OECD: Leaders endorse new G20/OECD principles on long-term investment financing

06 September 2013

G20 leaders endorsed an OECD-launched initiative to encourage the flow of institutional investment towards longer-term assets, such as infrastructure and renewable energy projects, in order to strengthen the global economy.

Currently, pension funds, insurers, mutual funds and sovereign wealth funds hold more than $80 trillion in assets. Pension funds alone managed over $20 trillion in assets as of the end of 2012, with a net annual inflow of savings of over $1 trillion. But only 1 per cent of those assets were invested in infrastructure projects, with an even smaller fraction in clean energy projects.

The High-Level Principles of Long-Term Investment Financing by Institutional Investors, prepared by an OECD Taskforce working together with G20 members, establish a framework for encouraging institutional investment in long-term assets. They set out the preconditions to long-term investment, such as the need for stable macro-economic conditions, a clear and transparent government plan for projects, as well as opportunities for private sector involvement via public procurement and public-private partnerships investment. The principles also address specific policies, including:

As part of its work for the G20, the OECD will also be intensifying monitoring of institutional investors and carrying out in-depth analysis of a variety of policy and market-based incentives to facilitate long-term investment, including in clean energy.

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