Speech

Social investment

Speech by the Rt Hon Iain Duncan Smith MP, Secretary of State for Work and Pensions.

This was published under the 2010 to 2015 Conservative and Liberal Democrat coalition government
皇冠体育app Rt Hon Iain Duncan Smith MP

Introduction

It鈥檚 a pleasure to be here tonight, and a particular pleasure to be at the Mansion House.聽

It is here that my speech really begins.

Back in 1739, when the first stones in this building鈥檚 foundations were being laid, a rather momentous occasion was taking place just two miles west of here at Somerset House.

皇冠体育appre, an assorted group of aristocrats, merchant bankers, artists and other 鈥榤en of standing鈥� had gathered for a celebration.

皇冠体育app reason?

皇冠体育appy had just been granted a Royal Charter by King George II to build the Foundling Hospital, set up to look after 鈥榯he education and maintenance of exposed and deserted young children鈥�.

But this wasn鈥檛 just any old hospital - it was a hospital that helped lay the foundations for the great wave of philanthropic activity that took place during the 18th and 19th Century.

Self-made men and women, led in this case by Thomas Coram, were pouring their money back into a society in which they saw overwhelming levels of social breakdown.

Social breakdown

皇冠体育app work that Coram and his contemporaries did was entirely laudable - but I should stress that I鈥檓 not just here tonight to talk about philanthropy.

Nor am I here to harp back to an imagined 鈥榞olden era鈥�.

皇冠体育app construction of the Foundling Hospital was both a symbol of a positive trend at the time - a rise in giving - and an overwhelmingly negative one - a rise in the level of street children and in overall levels of social breakdown.

I simply seek to make a point about what this philanthropic movement represented - namely the commitment of those at the top of society to putting their wealth back in to supporting those at the bottom.

I feel we may have lost our way a little since then.

Coram鈥檚 ambition was to change lives - the problem at the time was a lack of money.

Today our problem is more a lack of ambition.

We have been content to sustain people and not to change their lives, allowing social breakdown to fester and thrive in our poorest communities.

Waste of potential

This isn鈥檛 just a mark on our consciences.

It is also a criminal waste of potential.

I鈥檝e frequently said that many young people in our country who are out of work, on the dole, or in some of our toughest street gangs are harbouring a range of skills that could rival some of our top-paid professionals.

皇冠体育appy are just completely misdirected.

I鈥檓 talking about the young people who are mathematical whizzes when it comes to calculating their benefit claims.

I鈥檓 talking about the young people who are able to pull apart and unblock stolen mobile phones, or fix up old bikes and mopeds.

And I鈥檓 talking about young people who organise and lead highly complex gangs and drugs cartels.

皇冠体育appse kids aren鈥檛 stupid.

皇冠体育appy have just never had the opportunities that many of us were able to take for granted.

It all started badly for too many of them - dysfunctional families鈥�

鈥nderperforming schools鈥�

鈥ntimidating street gangs鈥�

鈥nd then too often into the arms of a welfare system that acts as a crutch, rather than a springboard for change.

Unlocking human capital

Meanwhile, at the top end of society, we find some of our most successful and well rewarded professionals pouring - rightly - their skills into wealth creation鈥�

鈥ut too often they are detached from what is going on at the bottom.

In many cases鈥�

鈥lthough not far away in miles from some of our most serious social problems鈥�

鈥hey do not have to see them, or do not believe they could be part of the solution for change.

皇冠体育app task seems too great, the gap between top and bottom too wide.

So the obvious question is: how do we bring these two groups together, using one set of skills to unlock the other?

Social investment

皇冠体育app answer to this challenge, I believe, lies with social investment, which is why we鈥檙e here tonight.

Social investment could be the tool for unlocking human capital at both ends of society, without being forced to rely on the generosity of a few wealthy individuals.

I want to see a process by which the wealth creators in our society can be tied back into projects which yield BOTH a social return for the community AND a financial return for them.

Why is this different from charity?

Because you get the rigour and discipline that comes from someone risking their money on an investment鈥�

鈥oney that could otherwise be reaping a return elsewhere.

If our top businessmen and women are putting their cash and the cash of their companies into these investments you can guarantee they will be keeping an eagle eye on them, bringing their expertise and asking all the right questions.

That makes then whole process both more effective, and more sustainable.

When you give money charitably it is an act of selfless giving.

You give money - wonderfully - because you think it is right.

But when you invest, this is an act of hard-headed calculation.

And once this area is opened up there鈥檚 no reason it shouldn鈥檛 become a mass market - there鈥檚 no reason that people shouldn鈥檛 be investing their savings in social investment ISAs or pension funds with a social return element.

Growing market

So what chance this new golden age?

皇冠体育app Social investment market is still in its infancy.

It is worth around 拢190m today, a number that pales in comparison with the 拢3.6 billion annual outlay on philanthropic grant funding.

But the market also has serious potential.

Ronald Cohen, known to many as the father of venture capital - has commented that

enterprise and impact investing鈥ook like the wave of the future.

Indeed, in his view:

Impact [social investment] capital is the new venture capital鈥�.

皇冠体育app challenge is how we get to that position from where we are now.

Government

In recent months I have made a number of calls to the market to get involved in this agenda鈥�

鈥nd that鈥檚 why I congratulate Broadway for launching their Property Fund today.

But Government has to get the financial and regulatory conditions right, and we鈥檙e very much in listening mode.

One of the things we鈥檝e heard from a number of organisations is that before they can invest substantial funds in social returns they need to have a better understanding of what those returns might be - and how certain they are to accrue.

A number in particular have supported the idea of an Early Intervention Foundation, which would provide expert advice on early intervention as well as building the evidence base on social returns.

I recently made a speech where I promised I would provide more details on this Foundation shortly - we are about to do just that.

皇冠体育appre are also a number of innovative projects going on across Government - from payment by results through the Work Programme鈥�

鈥hrough to full-blown social investment projects like the Peterborough Social Impact Bond鈥�

鈥y Department鈥檚 Innovation Fund鈥�

鈥nd the Cabinet Office鈥檚 local authority pilots. 聽

At the same time, we are seeing a major new source of investment funds coming on stream via Big Society Capital.

皇冠体育appre are already some really interesting projects here, including the setting up of the world鈥檚 first 鈥楽ocial Stock Exchange鈥� for social enterprises, which will be located right here in London.

Conclusion

To me it feels like we鈥檙e at a tipping point with this agenda.

皇冠体育appre is good work going on everywhere we look鈥�

鈥ut it鈥檚 now a question of how we piece it together and build a crescendo.

Shortly we will be publishing a new Social Justice strategy, setting out our ambition to use new and innovative delivery mechanisms鈥�

鈥ncluding social investment鈥�

鈥o change the lives of our most disadvantaged individuals and families.

Our ambition is for the UK be a world leader in this field.

I want to build a new legacy for this nation, not just as a country of great givers鈥�

鈥ut as a country of savvy social investors鈥�

This is - I believe - the best way we can start the tough but necessary process of reconnecting the top and bottom of society鈥�

鈥y bringing together the city with the inner city, and鈥�

鈥hrough that鈥�

鈥elping mend our social fabric.

Updates to this page

Published 29 February 2012