Vatican City, 16 June 2014 (VIS) – A
congress to identify current and practicable forms of investment for
greater social equality, entitled “Impact Investing for the Poor”,
has been organised by the Pontifical Council “Justice and Peace”,
is being held in Rome this week. The participants, including
representatives of the Roman Curia, were received in audience by Pope
Francis this morning.
Impact Investing is a form of
investment that “can benefit local communities and the environment,
as well as providing a reasonable return”. Investors who follow
this practice, the Pontiff explained, “are conscious of the
existence of serious unjust situations, instances of profound social
inequality and unacceptable conditions of poverty affecting
communities and entire peoples. These investors turn to financial
institutes which will use their resources to promote the economic and
social development of these groups through investment funds aimed at
satisfying basic needs associated with agriculture, access to water,
adequate housing and reasonable prices, as well as with primary
health care and educational services”.
Investments of this type are intended
to have positive social repercussions on local communities, such as
job creation, access to energy, training and increased agricultural
productivity. The financial return for investors tends to be more
moderate than in other types of investment. Pope Francis emphasised
that “the logic underlying these innovative forms of intervention
is one which acknowledges the ultimate connection between profit and
solidarity, the virtuous circle existing between profit and gift …
Christians are called to rediscover, experience and proclaim to all
this precious and primordial unity between profit and solidarity”.
“It is important that ethics once
again play its due part in the world of finance and that markets
serve the interests of peoples and the common good of humanity”. He
exclaimed, “It is increasingly intolerable that financial markets
are shaping the destiny of peoples rather than serving their needs,
or that the few derive immense wealth from financial speculation
while the many are deeply burdened by the consequences. Advances in
technology have increased the speed of financial transactions, but in
the long run this is significant only to the extent that it better
serves the common good. In this regard, speculation on food prices is
a scandal which seriously compromises access to food on the part of
the poorest members of our human family. It is urgent that
governments throughout the world commit themselves to developing an
international framework capable of promoting a market of high impact
investments, and thus to combating an economy which excludes and
discards”.
Francis mentioned that today the Church
celebrates the memorial of Saints Quiricus and Giulitta, a son and
mother who, persecuted under Diocletian, left all their possessions
to the poor and accepted martyrdom. He concluded, “I join you in
asking the Lord to help us never to forget the transience of earthly
goods and to renew our commitment to serve the common good with love
and with preference for the most poor and vulnerable of our brothers
and sisters”.
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