Big Society Capital, world’s largest hybrid organization

England recently launched Big Society Capital as part of its effort to develop the social finance market. BSC is a billion-dollar fund that was capitalized with dormant accounts of UK’s largest banks, as well as with funds that the banks gave in order to improve their post-economic recession image in society. The bank’s mandate to maintain long-term sustainability requires it to generate enough revenue to cover at least the costs of operations. Its other mandate is to build the social finance market. These two mandates may clash and complicate the life of its managers. Many market-building investments may generate insufficient cash flow to fit under the sustainability mandate. Some of those may be investments to smaller organizations where the cost of the loan is greater than the risk-adjusted return.

BSC’s chairman is Sir Ronald Cohen, who helped start Social Finance UK, the organization that is implementing the first demonstration project for social impact bonds.

Notably, BSC is the world’s largest explicitly hybrid organization. It comprises three separate organizations. 

1. Big Society Capital Trust, the holding company.
2. Big Society Capital Limited, the operating company that will make for-profit investments.
3. Big Society Foundation, which will “receive charitable donations and develop grant programmes to support the Group’s mission.” (source)

Horizontal capital aggregation for social enterprises

I found a really interesting study on horizontal capital aggregation for social enterprises (the process of syndicating distinct pools of impact capital matched to the multiple phases of an social enterprises’ development and growth).

    Overall, our analysis confirms that a variety of contrasting investment models and investment expectations exist, and the poor coordination of impact investors creates inefficiencies and redundancies that obstruct the efficient flow of capital system-wide. We conclude that the aggregation of capital can benefit businesses when investors are first and foremost aligned by return expectation.
    Our research indicates that social capital mobilization is early in its development and lacking market mechanisms common to other asset classes. While developed markets enjoy a well-worn path of “upround” private equity sources, there is little, if any, of this “vertical” capital aggregation ladder for social entrepreneurs operating in underserved markets. Consequently, much of the capital formation needed to support the scaling of social enterprises will necessarily be “horizontal”—meaning that capital sources are much more varied than pure equity investors and may include philanthropy, “soft” loans, quasi-equity, and private equity. The hand-off between these participants would not necessarily require valuation increases. Instead, such participants may require systems or organizational infrastructure development, increased management capacity, and a more rigorously stress-tested business model to attract follow-on investors.

Source:
COORDINATING  IMPACT CAPITAL: A New Approach to Investing in Small and Growing Businesses
An Examination of Impact Investors and Phased Investing for the Launch and Growth of Social Enterprises, John Kohler, Thane Kreiner, Jessica Sawhney, July 2011.

Roundup of articles on social enterprise and social investment

Here is a small batch of interesting writing on social enterprise and social investment.

In Search of a New Model for Government-Social Enterprise Collaboration, 6 Jan 2012, in the Stanford Social Innovation Review by K Sree Kumar, CEO of Intellicap, a rising Indian management consulting firm that specializes in microfinance.

An overview of NSW Australia’s social import bond request for proposals (see RFP here), 10 Jan 2012, by Steve Goldberg, Managing Director of Social Finance US.  Steve also runs the blog Billions of Drops in Millions of Buckets in which this article is published and which is eponymous with the book he has written.

Malnutrition in India is widespread, 10 Jan 2012, NYT: “Roughly 42 percent of all Indian children under age 5 suffer from malnutrition…”

The Speed issue of Google’s new Think Quarterly magazine.

Social stock exchanges rising

Small roundup of latest on social stock exchanges that aim to facilitate impact investing.

England
“The world’s first stock exchange for social enterprises will be set up in London with the help of money raised from dormant bank accounts, the government has announced.
The Social Stock Exchange (SSE) will be established in the capital with the help of £850,000 from the dormant accounts and it should help improve access to capital for social entrepreneurs.”
(source)

Singapore
Impact Investment Exchange Asia (http://www.asiaiix.com)

China
“In 2007 NPI introduced the concept of venture philanthropy, and today the venture philanthropy funds exceed RMB 50 million and support more than 300 nonprofits and social enterprises. In 2010 NPI designed and operated the Shanghai Social Innovation Park, which I had the opportunity to visit, where I met with a number of social enterprises that are pushing the envelope of creativity.” (source)

Roundup of latest impact investing articles

There has been a flood of writing on capital markets and social enterprise in the past several months.  I round up all the writing I have seen on the topic here.

A New Approach to Funding Social Enterprises
by Antony Bugg-Levine, Bruce Kogut, and Nalin Kulatilaka
Harvard Business Review
Jan-Feb 2012
http://www.ssireview.org/articles/entry/social_impact_markets

Social Impact Markets
Andrew Wolk
Stanford Social Innovation Review
Winter 2012
http://www.ssireview.org/articles/entry/social_impact_markets

Impact Investing (several articles)
MIT Innovations
Summer 2011
http://www.mitpressjournals.org/toc/itgg/6/3

Insight into the Impact Investment Market
JP Morgan Social Finance Research
14 December 2011
http://www.thegiin.org/cgi-bin/iowa/resources/research/334.html

The Promise of Impact Investing
V Kasturi Rangan, Sarah Appleby, Laura Moon
Nov. 4, 2011
HBS Note

HBR on funding social enterprises

The Harvard Business Review has an interesting piece in its upcoming magazine on the value of financial engineering for social enterprises.  I have a couple of responses to some of the points made in the article.

1. The social-finance gap is another way of describing positive externalities.

But many, if not most, social enterprises cannot fund themselves entirely through sales or investment. They are not profitable enough to access traditional financial markets, resulting in a financial-social return gap. The social value of providing poor people with affordable health care, basic foodstuffs, or safe cleaning products is enormous, but the cost of private funding often outweighs the monetary return

What the authors are describing here economists call externalities.  Social enterprises engage in activities that have positive externalities – that is, the social value of those activities to society is greater than the private value of those activities to the individuals that pay for them.  Consider for example the provision of food.  The provision of food by Kroger or Whole Foods to a person with average income in the US can be described as a transaction that has no externalities.  This is a generalization, of course, that assumes that all the costs and benefits of producing and consuming this good are captured in the price of the good.)  Therefore the private value of providing this good, or its price, equals the value to society of having this good provided.

Now consider the provision of food to an impoverished person who lives in government or other types of shelter.  The provision of food to that person carries both a private and a social return, with the latter being that society has an interest in feeding people that would otherwise go hungry.  That social benefit is not reflected in the price of the food that the poor person would purchase in at a place like Kroger or Whole Foods because those prices reflect just the intersection of the private marginal cost of producing the food and the private marginal benefit to the consumer of the food.

Positive externalities like the one that results from feeding the hungry lead to an underproduction of the relevant service or good.  Society has an interest in seeing more of these transactions than currently occur.  In the case of food, the price point may be above that which many poor people can afford and therefore many transactions that society may prefer to happen do not take place.  (Conversely, negative externalities result in overproduction of relevant goods and services.)  This is one of the basic justifications for government intervention in the marketplace:  if the government can subsidize this type transaction, then more will take place.

The financial-social gap that the authors mention, therefore, is a gap between the value that the customer is willing to pay for the good or service that the social enterprise is offering and the value that society gets from having that good or service be provided.

Government subsidy is one way to “internalize the externality” – that is, to make the private value (the price) reflect the social value.  In this case, government subsidy would reduce the price of the good and thereby increase the quantity demanded of the good.  More of the good will be sold, reflecting, in perfect scenarios, the social benefit of the good.

2. There is financially-better way to accomplish the financing that the authors describe.

To see how the process works, imagine that a social enterprise operating in Africa requires an investment of $100,000 to build new health clinics and expects the clinics to earn $5,000 a year—a return of 5% on the investment.
Unfortunately, 5% is too low to attract private sources of capital. Traditionally the enterprise would obtain the $100,000 from a charitable foundation instead. But suppose the enterprise asked the donor for only $50,000. It could then offer a financial investor a 10% return on the remaining $50,000. The donor would receive no repayment—but it would have $50,000 to give to another socially worthy enterprise.

The private investor in this example gets a 5% return on $100,000 (or $5000) in the first scenario and a 10% return on $50,000 (or $5000) in the second scenario.  The investor prefers the latter scenario because, although the amount of the money he gets is the same, he now has to invest less to obtain that amount and therefore has a higher ROI.  The investor is able to access the higher, 10%, ROI in the second scenario because a philanthropic funder fronts $50,000, or half of the total needed investment, to the social enterprise.  Because one of the goals in the article is to explain how social enterprises can access for-profit funding, this scenario accomplishes that by showing how two investors with different return expectations accomplish that.

However, the social enterprise can access the same capital if the philanthropic funder were to simply GIVE the private investor $5000.  Consider this scenario:  A private investor wants a 10% ROI, but sees an investment of $100,000 that yields only 5%, or $5000.  If a funder were to offer the investor an additional $5000 contingent on the investment taking place, the investor now sees an ROI of ( [$5000 + $5000] / $100,000 = ) 10%.  In the scenario the authors describe, the philanthropic funder spends $50,000 to obtain a for-profit investment.  In my scenario, the funder spends on one-tenth of that, $5000.  The social enterprise sees the same investment amount of $100,000.  And the for-profit investor is now arguably on the hook for the entire clinic.

My scenario has several problems.  First, the philanthropic funders have legal, political and personal considerations when making their investments.  The country’s legal regime may not allow them to give money directly to for-profit investors.  (For example, I do not think that Citi Foundation can simply give money to Citigroup to increase their return in microfinance investments.)  The political regime may also look down on this transfer of money.  Finally, philanthropies may have trouble raising money from donors if their money goes into the pockets of “other donors” – that is, rich investors.

Despite all that, the funder accomplishes more with less in my example, and has money left over to fund additional clinics.

3. Social impact bonds resemble infrastructure projects.

 Social impact bonds. Another innovation, the social impact bond, deserves special notice for its ability to help governments fund infrastructure and services, especially as public budgets are cut and municipal bond markets are stressed. Launched in the UK in 2010, this type of bond is sold to private investors who are paid a return only if the public project succeeds—if, say, a rehabilitation program lowers the rate of recidivism among newly released prisoners

I love that the authors mention infrastructure here.  Social impact bonds act very similar to governments’ current infrastructure projects, where the government temporarily leases assets to private companies in return for a performance-based return on the infrastructure that those companies create.  I will write more on this similarly – and on what infrastructure contracts can teach us about social impact bonds – in a later post.

Source:
Harvard Business Review
A New Approach to Funding Social Enterprises
by Antony Bugg-Levine, Bruce Kogut, and Nalin Kulatilaka

Some thoughts on impact investing

I recently came across and short and interesting interview with Dr. Judith Rodin, president of the Rockefeller Foundation.  I roughly capture and comment on two Dr. Rodin’s points below.  The full interview is here:   http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-15102389.

If you look at the problems in the world … it’s estimated that there are trillions of dollars in need.  It’s very clear that when we did the catalogue that there are really only billions of dollars of money in government aid and philanthropy that are the traditional sources of trying to solve some of the world’s problems…  At the same time we were beginning to understand that capital markets were developing funds with what we called double bottom line mandates…

I think that this quote captures an interesting shift in the social contract between businessmen and citizens in general and the governments under which they operate.  The way I understand the original social contract is that people unite under governments, and agree to surrender to it some rights and resources, and the government agrees to resolve for those people a set of collective problems that they alone cannot address, such as providing for a common defense.  When the Great Depression drastically undercut social welfare, not just in the United States but also abroad, the government took a much larger role in creating and sustaining social safety nets — we now taxed everyone much more and redistributed welfare to a greater extent.

We now seem to be moving away from looking to governments and international development agencies for safety nets and economic development assistance.  Most of the funding and technical acumen still resides within governments.  But people seem to be increasingly looking toward non-governmental solutions – whether by giving to NGOs as a way to assist with acute crises like in Haiti and Chile, or by preferring double-bottom line solutions like microfinance (through Kiva and others) rather than waiting for the IMF or USAID.

High net worth individuals are acutely aware of the growing inequality in Asia and other developing countries. They want to give back in ways that are consistent with the ways in which they gave money … For those who would like to figure out how to use their financial acumen and have social impact within the same set of vehicles … impact investing is becoming a great idea. 

I take away from this quote that economic and social development by businessmen will look drastically different from that done by international development agencies and NGOs.  Already, as I sit in classes at Harvard Business School where we discuss impact investment and social businesses, I see a focus on financial health of socially responsible enterprises at the expense, at least in my mind, of focus on the social impact of those businesses’ activities on their target populations.  Whereas financial return is measured using complex instruments, validity of the logic model for the social impact seems to suffice for many business investors when evaluating social return.