Joseph Wharton Award Acceptance
Speech
Thank you,
Katherine, for the kind words. I want to thank the Wharton Club of New York, the
Wharton administration, past Joseph Wharton Awardees and my fellow alums and
friends who nominated me and selected me for this award.
I humbly accept
this award not only for the work that I am doing but also for the work that many
other Wharton alums are also tirelessly doing to make finance into a force for
good, including pioneers like Wayne Selby, who received this honor before me,
and others doing equally important work today, such as Lisa Hall, Nick Donohoe,
Suzanne Biegel, Jean-Philippe de Schrevel
to name a few.
I am from Bangladesh. I was the first Bangladeshi
woman to work on Wall Street and also the first Bangladeshi woman to attend
Wharton. I have spent a life-time breaking down barriers and constraints and at
the same time building bridges between
cultures. Looking back
I can see that I have been able to accomplish what I have in part because I
could effectively take the ‘best practices’ of each culture and create an
effective third way for myself. The pursuit of an effective third way is what
brings me in front of you today.
We live in a prosperous world
today. Gross World Product has increased nearly 70 times in the
last century alone from $ 1 trillion in 1900 to over $70 trillion today. With
continuing improvements in modern science and medicine, people are healthier
and living longer.
Despite this wonderful economic report card, if one scratches the
surface a large gap between the haves and the have-nots is apparent. Globally,
over 2 billion people still suffer from multidimensional poverty. Billions of people still go hungry and don’t have
access to clean water and electricity. The United States is not immune to this,
with increasing inequality and persistent areas of need.
It is a reality that the economic system as it is today is not conducive
to equitable, sustainable growth. If we want the world to be a more equitable
place, we have to focus not only on implementing the efficiency measures we
learned at Wharton but also on changing the paradigm so that the market more
effectively delivers prosperity to all. It is not enough to focus on maximizing
output; we also need to ensure that the outcomes achieved match with our
fundamental goals.
Traditional capital markets are good at maximizing output, but lack the
“heart” required to achieve our higher aims. At the same time, there are not
enough dollars devoted to philanthropy to fully meet that need. To solve the
world’s most pressing problems and deliver on the dream of prosperity for all,
we need to harness the power and scale of the capital markets together with the
social consciousness of the philanthropic sector. Thus, A third
way is necessary.
I believe that this third way
is the social capital markets which will enable socially conscious investors to
combine the efficiency of the free market with the higher mission of
philanthropy and to invest for impact.
This third way requires the creation of a
vibrant marketplace which harnesses the power of the capital markets to bring
together investors, entrepreneurs and the entire financial ecosystem who value
social and environmental returns as well as financial returns. This impact
investing phenomenon is now a movement.
My contribution to this movement has been the two companies I created – Impact
Investment Exchange, in short IIX and Shujog – which are now leading the impact
investing movement in Asia and effectively working towards expanding this movement
from niche to mass.
IIX has become a market leader in impact investing in Asia. IIX runs successful
accelerators for impact enterprises, operates a private placement platform for
direct investment and has recently launched the world’s first social stock
exchange. Through its work, IIX channels investment capital from investors like
yourselves to impact enterprises that are working in the field to serve millions
of disadvantaged people in Asia, giving them access to credit, clean water, electricity,
vocational training and low cost housing and education. IIX is also structuring
innovative financial securities to float on our exchange, such as a Women’s
Impact Bond that I announced at the Clinton Global Initiative last week.
Women’s Impact Bond will impact the lives of millions at a go and also provide financial
returns to investors. We are also now launching a private equity fund that will
make growth investments in Impact Enterprises in South and Southeast Asia,
catalyzing greater impact throughout the region.
While IIX is playing a role in raising investment capital for Impact
Enterprises, my other company, Shujog, focuses on quantifying, strengthening
and deepening the impact of these organizations to their communities.
The work of the two organizations has already impacted the lives of more
than 10 million people while delivering on the promise of financial returns for
investors and helping to support sustainable, equitable development in the
region.
Fellow
alums, I urge you to join me in this journey of the ‘third way’ not only as a
moral imperative but also to be a part of history in the making. If we believe Wharton
is the best business school in the world, then let’s show the world that it is
a leader in sustainable business. Use your skills and resources to immortalize
Wharton not only on Wall Street, but also on all the Main Streets and dirt paths
of this world.
Each one
of you have made incredible contributions to society through your professional
work and, in many cases, your philanthropic giving. Now is the time to combine
these two facets of your life to support investing for impact. There are many
ways to do so. As individuals or organizations, you can direct a portion of
your investment portfolios into investing in impact enterprises and impact funds
and supporting innovative financial mechanisms for impact -- all of which will
enable you to make an impact through investing in myriad ways.
Ladies
and Gentleman, I would like to take this moment to thank my life partner Robert
Kraybill who has tirelessly supported me on this journey of doing good for the
last 25 years. Thank you, Rob.
I leave
you with the words of Martin Luther King, "The time is always right to do
what is right".
Thank you
again for your support and belief in my work. Let’s do the right thing and
let’s invest in impact. Thank you.
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