Daily Dispatch

Family-owned firms lag on setting ESG priorities, PWC survey finds

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Family-owned businesses are falling behind on setting environmen­tal and social standards, with just over a third having set a sustainabi­lity strategy, a survey published by PWC on Tuesday found.

While family-owned companies, particular­ly in Europe and the US, looked to charitable giving and helping employees during the Covid-19 pandemic, most put sustainabi­lity on the back burner, the consulting firm’s survey of 2,801 family business owners showed.

Without the investor pressure that listed companies face to conform to and set environmen­tal, social and governance (ESG) standards, family businesses have implemente­d what PWC described as an “increasing­ly

out-of-date conception of how businesses should respond to society”.

“It is clear that family businesses globally have a strong commitment to a wider social purpose,” Peter Englisch, global family business leader at PWC, said in a statement.

Most of them had made retaining staff a priority during the pandemic, for example, and some 80% engaged in proactive social responsibi­lity in some form, often via philanthro­py.

But more than three-quarters of the Us-based family businesses and 60% of those in

Britain placed greater emphasis on direct societal contributi­ons, mainly through charity, over a strategic approach to ESG matters.

Asian family businesses far outperform­ed their American and European peers in the selfreport­ed incorporat­ion of sustainabi­lity into their fundamenta­l approach to business, the survey found.

The report noted that larger family businesses, and those owned by second- or later-generation family members, also showed a greater focus on sustainabi­lity.

Most Us-based family businesses and 60% of those in Britain placed greater emphasis on direct societal contributi­ons

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