From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org


Church agency explores global, faith-based investment


From "NewsDesk" <NewsDesk@UMCOM.ORG>
Date Tue, 19 Nov 2002 14:32:49 -0600

Nov. 19, 2002 News media contact: Linda Bloom7(212)870-38037New York
10-71BP{535}

NOTE: Photographs are available with this report.

By Kathleen LaCamera*

LONDON (UMNS) - The United Methodist Church's pension agency is working
alongside Catholics, Protestants, Jews, Sikhs, and other faith-based
investors to put hundreds of billions of dollars worth of global corporate
wealth to work for good.

Drawing on decades of experience in the area of ethical investment, the
United Methodist Board of Pension and Health Benefits is playing a key
advisory role in the formation of the International Interfaith Investment
Group, dubbed "3iG." The group is the brainchild of the U.K.-based charity
the Alliance of Religions and Conservation, and aims to consolidate the
financial might of the world's religions. 

Laura Michalowski, the pension board's coordinator for corporate responsible
investing, traveled to Britain in November with members of the U.S.
Interfaith Center for Corporate Responsibility, for three days of meetings
and events focusing on the power of faiths worldwide to be a force for
change. Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip joined Michalowski and other 3iG
representatives Nov. 13 at London's historic Banqueting House for a
celebration of religion's contribution to environmental conservation. 

"We have come together with our consciences and with our money to effect a
positive global impact," commented Michalowski, who also met with British
Methodists working on ethical investments while in London. 

"The ultimate goal is to get corporations to join us in partnership," she
explained. "Imagine the potential and power of corporations and faiths coming
together in a way that all people are recognized, human dignity is respected,
and our heritage cared for and preserved for future generations.

"Corporations have moved from an understanding of profit as the only bottom
line to one that includes fiscal, social and environmental returns. ... The
faiths have always believed these goals were not mutually exclusive."

The alliance sees the accomplishments of the United Methodist Church and the
Interfaith Center for Corporate Responsibility as models on which to build an
international ethical investment initiative. The church ethically invests all
of its more than $10 billion in pension funds, and the center represents some
275 U.S. Catholic, Protestant and Jewish faith-based institutional investors.
 
Alliance Director Martin Palmer told United Methodist News Service that the
whole inspiration for 3iG started at a meeting in Nashville, Tenn., when
Palmer first met Michalowski and heard about what United Methodists were
doing with their investment power. Four years on, Palmer credits the pension
board with playing a fundamental role in helping other religions around the
world get involved in ethical investment programs individually and through
"cluster" organizations like the interfaith center.

"United Methodists are fundamental to the concept of 3iG, the enthusiasm for
3iG and the implementation of 3iG," Palmer said. He also explained that while
the International Interfaith Investment Group is being developed to help
faith groups manage their institutional portfolios, each faith member would
publish ethical investment advice for individuals within his or her tradition
as well.  

The United Methodist pension portfolio is the largest pool of assets among
all U.S. mainline denominations and is in the top 100 of all corporate,
charitable and endowment asset pools. Reflecting priorities established by
the United Methodist General Conference, the denomination's top legislative
body, the fund screens investments and engages corporations on issues of
corporate governance, equality, environment, finance, health, global
accountability and militarism.	

But encouraging economic cooperation among religions on a global scale is not
just about how a denomination or group invests in the stock market. The
alliance estimates that the 11 major faith traditions it works with own or
control nearly 7 percent of the earth's habitable land. In Scandinavia, the
Church of Sweden is the third-largest owner of all Swedish forests. Followers
of the Jain faith tradition, who come primarily from India, are major players
in the global petrochemical industry. 

For Michalowski, it is clear that the way United Methodists and other faiths
do business, together as well as individually, makes a difference.
Projections from initial conversations between 3iG representatives and
Citigroup senior analysts indicate that a coalition of faith-based investors
worldwide could affect as much as 15 to 18 percent of global capital
investment. It is a statistic that Palmer said "flabbergasted and amazed"
both Citibank officials and faith representatives.
 
Michalowski, who has 29 years of experience with socially responsible
investing, pointed out that, to date, "3iG" is still a work in progress. Not
only are faith groups joining in these developing conversations, but also
major financial institutions and international NGOs such as the World
Wildlife Fund.
 
"The challenge ahead is that we must proceed responsibly, keeping in mind a
common agenda, while at the same time respecting each faith's mission and
principles," she said. "The language of religion need not be divisive. There
is a commonality here. Even though there may be differences between us, we
come with a common purpose." 
# # #
*LaCamera is a United Methodist News Service correspondent based in England.

*************************************
United Methodist News Service
Photos and stories also available at:
http://umns.umc.org


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