Putting the H in ESG
The notion of the triple bottom line — financial, environmental, and social — and “ESG” are now part of the vernacular. ESG investing — strategies that hold companies’ accountable for their environmental, social and governance impact — grew to more than $30 trillion in 2018, boomed in 2020, and could reach $50 trillion over the next two decades as consumer tastes shift and investors demand more transparency.
Our Human Infrastructure is at risk
Most ESG-focused investments and corporate social responsibility initiatives have assessed the firm’s impact on the environment and society, few have measured its impact on its employees. More generally, the SEC is currently taking a closer look at disclosures.
In addition, while regulators punish environmental polluters, no sanctions exist for a poorly-run organization’s pollution of the individuals they employ.
Even in the best of times, society bears the brunt of the externalities of bad management through rising inequality and mental health disorders.
In a pandemic that has rendered employees increasingly psychologically and economically vulnerable, poor management and policies are a recipe for deep distress, poor productivity, and loss of life.
2020 has proved us the true essence of our society’s and economy’s success and survival: our Human infrastructure. We all came with the realization that a sustainable Human Infrastructure is as critical as an environmentally sustainable infrastructure.
The Human Sustainability Index
In 2011 the Sustainability Accounting Standards Board helped investors and companies agree on sustainability topics and measures. A decade later we need a different set of standards to put humanity first in our economy and society in order to:
- define how to measure the impact of the companies we support with our human, financial, and attention resources;
- hold companies accountable for reporting their investments in the well-being, upward mobility, and growth of their employees; and,
- support organizations that improve collective well-being as investors and consumers.
Since the 2018 publication of Compassionate Management of Mental Health in the Modern Workplace, we have been working to define a Human Sustainability Index (HSI) that can provide actionable insights to decision-makers regarding how firms nurture or damage Human Capital. It involves a management system, rating approach, and accounting standard:
1. Processes, tools and advisory support helping managers and their teams to jointly develop such a process of evaluation and “certification.” This reflection is to be accompanied by a process in the spirit of the Balanced Scorecard (a strategic planning and management system to identify and track leading performance indicators). It is iterative and complex and forces organizations to focus on values in practice and distinguish what are measures of effectiveness versus measures of performance. The Table below offers sample questions and dimensions.
2. A new accounting method so that investments in employees’ mental health and growth opportunities are accounted for as assets versus costs. In the current accounting treatment, investments made into programs to support employees are a cost on the Income Statement. At the same time, liabilities that may result from not investing in approaches that support employees’ mental and economic health (lost productivity, legal claims, costs of leaves, health expenses, etc.) will not be recognized on the balance sheet and considered remote.
3. A certification process to report policies and outcomes to give customers and investors a guide for their actions. Much as the U.S. Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) program provided a rating system to evaluate the “environmental performance of a building and encourage[s] market transformation towards sustainable design,” an HSI could help investors and consumers drive transformation towards sustainable employment.
As is the case for climate change, tackling the emotional and social inequities climate change requires that citizens, employees, experts, investors, corporations, and non-governmental organizations rethink how they operate and how their actions impact others. The crucible of 2020 has provided the unique opportunity to begin to put things right, to ensure that societies emerge more equitable, sustainable, and resilient. We cannot do it without definitions, metrics and informed choices.
Until we have an index, we have options
- For investors: How much weight do you assign to firms’ impact on their workforce when making investing decisions? Which type of metrics would you want to assess for making such a decision? How would you evaluate firms’ Human Capital performance? How would you value your Human Return on Investment (HROI)?
- For consumers: Are you currently considering in your buying decisions the impact of the firms on their employees? Which type of metrics would you want to assess for making such a decision? How would you evaluate firms’ Human Capital performance? How such an evaluation would impact your purchases going forward?
HSI Sample Reflection Questions for Companies
- What data would you want to collect and what current tools (employee engagement surveys, disability leave data) could be combined? Can some, such as the performance evaluation process, be tweaked to ask key questions: One might be, “do you feel that your manager cares about your well-being?” What biases might be reflected by the tools and policies and benefits your firm uses?
- What kind of data would you want to collect from EAPs and other entities and how would you evaluate it? A great EAP with a low single-digit utilization rate is not an investment, it is a waste. So is a fancy on-site gym that people don’t use because of a work environment that does not let people take the time to use it.
- What are the macro and micro signals you would track? How would you be clear about what they mean? Take the example of mental health leaves in a firm — more than average could signal a problem in the company or could suggest that its employees feel comfortable getting support and taking the time to heal. How do you balance trade-offs
- How could you use an HSI as an early warning signal for yourself and your teams? We are all part of a broader system with performance expectations. How would you go about making sure that such an index would be in service to the employee and not pose a potential career risk? Employees need to understand that much like tracking carbon monoxide keeps them safe, so does tracking indicators of an emotionally toxic workplace.
Authors Bahia El Oddi and Carin-Isabel Knoop research and write about human sustainability. (Cambridge, January 1, 2021), Photo credit to the amazing Ellen Feldman ([email protected] * www.ellenfeldman.net * www.WeWhoMarch.org).
Business as a Human System . Dignity and respect unlocking the wisdom of people and communities.
4 年An important spotlight on human dignity , endeavour and “ belonging “ as an asset to any business . We also need to be alert both to the danger that measurement can “ commodify “ people and also to the opportunity to share the benefits of nurture to the people who are creating the asset and the value .