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Pension funds have come to play an increasingly important role
within the new economy. According to Statistics Canada, in 2006,
trusteed pension funds in Canada had $836 billion of assets and
represented the savings of 4.6 million Canadian workers. Pensions
at Work is a unique collection of papers that uses a labour
perspective to deal with the socially responsible investment of
pension funds. Featuring leading Canadian and international
scholars, it builds on existing scholarship on socially responsible
investment and on the growing interest of the Canadian labour
movement in joint trusteeship. What is unique about this collection
is that it synthesizes three distinct themes - socially responsible
investment, pension funds, and labour studies. The contributors
address an array of critical issues such as gaps in the education
of union trustees of pension funds, the impact of human capital
criteria on shareholder returns, the influence of corporate
engagement upon corporate performance, and the nature of
public-private partnerships (PPPs). Although the essays in Pensions
at Work all address the nexus between socially responsible
investment, pension funds, and unions, each looks at a particular
manifestation of that relationship through a different disciplinary
lens. This collection moves the discussion to pension funds in
which union representatives are also trustees, a relatively new
approach that will be of great interest to institutional investors,
the labour movement, and instructors in labour studies programs.
Canadian pension fund assets are second in size only to the
combined financial assets of the major banks and have become a
critical source of capital for national and international markets.
Given their tax-exempt status, pension funds can provide the
long-term capital needed to build a new economy based on real
productivity. The funds are controlled by an intricate web of
financial and legal standards but, as deferred wages, are largely
beyond the control of workers or their unions. In Pension Power,
Isla Carmichael argues that unions could<->and
should<->have a new role to play in the economy by gaining
control over their members' pension funds. She demonstrates how the
financial industry's access to the capital goes against the
interests of working people, and she provides convincing evidence
that union management of pensions would better protect benefits and
offer support in building infrastructure in communities and
protecting the environment. This is a work of singular commitment
to a fundamental shift in the structure of managing one of Canada's
largest pools of capital.
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