UN Principles for Responsible Investment (PRI)

  

The UN (United Nations) likes to at least pretend to make sure everybody is on the same page. Otherwise, what are they all doing there, you know?

One of the ways they’ve established at least the stated precepts of what they consider "fair" runs through their UN Principles for Responsible Investment (PRI). The six principles under the PRI set the standard for responsible investing in terms of environmental, social, and corporate governance. Their thought? Why not meet both investment goals as well as societal ones? Everyone from financial institutions to retail can join in on the family-friendly fun.

But this is more than just a list of “would be nice to have”s. A separate nonprofit turns these six principles into reality. Organizations can put on their signatory hats and publicly commit to adopting and implementing the PRIs. Gotta get that street cred with consumers.

Here are the six principles:

1. We will incorporate environmental, social, and corporate governance (ESG) issues into investment analysis and decision-making processes.

2. We will be active owners and incorporate ESG issues into our ownership policies and practices.

3. We will seek appropriate disclosure on ESG issues by the entities in which we invest.

4. We will promote acceptance and implementation of the principles within the investment industry.

5. We will work together to enhance our effectiveness in implementing the principles.

6. We will each report on our activities and progress towards implementing the principles.

7. We will not openly take bribes behind the scenes and then change our votes so that they reflect our nation's individual immediate needs, no matter how corrupt our leaders are, and...ok, ok, #7 isn't on there. But it should be.

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Finance: What is an International Money ...4 Views

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Finance Allah Shmoop What is the International Monetary Fund or

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the IMF or IMF If you're just thie goal of

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the I M f is to stabilize the exchange of

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trade among nations particularly you know the less politically stable

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ones the smaller ones the emerging market ones the developing

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ones the Third World or whatever other politically correct name

00:25

for economically weak countries comes to mind So what actually

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is the fund Well it was started in nineteen Forty

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for as two was coming to a close And the

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aftermath of the Great Depression which financially infected the world

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was still on everyone's minds Countries wanted there to exist

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some stabilizing force in their exchange of promissory paper I

00:46

bonds as they bought goods and services from each other

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The scars of the nineteen thirties currency devaluations all around

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the world were still a thing and everyone still had

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this image of it Taking a wheel barrel of German

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marks the German currency at the time to buy a

01:01

loaf of bread had crazy inflation from a bunch of

01:04

paper was worth but well you know that loaf had

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really awesome raisins in it but still was a loaf

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of bread Okay well think of the IMF and the

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same vein as you would a market maker in a

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stock that is a given exchange allows an investor to

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make a market in say Amazon stock where at this

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moment she's a buyer at fifteen Oh two in the

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cellar at fifteen fourteen and she makes twelve dollars spread

01:26

on each share sold her only basic requirement While she

01:29

has to continue to make a market in good times

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or bad with volatile spikes and moves in the stock

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under any conditions she has toehold in inventory lots and

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lots of shares of a M CNE in order to

01:40

make that market like just make it be liquid Well

01:43

that's basically how the I M F works But with

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the inventory being the currencies in the countries in which

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it eases trade but may load up on rubles one

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day is it reduces exposure that the Chinese currency or

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RMB then may add euros on other days while it's

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reducing Zimbabwean dollars Yeah the short idea here is to

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simply make sure that exchange rates and international payment systems

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run smoothly Liquid Lee So today almost two hundred countries

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participate in the dance hoping to stimulate the interaction of

02:13

trade among all nations And this makes sense generally right

02:17

Like if everyone has somethingto lose well then they probably

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have less interest in doing things like Oh you know

02:24

kill each other And that whole stabilising of trade makes

02:26

for more predictable commerce more trustworthy ability to plan and

02:30

build and liquidity or trust in a credit system so

02:33

that countries can take on modest amounts of leverage with

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credit terms making sales happen more easily all around the

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world Yeah it's a good idea And going through the

02:42

IMF or trading through their system The world then has

02:44

much better financial surveillance as to how well or poorly

02:48

a given country is doing economically or at least commercially

02:52

like how well they're selling bananas or coffee beans or

02:55

oil or whatever they sell a big spike in banana

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sales from India Well that's probably good But what does

03:00

it mean to the countries competing against India in selling

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those bananas well through the IMF trading system The numbers

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are easy to check and it looks as if sales

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are for falling through the floor For India's competitors Well

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then the IMF can sometimes step in and buy a

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bunch of bananas you know because they have appeal and

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find another buyer for them elsewhere And this is a

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problem at times because well the worst managed countries the

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most corrupt ones tend to get the most attention right

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Corrupt governments You thinking Somalia Mexico Rwanda Yeah we're looking

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at you guys or it's all about ludicrously unfair tax

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policy to favor the rich high Greece were looking at

03:37

you or to favor the poor a Venezuela How'd that

03:40

huge leverage bed on oil prices going up work out

03:43

for you there Yeah none of those countries have done

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well and the disciplined group of relatively wealthy countries have

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had to step in at times and bail them out

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with huge loans to stave off either civil war or

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mass starvation or well you know just to stave off

03:58

war Typically the IMF watches and advises those who seem

04:02

to have their acts together And it lends money to

04:04

those who don't The five largest stakeholders in the IMF

04:07

are the US Japan France Germany and the U K

04:09

Hey China where are you We need you in here

04:12

Well the fund itself was capitalized are funded by initial

04:15

capital contributions a gazillion years ago And there are more

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coming as more and more countries teeter on the edge

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of a well full bankruptcy Yeah You know more countries

04:24

they're going to be coming in Aachen for a western 00:04:26.804 --> [endTime] dough

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