Private equity firms begin to respond

Distribution Network
Content
Private equity firms have acted to counter suggestions that their increasing influence poses a threat to corporate social responsibility.

Two heads of private equity firms last month publicly pledged more openness, while arguing that there is no reason their business model is necessarily incompatible with the CSR policies pursued by listed companies.

Damon Buffini, managing director of Permira, Europe’s biggest private equity group, said he acknowledged that ‘there has to be more disclosure’ to allay concerns that private equity firms are only interested in short term gains. He offered to meet union leaders in Britain to discuss their widely publicized concerns that private equity fails to take its social responsibilities seriously.

Permira also announced that the hotel chain Travelodge, which it owns, is to recruit a director of environmental sustainability to develop a social and environmental strategy for the company.

In the US, David Rubenstein, co-founder of the Carlyle Group, one of the largest private equity firms, said he hoped the recently created Private Equity Council in Washington DC would help firms like his to show they are socially responsible.

The industry responses came shortly before the Work Foundation produced figures that show private equity firms involved in management buy-ins had cut jobs by an average of 18 per cent over six years, and the workers at the buy-in companies were £231 ($455) a year worse off compared with other private sector employees. The foundation drew on data on 1350 private equity deals dating back to 1999 to support its claims.