Pension
funds and responsible investing ... and Israel
[9-25-04]
With all the
discussion of the PC(USA) action to divest stock holdings in companies doing
business supportive of Israel's occupation of Palestinian territory, Gene
TeSelle offers some thoughts and questions about pension funds, which have
become a part of the debate.
For a report on
discussions of divestment at the recent meeting of the General Assembly
Council, see
Leslie Scanlon's article in The Presbyterian Outlook.
We invite your comments and reflections on this complex issue.
Just send a
note.
One of the important
questions raised during the controversy over selective disinvestment from
Israel has to do with the relation between Mission Responsibility Through
Investment (MRTI) and the agencies that administer investments for the
PC(USA).
First the Board of
Pensions and then the Presbyterian Foundation declared that they must follow
the Prudent Man or Prudent Investor rule to make the maximum profit. If
divestment from Caterpillar or any other major corporation doing business
with Israel were to be at a financial disadvantage, they claim, they could
not do it.
The first response that
needs to be made is that the Presbyterian Church has engaged in many kinds
of divestment -- South Africa, tobacco companies, munitions makers, etc. The
list can be found at www.pcusa.org/mrti/divestment.htm.
Then there is the
interesting question to what extent the General Assembly can tell the Board
of Pensions and the Foundation how to invest money. Conservative Jim
Berkley, who was critical of the divestment decision, still reacted with
indignation (Berkley Blog,
September 8, 2004) that these two agencies could claim independence from
the General Assembly. It should not have been a surprise. Both of these
agencies are indeed bound by federal and state laws concerning the
management of funds. In the past they have often told the General Assembly
that they are working under special rules, though they also see it to be
their responsibility to follow General Assembly directives as closely as
possible.
The basic question is to
what extent secular laws about the management of funds can negate the
policies of a religious body that wants to make responsible investments. At
the extreme, these laws function like NAFTA and WTO, overriding and negating
decisions made on grounds of justice and demanding that investment be made
solely to maximize gain. Bernard Mandeville's "Fable of the Bees" would be
enacted all over again.
It is time for a thorough
analysis, not only in the church but in the society, of laws regulating
pension funds in order to identify areas needing change. ERISA (the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act) has offered much-needed regulation of
pension funds. But it is insufficient. We know from the recent news that
corporations often use their pension funds to back risky investments; that
pension funds can be raided to pay off creditors in the event of bankruptcy;
and that pension agreements might not be carried over when a corporation is
sold unless there is an explicit "succession agreement."
The federal Pension
Benefit Guaranty Corporation bails out failed pension plans. But it is
reaching its limit, and if one or two airline companies collapse we could be
faced with another crisis like the Savings and Loan scandal of the 1980s.
One solution offered by
pension expert Robin Blackburn (The Nation, February 17, 2003) is
to require every corporation to issue new stock or bonds each year,
equivalent to 10 percent of profits, which would be owned by the relevant
pension fund (the union's, the corporation's, or a third party trust fund)
to guarantee its solvency.
What can those who are
better acquainted with the world of pension funds and socially responsible
investing tell us about the current situation -- and about ways it could be
improved?
We invite your comments and reflections on this complex issue.
Just send a
note.