影响投资决策的范畴认知与结果效率

Matthew K. O. Lee, A. Adbi, Jasjit Singh
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引用次数: 39

摘要

新兴的“影响力投资”实践优化了财务和社会结果,从而承诺支持同时追求财务和社会目标的混合型组织。然而,我们认为,影响投资决策可能容易受到限制其结果效率的行为因素的影响。在一项旨在反映影响力投资决策基本特征的投资组合分配任务中,我们发现,在一系列情景中,个人系统地未能选择有效实现财务和社会结果的投资组合,从而浪费了价值创造的机会。我们进一步在网上和真人实验中表明,结果效率低下与“类别认知”有关:抑制投资选择的类别标签会提高效率。“影响力投资”方法有望鼓励对追求财务和社会目标结合的混合型组织进行更多的财务投资。我们通过实验证明了这种方法的一个挑战:人们很难确定同时优化财务和社会结果的投资组合。这在一定程度上是由于“分类认知”(categorical cognition):一种以已知类别(而非它们产生的实际结果)来看待投资的自然倾向。我们的实验表明,从投资选项中去掉“营利性公司”、“慈善机构”和“社会企业”的标签——从而使对它们的分类思考变得更加困难——会增加结果效率分配。因此,我们表明,要充分发挥影响力投资的潜力,投资者需要超越将商业和慈善视为独立领域的传统思维。
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Categorical Cognition and Outcome Efficiency in Impact Investing Decisions
Research Summary The emerging practice of “impact investing” optimizes both financial and social outcomes, and thus promises to support hybrid organizations that simultaneously pursue financial and social goals. We argue, however, that impact investing decisions may be prone to behavioral factors that limit their outcome efficiency. In a portfolio allocation task designed to reflect the essential features of an impact investing decision, we find across a range of scenarios that individuals systematically fail to choose investment portfolios that achieve financial and social outcomes efficiently and thereby waste opportunities for value creation. We further show in online and in‐person experiments that outcome inefficiency is related to “categorical cognition”: suppression of categorical labels on investment options increases efficiency. Managerial Summary The “impact investing” approach promises to encourage greater financial investments in hybrid organizations that pursue a combination of financial and social goals. We experimentally demonstrate a challenge of this approach: People struggle to identify portfolios of investments that simultaneously optimize across financial and social outcomes. This is partly due to “categorical cognition”: a natural tendency to view investments in terms of known categories rather than the actual outcomes they produce. Our experiments show that removing the labels “for‐profit company,” “charity,” and “social enterprise” from investment options—thus making it more difficult to think about them categorically—increases outcome‐efficient allocations. We therefore show that realizing the full potential of impact investing will require that investors transcend conventional thinking about business and charity as separate domains.
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