Publication | Open Access
The end of ESG
427
Citations
38
References
2022
Year
Esg FactorsPerformance StudiesApocalyptic StudiesEducational EntertainmentCorporate StrategyEnd-of-life ProductManagementBusinessGeneral BusinessBusiness StrategyStrategyStrategic ManagementSustainable InvestmentE-scienceAbstract EsgInnovationEsg Performance
ESG is not a distinct category but simply a long‑term value factor, comparable to other intangibles such as management quality and innovation. The paper argues that investors should focus on overall company quality rather than giving special weight to ESG performance.
Abstract ESG is both extremely important and nothing special. It's extremely important because it's critical to long‐term value, and so any academic or practitioner should take it seriously, not just those with “ESG” in their research interests or job title. Thus, ESG doesn't need a specialized term, as that implies it's niche—considering long‐term factors isn't ESG investing; it's investing. It's nothing special since it's no better or worse than other intangible assets that create long‐term financial and social returns, such as management quality, corporate culture, and innovative capability. Companies shouldn't be praised more for improving their ESG performance than these other intangibles; investor engagement on ESG factors shouldn't be put on a pedestal compared to engagement on other value drivers. We want great companies, not just companies that are great at ESG.
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