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The virtue economy is over

The DEI and ESG movements are well-intentioned, but executing on the vision has always been a problem

    • A protest against fossil fuels during the COP28 climate summit in Dubai, in December 2023. Phasing out fossil fuels is a good idea, but how to make it happen?
    • A protest against fossil fuels during the COP28 climate summit in Dubai, in December 2023. Phasing out fossil fuels is a good idea, but how to make it happen? PHOTO: REUTERS
    Published Thu, Jan 18, 2024 · 02:45 PM

    THE virtue bubble has not only peaked; it is also starting to deflate.

    For the last few years, the ESG movement has affected both how people invest and what they buy. Now, the acronym (it stands for environmental, social and governance) is becoming a “dirty word”. Companies are scrubbing it from their websites, and chief executive officers are no longer mentioning it in their speeches.

    And if there is an acronym that sparks even stronger feelings than ESG, it is DEI (which stands for diversity, equity and inclusion, and is part of the S and G in ESG). Depending on your view, DEI is either a cure for America’s structural racism or proof that the fight against it has gone too far. In either case, its power is also fading; firms facing narrowing profit margins are cutting jobs in DEI departments.

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