Members Are Willing To Sacrifice Some Returns For ESG Investment
A majority of Dutch workers of over 50 would be willing to sacrifice 1% of future pension benefits if it meant their pension funds made sustainable investments, a survey by Tilburg University has found.
Researchers Johan Bonekamp and Arthur van Soest, who interviewed a group of 1,272 workers aged between 50 and 65, found that 66% responded positively to a situation in which a pension fund had already adopted an ESG approach.
Just over half (55%) of the respondents said they were willing to forgo on part of their pension if their scheme was considering introducing sustainable investment strategies.
According Bonekamp and Van Soest, the proportion that explicitly rejected the idea ranged from 26% to 31%.
The result didn’t differ significantly when respondents were asked about the impact of 0.5% or 0.25% reductions in returns. Only 10% changed their minds, the researchers found.
The authors of the survey highlighted that sustainable investing did not automatically lead to lower returns “as recent studies weren’t unequivocal about this”.
A survey by Maastricht University in 2014 found that 70% of workers were willing to sacrifice 1% of their pension if their pension fund excluded tobacco firms and arms manufacturers from their investment universe.
Last year, the €25bn multi-sector scheme PGB found that 28% of its active members didn’t want to make “sufficient returns” dependent on investments in sustainable energy.
However, last March, another member survey by the €72bn metal industry scheme PMT suggested that savers only supported ESG investment if it didn’t come at the expense of returns.
Bonekamp and Van Soest’s survey also found that workers with children were slightly less prepared to tolerate lower returns. In their opinion, this was remarkable, “as we expected that this group would find it important to leave the world in a better shape”.
The Tilburg University researchers also found that higher educated workers were slightly more willing to pay more for sustainably invested pension assets.
Last year, the €21bn sector scheme for the retail industry (Detailhandel) found that lower educated participants were equally keen on sustainable investment than their higher educated colleagues.
EU Negotiators Agree On Sustainability Taxonomy, Approval Still Needed
Efama calls for action on corporate reporting given investor disclosure requirements Read more
Large Dutch Metal Schemes Keep Premium, Accrual Unchanged In 2020
PMT and PME announce significant contribution rise for 2021 Read more
AP1 Hit By New Rules Breach As Head Of Equities Agrees To Quit
Swedish national pension fund says Olof Jonasson bought into firms AP1 later invested in Read more
IPE Conference: Pension Funds Find Changing Public Opinion Is Part Of A PE Investors Role
“Locusts” perception of private equity poses challenges for would-be investors Read more
IPE Conference: Long-term Horizon Hailed As Key To Improved Investment Approach
‘The biggest risk is that you will not achieve any returns in the coming decades,’ says Jaap van Dam, 300 Club Read more
UK Roundup: TPR Debt Recovery Rate Low, £40m Missed
KPMG sells UK pensions practice Read more