Finance Must Be Defended: Cybernetics, Neoliberalism and Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG)

被引:1
|
作者
Morgan, William R. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Rhetor, 7408 Dwinelle Hall 2670, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA
关键词
2007-2008 financial crisis; corporate social responsibility (CSR); cybernetics; Elena Esposito; environmental; social; and governance (ESG); modern finance; Michel Foucault; Friedrich Hayek; neoliberalism; sustainability;
D O I
10.3390/su15043707
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
In the last decade, interest in environmental, social, and governance (ESG) surged dramatically. This article contends that corporate perspectives on ESG-as managing risk and/or returning expected value-are insufficient to account for developments presently unfolding in the ESG finance space. There, novel derivative tools are being developed and deployed, promising to flip the sustainability market on its head. Unlike other sustainability metrics or strategies, ESG derivatives do not attempt to price a given firm's risk profile in light of the environment, but rather seek to price the risk profile of environmental catastrophe itself. What this translocation of risk prophesies is the direct application of financial engineering to the climate. In this article, re-visiting the late work of Friedrich Hayek and tracing his legacy in Michel Foucault's lectures on neoliberalism frames my argument that the modern financial system from which these derivatives spring is best understood as a cybernetic one. Cybernetic systems are ones that endeavor to negate entropy and maintain organization by means of information feedback loop-based learning; in finance, this takes the form of Hayekian price discovery. With ESG derivatives, the system of cybernetic finance is presently setting to work converting climate uncertainty into pricing efficiency. Because derivatives such as these represent the polity's most advanced media for the meaningful sensation of threats, what emerges about the environment from the trade of these products will soon be fed backwards as a powerful set of inputs to governance, shaping how the climate is brought into representation and what responses to its associated crises are possible.
引用
收藏
页数:21
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Environmental, social, governance (ESG) & sustainable finance : Emergence of new era of investing
    Bhatia, Richa
    Bhasin, Narinder Kumar
    Kadyan, Sunil
    Singh, Preeti
    JOURNAL OF INFORMATION & OPTIMIZATION SCIENCES, 2023, 44 (08): : 1543 - 1562
  • [3] Environmental, social, and governance (ESG) and artificial intelligence in finance: State-of-the-art and research takeaways
    Lim, Tristan
    ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE REVIEW, 2024, 57 (04)
  • [4] Environmental, social, and governance (ESG) and artificial intelligence in finance: State-of-the-art and research takeaways
    Tristan Lim
    Artificial Intelligence Review, 57
  • [5] Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) for Online Marketplaces
    Ryu, Sunghan
    Koedijk, Kees G.
    Chow, Victor
    Gao, Xiang
    ELECTRONIC MARKETS, 2024, 34 (01)
  • [6] Demystifying Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG): charting the ESG course in Africa
    Baswetan, Anggun Meranti Yuwandari
    Kondologit, Garry Rheinhard
    DISABILITY & SOCIETY, 2023, 39 (11) : 3042 - 3044
  • [7] Green finance and environmental, social, and governance performance
    Qian, Shuitu
    Yu, Wenzhe
    INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF ECONOMICS & FINANCE, 2024, 89 : 1185 - 1202
  • [8] The global pricing of environmental, social, and governance (ESG) criteria
    Gregory, Richard P.
    Stead, Jean Garner
    Stead, Edward
    JOURNAL OF SUSTAINABLE FINANCE & INVESTMENT, 2021, 11 (04) : 310 - 329
  • [9] Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) disclosure: A literature review
    Tsang, Albert
    Frost, Tracie
    Cao, Huijuan
    BRITISH ACCOUNTING REVIEW, 2023, 55 (01):
  • [10] CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES OF ENVIRONMENTAL, SOCIAL, AND GOVERNANCE (ESG) INVESTING
    Nad, Tihana
    Dedi, Lidija
    CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS OF THE 2ND INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON THE ECONOMICS OF DECOUPLING, ICED 2021, 2021, : 317 - 338