Financing Your Local Green Business

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Despite a growing need for eco-conscious, local businesses, the financing opportunities still remain restrictive.
Despite a growing need for eco-conscious, local businesses, the financing opportunities still remain restrictive.
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“Good Green Jobs in a Global Economy” by David J. Hess explores the politics of green jobs and suggests solutions for maintaining a growing economy while promoting green energy.
“Good Green Jobs in a Global Economy” by David J. Hess explores the politics of green jobs and suggests solutions for maintaining a growing economy while promoting green energy.

Good Green Jobs in a Global Economy (MIT, 2012) by David J. Hess looks at the implications of convergence of industrial and environmental policy in the United States. Hess discusses the shift in the United States’ economy, looking at the impact that green jobs has had on both the national and global economy. The following excerpt is his discussion on financing local green businesses.

A complete approach to the funding of locally owned green energy would also include support for the incubation and growth of green small businesses. There are some general government programs to assist small businesses, but the regulatory system is structured to limit the options for small investors who wish to invest in small businesses. One set of options, microfinance and community loan funds, accept quasi-charitable donations with zero or low interest rates. Likewise, community investment options from the larger mutual fund companies, such as the Calvert Foundation Community Investment Note, provide a low rate of interest. Some community banks and credit unions also offer financial products that include investments in or donations to local environmental groups. However, interest rates are all relatively low in this set of financial instruments.

Somewhat higher rates of return with correspondingly higher levels of risk can be obtained for debt investment in small businesses through Internet-based lending sites. Although in 2008 the Securities and Exchange Commission issued a cease-and-desist letter to the leading company, Prosper.com, by July of 2009 the company had successfully completed registration and was back in business. Partly in response to the perceived need to develop a better regulatory environment for new financial models, the peer-to-peer organizations formed a trade group, the Coalition for New Financial Models, in 2009. Within the peer-to-peer system, it is possible to support small businesses that meet social and environmental responsibility criteria. This approach is still a loan rather than an equity investment, but it allows investors to assume more risk and gain higher rates of return than those found in community loan funds and similar vehicles.

Although the existing options for small investors are laudable, they are basically debt investments with low rates of return. Whether one goes through a loan fund, through the Calvert Foundation, through a credit union, through a community bank, or through a peer-to-peer site, non- accredited investors generally cannot make equity investments in the green small-business sector. The legal structure of investment has made it difficult to develop similar options for equity investments for non- accredited investors who might be willing to accept higher risk for the prospect of higher returns. Although there are some plans to develop the equity side of green community capital, such as regional stock markets, to date the mechanisms that could rebalance investment in locally owned independent businesses remain very restricted.

Because the retirement industry is structured to send individual investments into the stocks and bonds of publicly traded corporations, there is a gap between the need for investment in the small-business sector and the trillions of dollars of retirement savings, not to mention other investments held by non-accredited investors. For persons who wish to invest in small businesses with a social and environmental responsibility mission, the options are very limited. Michael Shuman writes:

  • Published on Jun 27, 2018
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