Risk tolerance and Social impact bond: Difference between pages

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''Risk management.''
(SIB).  


1.
The Social Impact Bond model is an innovative method of financing welfare and other social services.  


Strictly, an absolute maximum acceptable level of risk.  
It aims to improve a social outcome through the collaboration of government, service providers and external investors.  


In this strict sense, risk tolerance is the amount of risk that the firm can actually bear.  
Put simply, a SIB involves a set of contracts, the basis of which is an agreement by government to pay investors for an improvement in a specific social outcome once it has been achieved.  


This amount of risk could be represented by the firm's capital, or by an amount of capital above a base amount of capital that cannot be put at risk.


Service providers address the social outcome by delivering an intervention to a group within a target community. Investors provide working capital for service providers to deliver the intervention.


2.
If greater improvements in the social outcome are made, government payments are larger and thus, investor returns are higher.  


The term 'risk tolerance' is also sometimes used in a looser sense, to mean the same as 'risk appetite'.
Effectively, the SIB acts a social futures contract rather than a debt instrument (Nicholls and Tomkinson, 2013, p.3).


Social impact bonds involve external investors financing a project with a social purpose and getting a return dependent on meeting certain performance criteria.  They are a subset of payment by results mechanisms whereby governments contract with external parties to provide public services with payment  according to the results they achieve.


== See also ==
* [[Enterprise risk management]]
* [[Guide to risk management]]
* [[Risk appetite]]
* [[Risk policy]]
* [[Risk register]]


[[Category:Financial_risk_management]]
==See also==
*[[Social Bond Principles]]
*[[Social Business Trust]]
*[[Social enterprise]]
*[[Social inclusion bond]]
*[[Sustainability bond]]
* [[Sustainability Linked Loan Principles]]
 
 
===Other links===
[https://www.gov.uk/social-impact-bonds Introduction to social impact bonds]
 
[[Category:The_business_context]]
[[Category:Ethics]]

Revision as of 13:37, 17 September 2019

(SIB).

The Social Impact Bond model is an innovative method of financing welfare and other social services.

It aims to improve a social outcome through the collaboration of government, service providers and external investors.

Put simply, a SIB involves a set of contracts, the basis of which is an agreement by government to pay investors for an improvement in a specific social outcome once it has been achieved.


Service providers address the social outcome by delivering an intervention to a group within a target community. Investors provide working capital for service providers to deliver the intervention.

If greater improvements in the social outcome are made, government payments are larger and thus, investor returns are higher.

Effectively, the SIB acts a social futures contract rather than a debt instrument (Nicholls and Tomkinson, 2013, p.3).

Social impact bonds involve external investors financing a project with a social purpose and getting a return dependent on meeting certain performance criteria. They are a subset of payment by results mechanisms whereby governments contract with external parties to provide public services with payment according to the results they achieve.


See also


Other links

Introduction to social impact bonds