community."
The incapacity to finance sustainable development through philanthropic official assistance turned the Johannesburg Summit to business world and the financial industry. Pioneering financial institutions - including development banks and private banks - have developed a wide range of innovations that can support sustainable development. This article highlights a few innovative products and markets and focuses on the progress made by financial players on the level of standards, metrics and guidelines to improve sustainability management systems, reporting and accounting practices and the multi-stakeholder dynamic. The role of the socially responsible investing (SRI) community has been underexposed by the Summit. Through its voice and market success, SRI has moved from a green market niche to the mainstream, however not becoming mainstream. The invaluable levering effect of SRI has just been discovered by authorities and market regulators and is becoming instrumental. In order to show the business case of Corporate Social Responsibility and to prove the financial viability of the People, Planet, Prosperity investing approach, the SRI community should critically reflect on its own quality assurance systems, sound disclosure and verification practice
L'analyse > Aujourd'hui, la transparence s'impose. Le dossier pédagogique > Etat de la législation > Bonnes pratiques > Mécanismes de l'ISR L'avis des experts > Graig Mackinzie, Invest Insight > Herwig Peeters, Ethibel asbl
Une science morale ? Le plus et le moins Le modèle économique et les autres Une frontière poreuse Qu'est-ce qu'une société juste ? Modifier les dotations, modeler les besoins La carotte et le bâton Un détour inutile ?
1. Rôle et responsabilité des opérateurs financiers 2. Une responsabilité mal perçue 3. Enjeux de responsabilité 4. Instruments de confiance