For some commentators, 2023 was the year in which woke capitalism faced a reckoning at the hands of a global backlash against environmental, social and governance-centred investing (ESG). Criticism of woke capitalism characterised two US Republican Party presidential primary campaigns.
It is seen in a slew of anti-ESG bills moved by state legislatures. Money is starting to trickle away from ESG-marked exchange-traded funds, and major asset managers are concerned about the label’s public relations value. The latest academic research has also found that firms with high ESG ratings are significantly more likely to be financially distressed than firms which do not have high ESG scores.
While recognising the progress that has been made, this report argues that several crucial areas of the problem of woke capitalism remain unresolved. It also takes pains to distinguish the situation in Britain from America, which has a significantly different cultural and legal context. It counsels caution in relation to claims that the ESG industry is dying or was inevitably doomed from its inception. In particular, it warns against the apparent enthusiasm for embedding the ideas behind woke capitalism into law, just as the market suggests that ESG is not the economic goldmine its supporters suggested.