Traditional Financial Field
Noé Kabouche
Work in progress — Please do not share or cite
Abstract
Coined by the Rockefeller Foundation in 2007, impact investing has often been showcased as a
disruptive approach to finance, by its promoters. This paper examines the emergence of impact
investing in Geneva and shows that this discourse can be qualified when it comes to the concrete
conditions of its emergence, as a field. Literature on impact investing emergence has mainly
examined this process under the lens of its intermediary status and its connection to various
proximate fields, especially the state. But the present case shows a local emergence that is driven
by incumbent market actors from traditional finance. We argue that such an emergence relies on
strategies capitalizing on microfinance, a characteristic practice of Geneva, controlled by the main
financial actors of the city. Based on qualitative fieldwork consisting of interviews and document
analyses, the paper reconstructs the rise and evolution of impact investing in Geneva over the past
two decades, showing that dominant private banks of Geneva directly or indirectly propelled most
of the asset management firms positioned today in impact investing, relying on various
mechanisms, such as practice relabeling, and strategic innovations.
1. Introduction
Sir Ronald Cohen, one of the pivotal actors in the worldwide development of impact investing and
head of the Global Social Impact Investment Steering Group (GSG), named his main book on
impact finance as follows: “Impact: Reshaping Capitalism to Drive Real Change” (Cohen 2020).
Alongside other promoters of this relatively new form of sustainable finance (see for instance,
Bugg-Levine and Emerson 2011; Emerson 2018), he suggests that impact investing can solve
capitalism’s shortcomings regarding today’s social and environmental challenges. Likewise, the
Global Impact Investing Network (GIIN), the main organization promoting and supporting
impact investing around the world, states that this practice is “unashamedly ambitious”, and aims
at becoming the “normal way of doing things”1. These phrases picture impact investing as a
disruptive practice, whose role is to revolutionize the way financial activities are being carried out,
while replacing the old ways of capitalism. But how does such a promise materialize when it comes
to impact investing’s implementation in specific places?
Part of the broader category of “sustainable finance”, which refers to investment taking into
account social and environmental issues (including socially responsible investments (SRI) (Arjaliès
2010), ESG (environmental, social and governance) criteria guiding investing (Leins 2020), and
shareholder activism (Soule 2009; Waeger and Mena 2019)), the term “impact investing” was
coined at a event organized by the Rockefeller Foundation in 2007. Its goal was to define an
investment strategy that would reportedly stand out from the other sustainable finance approaches
by putting the emphasis on an active investing endeavor that “aims to generate a measurable social
and environmental impact alongside a financial return”. To develop and promote impact investing,
the foundation created the GIIN, mentioned above, a network bringing together banks, investment
funds, individual investors and foundations.
Several studies have been exploring how impact investment initiatives have been developed in
various countries. Some of them show that the “impact investing” label is the result of the joint
effort of market players, public institutions and political actors. In the United Kingdom, social
impact investing was meant as a welfare policy relying on unclaimed assets used for the creation of
a “social investment bank” (Golka 2019, 2023). In France, it was an asset class’s label controlled
by the state and linked to the “Économie sociale et solidaire”, which refers to economic activities
which follow specific criteria, such as being useful to society as a whole, and not focused only on
profit-making (Chiapello and Godefroy 2017). But impact investing is not always the consequence
of the cooperation of various fields that would result in a state-guaranteed label tied to a specific
political or social vision. In this article, we examine the development of impact investing in Geneva,
Switzerland, and question its relationship to financial and non-financial actors. Through this case,
we show that impact investing’s strong ambitions towards existing financial markets that must
reportedly be “reshaped”, are not pivotal in its emergence. On the contrary, we argue that impact
investing mostly acts as a label used by existing financial actors to categorize their initiatives when
other labels are being jeopardized by global events or when worldwide financial evolutions offer
new ways of conducting financial activities prone to grant strategic advantages on existing markets.
To this end, we consider impact investing in Geneva as an emerging field (Fligstein and McAdam
2012) and demonstrate that skilled social incumbent actors from traditional finance of the city
fashioned its settlements through strategic actions and resource deployment. Hence, we show that
the local rise of impact investing was largely due to an extension of the previous field of commercial
microfinance in which powerful financial actors of the city played a key role. This filiation between
impact finance and microfinance appears as a core characteristic of the Geneva case: after having
showcased microfinance as an innovative and virtuous form of investment, Geneva’s asset managers
relabeled such activities as “impact investing”, as the new concept offered more flexibility and
4
dismissed reputational risks tied to microfinance crises. These incumbent actors from traditional
finance hence managed to build a specialized sub-field of finance and occupy dominant positions
in it, by drawing on transnational symbolic resources and local alliances with the field of
international development, while choosing themselves the structuring conditions of this field, that
was not controlled by external actors, such as the state, NGOs, or other organizations.
This paper offers two main contributions. First, it builds on existing works addressing the
conditions of emergence of impact investing in various places, showing that the case of Geneva
features a financial incumbent-driven development, where structuration processes mainly rely on
relabeling of and capitalizing on existing activities, here, microfinance. Through the adopted field
perspective, our study highlights the interconnectedness of different social spaces, while
emphasizing the crucial role of existing dominant financial actors and structures in impact
investing’s settlement. Second, this analysis fosters questioning on the consequences of such a
finance-led development. Whereas impact investing is often described as a disruptive way of
conducting financial activities, observing this phenomenon as a commercial relabeling taking place
within traditional financial fields begs the question of the movement’s objective and positioning.
This paper is structured as follows. In the next section (2.) we expose our data and methods. Then,
we present our empirical findings (3.). Finally, we discuss them and conclude on the conditions
under which financial incumbent-led emergence of impact investing can take place, and question
the possible consequences of such developments (4.).
2. Data and methods
Like other transnational phenomena, impact investing is also locally anchored, and studying this
local anchoring—here, through the case of Geneva—is crucial to understand its concrete
implementation mechanisms (Attencourt and Siméant 2015). Geneva has a long financial and
5
banking history and a highly integrated financial field (Araujo 2020; Mazbouri and Guex 2010)
dominated by ancient families and private banks active in wealth management. Geneva is also
known for its philanthropic initiatives, led by foundations and banks (David and Heiniger 2019;
David, Heiniger, and Bühlmann 2016; David et al. 2016). The case of Geneva, finally, also has the
perk of being quite suitable to a thorough emergence analysis. The main reason for it is the small
size of its financial ecosystem, due to the hegemony of a few historic families, and a limited number
of influent companies. This specific local situation enables us to follow the main individuals who
designed the field, and hence, offer a detailed analysis of the phenomenon.
To this end, our fieldwork consists of direct and participant observations at events related to
sustainable finance, where we first identified and mapped the main actors of the field. We hence
focused on asset management firms specialized in impact investing (n = 8). Moreover, we looked
at other actors in the field: individuals who played a structuring role the configuration of the impact
investing field; banks that offer impact investment products, but are not specialized in it; and other
surrounding actors, such as associations supporting such initiatives and actors from international
organizations and NGOs. Our main data sources are semi-structured interviews (n = 50),
conducted online and in person, in French or English. Interviews lasted between one and two
hours. We interviewed at least one executive for each of the specialized impact companies, but
often also did a second interview with a more operative manager2. We aimed at covering the field
exhaustively, both to understand its structure and its origination. As a consequence, interviewees
were added along the way, as we learned more about the process of the field emergence and
contacted people who had a role in it. We also analyzed the annual reports of the specialized impact
investing asset managers, and gathered other marketing documents. All interviews were
transcribed, and qualitatively analyzed through the software Atlas-Ti. For this paper’s purposes, we
2 The research project, which is financed by the Swiss National Science foundation, is interested also in other
aspects of the impact investment market, which are not part of the study presented here.
6
mostly relied on an analysis that focuses on the processes of field creation and consolidation. This
led us to pursue a genealogical approach (Agrikoliansky, Fillieule, and Mayer 2005; Balsiger 2016)
to the field emergence: we went back from the actors present in the field today, to find out how
the field was created. In the empirical analysis, names of organizations have been changed, and
interviewees are only mentioned by their institutional affiliation. Only four major individuals are
being referred to by the same letter (A, B, C, D), throughout the analysis.
3. Empirical analysis
Today’s field of impact investment in Geneva is populated by firms that were created at different
times. Just focusing on the specialized asset managers (and thus disregarding the traditional private
and commercial banks that offer impact investing products), one sees that some companies were
funded a couple years prior or after 2010, a few more were created later, and two more, which are
firms active in microfinance, already existed in the early 2000’s. This is a particularly salient
observation for the analysis of the emergence of the field: some of the companies actually pre-exist
the coinage of the very term “impact investment”, in 2007. At the same time, it also shows that
many of the firms that constitute the field were created after the term existed. From afar, and just
judging from the age of organizations, it thus looks like this field was created partly by incumbents,
and partly by new actors. But of course, this is a very crude indicator. Through the interviews we
conducted, we identified much more precisely the process of emergence of the field of impact
investing and of the role of incumbent actors therein. We hence show how impact investing in
Geneva settled as a label capitalizing on existing forms of financial activities secured by incumbent
actors from the traditional financial field of the city.
In the first empirical section, we will examine the emergence of microfinance in Geneva in the late
20th century, a type of investments made in developing countries. We will show that this practice
was structured as a subfield within the existing financial field and by several of its powerful actors.
7
The second section will focus on the period running from 2008 to 2014, when the term “impact
investing” was coined by the Rockefeller Foundation. We will study the processes through which
the Geneva impact investment field emerged from the microfinance one, using relabeling and
diversification strategies relying on both microfinance practices and the new “impact investing”
concept.
3.1 Before impact: the emergence of a microfinance field among Geneva traditional
finance
Impact investing in Geneva was not generated in a void: it emerged within an existing field,
microfinance. To comprehend the emergence of impact investing, one needs to understand the
processes that supported the development of microfinance in Geneva. Microfinance practices
settled within the financial field of Geneva, thanks to the essential support of central incumbent
actors of the local financial center: the private banks.
Although the financial center of Geneva includes several types of institutions (Araujo 2020;
Mazbouri and Guex 2010), namely cantonal and major commercial banking firms, its most
characteristic and arguably historically most important feature are the private banks. They largely
dominated the Swiss financial ecosystem of the 19th century (Mazbouri and Guex 2010), especially
in Geneva. Private banks are financial organizations which offer personalized support to rich
clients, traditionally rich families, in asset and wealth management. Unlike other banks, only wealthy
people can become clients of a private bank. These dominant private banks were characterized by
a strong control exerted by what has been called an “aristocratic bourgeoisie”, referring to rich
families which benefited from an ancient reputation, an important involvement in the financial
affairs of the city, and an aristocratic way of life (Cassis 1991). As shown by Araujo and Mach
(2018), these families secured their institutional control throughout the decades—and centuries—
contributing to an exceptional stability of their firms’ associates (Fernandez Perez and Colli 2013).
8
Indeed, in some of these banks, people with the same family name have been in charge for more
than 200 years, showing that the firms were transferred within the same family, and often to direct
descendants. In short, the financial center of Geneva is profoundly marked by a set of strongly
anchored incumbent actors, historically rooted in the banking landscape, and still active today.
Among these incumbents, two institutions specifically played an active role in the development of
sustainable finance, and indirectly, impact investing: Lacour-Deschamps and FAC (Flury –
D’Alverny – Campoli), a financial firm founded by people linked to both Lacour-Deschamps and
Flury—the other major private bank in Geneva. These organizations possess all the features
regarding familial longevity mentioned above, provide wealth and asset management services and
became major worldwide actors. According to the British Scorpio institute, they have been ranked
in the top 25 private banks worldwide by asset under management3. And for instance, one of these
two banks, Lacour-Deschamps, is the most ancient private bank in Geneva (established at the end
of the 18th century) and gathers more than 2,500 employees worldwide4. These famous and wellestablished
groups played a major role in the framing of the sustainable financial practices in
Geneva, by participating in the introduction of a new financial practice: microfinance. This term
refers to investments made in financial institutions whose role it is to fund underprivileged
individuals or micro and small enterprises from the real economy in developing countries. This
approach targets non-Western institutions and aims at providing “financial inclusion” to “frontier”
or “emerging” markets, while monitoring these investments and measuring their social impacts on
the populations through mixed methods and customized indicators that depend on the situation
of the investees (Servet 2006). The creation of the first commercial microfinance company in
Geneva—Green Lotus, founded in 2001—was the result of the encounter between the United
Nations (UN) and the world of private banking, represented by Lacour-Deschamps and FAC. At
3 Le Temps, 2016.
4 Lacour-Deschamps’s Website.
9
that time, the contribution of private finance to the development field started to be discussed
among UN institutions, but was still a very marginal phenomenon. While the official narrative of
the creation of commercial microfinance emphasizes the collaboration between UN institutions
and banks, the accounts we got from interviewees from both sides indicate that while a UN
coordinator (from UNCTAD5), called A, played an important role, this person did not have much
institutional backing. Yet this UN official “toured all the banks” in Geneva but also in other
countries such as Luxembourg, to find allies to start a commercial microfinance fund, and
developed a tool destined to match investors and projects in need of funding. According to one of
the founders of Green Lotus, who then worked at Lacour-Deschamps, the UN official proposed
the project to the bank, which refused because it was already involved in some complicated matters
with a foundation promoting socially responsible investment since 1997, as stated by B, who
worked for both FAC and previously Lacour-Deschamps:
“Green Lotus, in its communication, always says: ‘Green Lotus was founded by the United Nations’. It’s not
quite true, but it’s because I met A, that we put together this thing. […] He is the one who started it. Because
then, I did a project for Lacour-Deschamps, and then they didn’t want to do it, because I was in charge of [X]
at the time and it was a bit complicated as a project because there was a lot of shareholder activism and pension
funds. And Lacour-Deschamps was a bit scared and then they said: ‘no, this is not for us.’” (Interviewee B,
FAC)
After the fund was launched in Luxembourg, a Belgian banker (C), a family member from Lacour-
Deschamps (D), and B (who worked at that time for Lacour-Deschamps) funded Green Lotus,
with the goal of providing management consulting on this fund—it was the beginning of the first
asset management firm oriented towards commercial microfinance in Geneva:
“[In 2001], after I got the idea from A to create a non-profit company but one that would manage impact
funds, I came up with this idea again and I thought: ‘I’m tired of banking’. The banking world, at least at that
time, was not at all conducive to the development of something like I was trying to do. So, I left the bank and
with the blessing of my CEO at the time, I created Green Lotus with D [who is from the Lacour-Deschamps
family]. And we embarked on the adventure. And from the start of the creation of the startup, we received a
management consulting contract [the microfinance fund]. And that’s how Green Lotus started. So, in March
2001, here we are, the two of us… I provide the fund management advice and D knew—linked to his father,
5 UNCTAD stands for United Nation Conference on Trade and Development.
10
obviously—people who could support us. His father was the founder of [an association supporting firm
creations], as you know. And he gave us a lot of support. He really got us started, if you will.” (Interviewee C,
at that time, a Belgian banker)
Thus, two of the partners who launched the first commercial microfinance fund in Geneva came
from the world of Geneva private banks, and were linked to the private banks through family,
business ties, and financial resources. To understand the success of this project, it is also worth
noticing that the private banks—whose actions were crucial in the emergence of Green Lotus—
enjoyed an apparently natural role in this process, since their tradition of personalized financial
support and long-term strategies easily matched the expectations of sustainable finance. This may
be part of the explanation of why they (instead of other kinds of financial actors) bet on
microfinance (Araujo 2020):
“[We’ve been interested in impact] since… well, for some time, since […] we have a philanthropic foundation
that is really very important, so that’s something we’ve always been invested in, and then, throughout our
history, we’ve had impact initiatives. We introduced the ESG in 1997, we participated in the creation of Green
Lotus in 2001, so there has always been a part of the company that has been invested in […] the idea that finance
should also be at the service of society.” (Responsible for sustainability integration, Lacour-Deschamps)
“Geneva’s financial sector is naturally oriented towards the long term and towards a notion of common interest.
It’s not every man for himself, trader, but it’s rather long term. So, there is a phenomenon of this place that is
perhaps a little romantic, but afterwards it is up to the academics to validate this, which is somewhat in keeping
with this idea of the spirit of Geneva, I think.” (Interviewee B, FAC)
In 2005, a second microfinance company, called Harmony, was also launched in Geneva. Similarly
to Green Lotus, the case of Harmony involved incumbent actors, as one of its cofounder is D,
related to one of Lacour-Deschamps historical families which run this private bank. And yet
another microfinance company, AccountFin, was created in Zurich in 2003, with an office in
Geneva too. Although this company is not technically part of the Geneva field of microfinance,
the story of its founding is interesting to consider. According to one of our interviewees, this third
organization was created by a big commercial bank, Credit Suisse, in reaction to the funding of
Green Lotus:
11
“And when they [a wealthy family] heard that Green Lotus was coming they said to Credit Suisse: ‘you have
to do something or we’ll leave you and go to Green Lotus. And they created AccountFin because they didn’t
dare to go head on. Because it’s not easy for a big bank, somewhere, to lend to the poorest people for an
interest, if it turns out to be bad, not only do they steal from the rich, but they also steal from the poor. »
(Interviewee B, FAC)
In all these cases, small companies are created and supported by financial and personal resources
from established banks. These banks refrain from entering this market themselves—partly
probably due to the very small size of this new sector. As an interviewee told us, “a bank doesn’t
want to wipe the slate clean: it wants to see if it works, and if it does, then they’ll get on with it”. But this is not
the only reason. The reputation risks associated with it also play role, as we see in the previous
excerpt.
We then observe a striking continuity between this newly generated subfield of microfinance and
the existing ancient financial field. This new subfield was indeed organized by strong incumbent
actors, namely the private banks, which defined the structures of the field, and acquired central
position in it.
3.2 From microfinance to impact investing: relabeling and expanding
Yet, how did impact investing enter the story told before? The developments after 2008 first must
be reconsidered as part of the broader international context. The rise of impact investment as a
financial category is of course related to the entrepreneurial work of the Rockefeller Foundation
and the organizations that were then created to promote such activities, which enabled local actors
to seize this label and build a local field of impact investment. But another factor is the sociopolitical
context at the time, marked by the financial crisis of 2007-2008, which profoundly affected
the sector. It gave legitimacy to endeavors of sustainable finance and forced financial actors and
regulators into redesigning rules and goals of the financial markets, while imagining new categories
of finance destined to showcase a more responsible, ethical, or sustainable approach to finance
12
(Ziolo et al. 2017). Official discourses from sustainable finance organizations in Geneva hence
consider the subprime crisis a strong catalyzer of the renewal of sustainable finance in the 2010’s:
“After the major crisis of 2008, a number of reforms were put in place, in order to improve the functioning
and integrity of the international financial system. The financial center [ must therefore face these new
challenges, which involve a fundamental change in its business model. However, we must not forget that if our
financial center is today considered one of the most competitive in the world, it is because throughout its
history it has been able to reinvent itself and make room for innovation.” (From a flyer published by Sustainable
Finance Geneva in 2014, an association made of various financial actors promoting sustainable finance)
Moreover, according to several of our interviewees, this crisis fostered development of sustainable
forms of finance, such as impact investing in Geneva. This process was sometimes presented as an
epiphany within the financial sphere, regarding what can be done through finance and what lacks
“meaning”:
“To have had these derivatives that are completely… yes, we don’t know what we’re getting into. Finance makes
a lot of money in these things, so maybe there has been an awareness.” (Market Research Analyst, Impact
Division, Harmony)
“The financial crisis of 2008 brought changes, a general awareness, this awareness also, as I said, a political
sensitivity was already there for a while.” (Senior Relationship Manager, AccountFin)
Yet the rise of impact investing is not only a reaction to the financial crisis. If we look closely at
the processes underlying the establishment and growth of the field after 2008, we find that the
transition from microfinance to impact investing corresponds to a field frame (Lounsbury,
Ventresca, and Hirsch 2003) expansion; i.e., a process in which the new term (impact) comes to
embrace both the old frame and its established practices of lending small sums to poor individuals
or very small businesses (commercial microfinance) as well as adds new practices to it (investment
in equity, in social/green companies in the developed world, in listed companies, etc.).
Three intertwined processes characterize this field frame expansion from microfinance to impact
investment. First, following a major crisis of the microfinance sector, microfinance companies
started to relabel their activities as “impact investing”, but without changing their actual practices.
13
This relabeling mechanisms act as the starting point of the field frame evolutions, sustained by two
other logics. The second mechanism refers to individual actors from established microfinance
companies who developed new practices that went beyond microfinance’s core activity of lending
to poor individuals or very small businesses. This eventually led to the creation of new firms
specialized in impact finance—in one instance, as a result of a scission of one of the microfinance
companies. Third, the newly emerging impact investing field attracted various kinds of newcomers,
adopting different practices of impact investing, some coming out of scissions within microfinance
companies, while others were newly created. This led to a growth and increasing diversification of
the field.
The relabeling phenomenon: how a field frame gets transformed
The first and most salient process explaining the rise of an impact investment field in Geneva is
the relabeling of existing microfinance practices. This process is strongly related to a serious crisis
that hit the microfinance sector in the early 2010’s. At that time, a number of scandals emerged,
involving microfinance, as NGOs and scholars criticized inconsistent lending strategies causing
over-indebtment of poor populations, especially in India, and a series of suicides (Breza and
Kinnan 2021; Hudon and Sandberg 2013; Mader 2013; Taylor 2011). This crisis strongly afflicted
the reputation of the microfinance movement around the world, and some microfinance firms in
Geneva also suffered from it, as shown by the following report produced by Harmony in 2018:
“Following years of exponential growth, the microfinance industry in India, one of the biggest at that time went
crashing in 2010 following reports of waves of suicide from over-indebted microfinance clients in the southern
state of Andhra Pradesh, the epicenter of India’s microfinance sector. […] This was a turning point in the
public perception of microfinance, and threatened the future of the sector in India as well as abroad. Linked to
an above average, uncontrolled growth of the sector, the crisis also brought to light coercive collection practices
of loan officers and general excessive interest rates the sector was facing.” (Harmony, White Paper, 2018)
In this context, the perspective of changing the frames of microfinance became particularly
appealing:
14
“If [impact investing] has become the dominant term, it’s because there was a big crisis in microfinance in 2011,
[…] in Nicaragua: afterwards, there was a crisis in 2012, I think in India, and then finally they saw themselves
forced to change their discourse also towards the academic world which, I think, was much more receptive to
impact investing, than to microfinance, per se. Even so, once again, if you look at the figures, and in particular
if you look at the figures for the industry in Switzerland, in particular… but finally because the Swiss industry is
so important in this field [microfinance], that’s what makes it times. 80%, or even more… 85% of what the
Swiss impact investing actors do is microfinance. It’s just the terminology that has changed, which is a more
open, more inclusive terminology, but ultimately the, what’s behind it is still microfinance, but I think it’s not…
that… the term [impact investing] is more inclusive; it’s sexier.” (Interviewee D, co-founder of Green Lotus)
Thus, a relabeling phenomenon occurred: Green Lotus decided in 2012 to keep its core activities
focused on microfinance, but it progressively relabeled them as “impact investment”. This
evolution is visible on their website. Through the “Way Back Machine” tools6, we notice that the
term “impact investing” was first used in 2010 on Green Lotus’s website. In 2021, the term “impact
investing” is even incorporated in the company’s logo, while the firm’s main activities remain
focused on what was initially called “microfinance”. A similar process can be observed at Harmony,
also specialized in microfinance :
“It happened naturally with the demands and then the needs of the market. At the very beginning, since 2005,
it was rather micro-credit, so only credit products to small entrepreneurs who need to start their business or
working capital. After that, we moved to microfinance, so we’re talking more about financial institutions with
different products, not only credit but deposits, insurance, all that. After that, the sector, in 2007, 2010, we
moved to financial inclusion where […] the goal is to include everyone in the financial system. And from there,
in 2007, there was the terminology impact investing for the first time.” (Market Research Analyst, Impact
Division, Harmony)
But according to Harmony’s employees, there was no real evolution in the concrete activities of
the firm throughout the period. The goal of this was mainly to use the spreading concept of “impact
investing”, according to the practitioners:
“[The question] is also ‘how does a name come about?’ But if you want, as the name has changed too, when
you look at the research papers on impact investing, one of the key themes was microfinance because it is one
of the only ones where there is a track record, which shows that we have made an impact. So when you look
at these papers… it’s true that we have been doing impact investing for ten years, in the sense that we are now
6 https://web.archive.org
15
part of a new name. In the sense that we fit into that category. And then, it’s also a bit pragmatic: if everyone
uses a word and you do it, there’s no reason for you to say, ‘well no, I don’t do that’. » (Head of Portfolio
Management, Harmony)
All in all, we do observe a field frame expansion supported by relabeling strategies. Those make
“impact investing” the new label of old microfinance activities, after they were tarnished by global
crises.
Schisms within microfinance firms: beyond microfinance practices
The second mechanism that explains the field frame expansion of the microfinance field in Geneva
consists in the emergence of new firms dedicated to practices that supposedly go beyond
microfinance. These new firms, which stem from the microfinance subfield, are in fact the result
of a schism within Green Lotus.
In 2007, one of Green Lotus’s cofounders, C, suggested that the firm extends its range of financial
services. Until that date, Green Lotus only offered private debt services. C advocated within the
company for the development of private equity solutions, implying the realization of investments
made in the investee’s equity, in the middle and long run, whereas commercial microfinance only
focused on investing in lending institutions in developing countries. This new kind of investment
was then implemented, enabling the diversification of the firm’s activities as new conceptions of
sustainable finance through the self-defined “impact investing” practices emerged. These
evolutions led to the inception of a new company named “Green Lotus – Investments”, whose
activities were devoted to private equity, whereas the former Green Lotus remained in charge of
private debt and was renamed “Green Lotus – Finance”. But C wanted to go beyond the sole
implementation of private equity investments. Observing the evolutions of sustainable finance and
impact investing, he advocated for the development of new financial services, focusing not only
16
on social impact in developing countries, but also on energy, education and health including
environmental impact:
« “At the same time, I told them: ‘I feel that there is a wave coming that will go beyond the financial sector and
there will be a whole series of new business models in access to energy, in access to education, in access to
health, that will have a very strong social and environmental impact and in which we will be able, just like in
microfinance, to make investments, also for financial profitability. So please, let’s do something other than
microfinance.’” » (C, co-founder of Green Lotus)
His proposal was rejected by his collaborators, who insisted that Green Lotus was a brand, specific
to microfinance, and that this brand should not be “dissolved” with practices that were not strictly
speaking microfinance. As a result, he launched his own company, named Lime – Finance, focusing
on this non-microfinance sustainable investments. Initially still part of the Green Lotus group, this
entity eventually became an independent company.
This sequence shows how a new actor, Lime, contributing to the field frame transition towards the
“impact investing” larger label, emerged from the most dominant incumbent entity of
microfinance, Green Lotus. However, it is important to note that the expansion of activities
through Lime are not contesting microfinance, nor are they attempts to deal with the negative
externalities of microfinance. Rather, they are an addition, a way to broaden the financial tools
deployed within microfinance. The solution—a scission—spurs the diversification of the emerging
field of impact investment, which as a broader category can accommodate different types of
activities.
Diversification through newcomers: dynamics of the impact investment field
However, the field of impact investing is not only constituted of actors with a direct lineage to the
earlier microfinance field. Around 2010, a series of newcomers entered the new field of impact
finance and contributed to its diversification. We will here discuss three examples, corresponding
to different types of impact investing and thus to different positions in the emerging field. As the
17
examples shows, all these new companies are in fact strongly connected to incumbent firms from
the Geneva financial field, and especially its private banks. These apparently “external” newcomers
thus actually support our main argument, stating that the development of impact investing remains
very integrated to the broader financial field of the city.
The first case is quite close to the previously discussed example of Lime, although here we do not
observe a scission, but an entrepreneur very closely linked to the two dominant microfinance
companies. Transform was co-founded in 2010 by D, who was already one of the co-founders of
both Green Lotus and Harmony. Moreover, some of his associates also belong to wealthy and
well-known families of Geneva. One of these associates, E, belonging to a major industrial family
of the city, played an active role in the elaboration of the unique fund managed by Transform. His
action contributed to the firm’s viability at the first stages of its development:
“Ha, [my name], it’s clearly an asset. I couldn’t have, without… When we first started, we started the fund in
2011, I told some family members about it, and then they said at our general meeting, ‘you can come and
present your fund.’ So I thought that was cool, yeah. And there were several cousins who said, ‘Okay, we’re
investing in the fund’. [Later on], we decided on a junior share class, which is like a first class, in fact. And there,
I had planned to invest in it; and then there were several investors who told me [that they were interested]; I
accepted those who were really very close, my parents. […] And then, without that, it would have been
difficult.” (Interviewee E, Executive Director, Transform)
In short, far from being an outsider, Transform—even though it does not directly stem from a
microfinance asset manager—is the result of the action of a few incumbents, including D and E.
They mobilized social and economic capital in order to launch the project, while already knowing
the dynamics of this newly emerging field frame of impact investing—especially since D was one
of the pioneers of microfinance in Geneva. Overall, this advocates for a very internal and integrated
development of impact investing.
The second case we will briefly discuss is the firm Regenae, founded in 2010. This firm is positioned
very differently than the previous ones, as it does not invest in developing countries, but finances
18
entrepreneurial activities in Switzerland and other European countries. Thus, it speaks to the
diversification that characterizes the rise of the impact investing field. In the firm’s discourse, one
finds a very activist stance and a strong critique of traditional finance—much stronger than in most
other cases of impact finance in Geneva. Yet Regenae is also closely related to incumbent actors
from the Geneva financial field. It was founded by an actor who was a partner in FAC (which help
launch Green Lotus), a crucial actor in the beginnings of the microfinance field. As the quote below
shows, Regenae was initially even envisioned as being part of FAC itself. Yet eventually, it was
decided that the partner should launch it as an independent firm, with a very “activist” profile:
“Regenae, you know, [its founder] was my partner here in fact, and then we did this together, they left [FAC],
because we were still small, but already too big to be able to integrate this activism. […] He really wanted, after
the financial crisis, to do something radical in terms of impact, and we thought: ‘it’s better to do this separately
rather than internally’, because not everyone could relate to it. (Interviewee B, currently at FAC, cofounder of
Green Lotus)
The third example is the case of Hecate, an impact investing firm created in 2019. Hecate stands
for another way of doing impact investing: it develops funds that invest in listed companies,
coupled with a quantitative way to measure impact developed in collaboration with EPFL, a leading
Swiss University. As in all the other cases, Hecate is related to an incumbent actor—in this case,
the Swiss private bank Lamy:
“Hecate was created two years ago, […] with the objective […] to create impact investment solutions. […] We
have a majority shareholder which is a [private] bank, which is the Lamy Bank […] and in fact, the idea was for
them to develop a unit which did not have all of a sudden conflicts of interest or in any case a double discourse
in relation to a certain number of things that traditional finance would still be financing, and all of a sudden
Hecate which becomes very vocal on certain things that it wishes… in which it wishes to invest. So, the fact
that we are independent, a fully dedicated unit, allows us to be very strict, at least in the way we define impact.”
(Head of Research, Hecate)
The inception of Hecate could be then analyzed as a typical strategy of big firms willing to innovate
and expand their business and imitate other firms, whilst keeping a certain stability within their
main organization (DiMaggio and Powell 1983), here, in order to avoid any exposure to criticisms.
Therefore, Hecate is not really a challenger, since it benefits from the resources of a central and
19
senior actor of the field, Lamy. Actors such as Hecate contribute to the expansion of the impact
investing field, as they seize it—lately—, but they are not pivotal in its emergence.
4. Conclusion
Impact investing’s promoters present it as a new practice that challenges existing forms of
investing, and criticize how the dominant financial field works. As an alternative, they promote a
form of investing that seeks to achieve measurable social or environmental impact, offering
solutions to the world’s most pressing problems, while at the same time not sacrificing the
investor’s financial interests. However, when looking into the rise of impact investment in Geneva,
we see that this field was shaped by actors who have very close connections to incumbent firms of
the traditional financial field, in particular private banks. Contrary to most of the cases studied so
far by the literature, the rise of this practice as a local field does result from the intersection of
public and private forces. On the contrary, people creating ventures in this field are almost
exclusively part of the financial elite. Thus, this paper highlights two key takeaways.
First, actors at the origin of impact investing in Geneva are not moral entrepreneurs seeking to
disrupt traditional finance, but incumbent actors from the financial field who strategically occupy
and/or create a tangent field, around microfinance. In spite of some of the rhetoric around impact
investing, the goal, at least in Geneva, was not to oppose financial field’s dominant practices.
Instead, they built a parallel field, a niche, that develops an alternative practice. The study shows
that the individual actors taking part in this process are all part of the financial field: they work in
private banks and/or belong to the most influent families of Geneva private banking. By launching
different ventures specialized in different forms of sustainable investment, they manage to build
and dominate a newly emerging field. To do so, they sometimes quit the positions they held
previously, and take certain financial risks to do something that, in their discourses, has more
meaning. Yet, they do so in a very cushioned way, thanks to the social and economic capital they
20
have. Could it be otherwise—would it be possible for challenging actors to launch the kinds of
impact investing ventures that we observe? Impact investing implies to gather high to very high
sums in order to launch meaningful investment vehicles, and to do so, one needs to have access to
large amounts of “patient capital”. It seems very difficult for challenging actors (and even more so
for actors from outside of the financial world) to achieve such projects. Thus, the specificity of
finance seems to be an obstacle for a challengers-driven moral market to emerge.
The second point we want to make concerns the structuration and dynamics of the impact
investment field that emerges through such an internal process. The moral markets literature has
shown how moral status plays an important role in the structuration of such markets (Balsiger
2021; Suckert 2018). Conventional firms cannot just enter challengers-driven moral markets
without risking criticism and targeting by social movement actors. This why they often collaborate
with social movement actors when entering such markets, for instance by adopting labels (Kim
and Schifeling 2022). In the case studied here of an internal emergence of a moral market, we do
see that moral status or moral legitimacy does seem to play a role—the incumbent actors refrain
from entering these markets directly, at least in the beginning. However, in the further dynamic of
the impact investing field, we observe a very broad diversification that leads to little open conflict
and criticism: as the field frame expands and the “impact investing” label grows, more and more
various actors freely join the field and claim this label. A central result of this research is that
“impact investing” in Geneva is actually more a label than a practice, in the field’s structuration. In
other words, it barely challenged existing practices, and was mainly used as a way of relabeling old
practices, or justifing the strategic diversification of them. Indeed, microfinance forms the substrate
of these relabeling processes and consequently fueled the practical innovations around sustainable
finance, by encompassing various financial products deemed “sustainable”, “social”, or
“environmental”. All in all, financial incumbent-led emergence of impact investing has
consequences on the activities labeled as such, since it fosters its exploitive usage as a flexible
21
marketing label. As the concept of “impact investing” is spreading into the financial world, it is
crucial to examine the conditions of its enactment in local contexts, to identify how it shapes the
practices it encompasses and their consequences.
22
References
Agrikoliansky, Eric, Olivier Fillieule, and Nonna Mayer, eds. 2005. L’altermondialisme En France. La
Longue Histoire d’une Nouvelle Cause. Paris: Flammarion.
Antadze, Nino, and Frances R. Westley. 2012. “Impact Metrics for Social Innovation: Barriers or
Bridges to Radical Change?” Journal of Social Entrepreneurship 3(2):133–50. doi:
10.1080/19420676.2012.726005.
Araujo, Pedro. 2020. “The New Swiss Banking Elite? Plurality and Polarization of Careers.”
Université de Lausanne, Lausanne.
Arjaliès, Diane-Laure. 2010. “A Social Movement Perspective on Finance: How Socially
Responsible Investment Mattered.” Journal of Business Ethics 92(S1):57–78. doi: 10.1007/s10551-
010-0634-7.
Attencourt, Boris, and Johanna Siméant, eds. 2015. Guide de l’enquête globale en sciences sociales. Paris:
CNRS Éd.
Balsiger, Philip. 2016. The Fight for Ethical Fashion. The Origins and Interactions of the Clean Clothes
Campaign. Abingdon, Oxforshire: Routledge.
Balsiger, Philip. 2021. “The Dynamics of ‘Moralized Markets’: A Field Perspective.” Socio-Economic
Review 19(1):59–82.
Barman, Emily. 2015. “Of Principle and Principal: Value Plurality in the Market of Impact
Investing.” Valuation Studies 3, 1:9-44,.
Barman, Emily. 2020. “Many a Slip: The Challenge of Impact as Boundary Object in Social
Finance.” Historical Social Research / Historische Sozialforschung 45(3):31–52.
Bourgeron, Théo. 2020. “Constructing the Double Circulation of Capital and ‘Social Impact.’ An
Ethnographic Study of a French Impact Investment Fund.” Pp. 117-139, in Social Finance, Impact
Investing, and the Finanizalization of the Public Interest, Special Issue of Historical Social Research, edited by
E. Chiapello and L. Knoll.
Breza, Emily, and Cynthia Kinnan. 2021. “Measuring the Equilibrium Impacts of Credit: Evidence
from the Indian Microfinance Crisis.” The Quarterly Journal of Economics 136(3):1447–97. doi:
10.1093/qje/qjab016.
Bugg-Levine, Antony, and Jed Emerson. 2011. Impact Investing: Transforming How We Make Money
While Making a Difference. 1st ed. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
Cassis, Youssef. 1991. “L’histoire Des Banques Suisses, Aux XIXe et XXe Siècles.” doi:
10.5169/SEALS-81071.
Chiapello, Eve, and Gaëtan Godefroy. 2017. “Die Doppelfunktion Der Beurteilungsinstrumente.
Warum Die Pluralität Der Marktklassifikationen ZähltThe Dual Function of Judgment Devices.
Why Does the Plurality of Market Classifications Matter?” Historical Social Research / Historische
Sozialforschung Vol. 42 No. 1:Volumes per year: 1. doi: 10.12759/HSR.42.2017.1.152-188.
23
Cohen, Sir Ronald. 2020. Impact: Reshaping capitalism to drive real change. London: Ebury Press.
David, Thomas, and Alix Heiniger. 2019. Faire société: la philanthropie à Genève et ses réseaux
transnationaux autour de 1900.
David, Thomas, Alix Heiniger, and Felix Bühlmann. 2016. “Geneva’s Philanthropists around 1900:
A Field Made of Distinctive but Interconnected Social Groups.” Continuity and Change 31(1):127–
59. doi: 10.1017/S0268416016000114.
DiMaggio, Paul J., and Walter W. Powell. 1983. “The Iron Cage Revisited: Institutional
Isomorphism and Collective Rationality in Organizational Fields.” American Sociological Review
48(2):147–60. doi: 10.2307/2095101.
Emerson, Jed. 2018. The Purpose of Capital: Elements of Impact, Financial Flows, and Natural Being.
Fernandez Perez, Paloma, and Andrea Colli, eds. 2013. The Endurance of Family Businesses. Cambridge
University Press.
Fligstein, Neil, and Doug McAdam. 2012. A Theory of Fields. Oxford, New York: Oxford University
Press.
Golka, Philipp. 2019. Financialization as Welfare. Social Impact Investing and British Social Policy, 1997-
2016. Berlin: Springer.
Golka, Philipp. 2023. “The Allure of Finance: Social Impact Investing and the Challenges of
Assetization in Financialized Capitalism.” Economy and Society 52(1):62–86. doi:
10.1080/03085147.2023.2151221.
Hudon, Marek, and Joakim Sandberg. 2013. “The Ethical Crisis in Microfinance: Issues, Findings,
and Implications.” Business Ethics Quarterly 23(4):561–89. doi: 10.5840/beq201323440.
Kim, Suntae, and Todd Schifeling. 2022. “Good Corp, Bad Corp, and the Rise of B Corps: How
Market Incumbents’ Diverse Responses Reinvigorate Challengers.” Administrative Science Quarterly
00018392221091734. doi: 10.1177/00018392221091734.
Leins, Stefan. 2020. “‘Responsible Investment’: ESG and the Post-Crisis Ethical Order.” Economy
and Society 49(1):71–91. doi: 10.1080/03085147.2020.1702414.
Lounsbury, Michael, Marc Ventresca, and Paul M. Hirsch. 2003. “Social Movements, Field Frames
and Industry Emergence: A Cultural-Political Perspective on US Recycling.” Socio-Economic Review
1:71–104.
Mach, André, and Pedro Araujo. 2018. “Longévité Des Familles à La Tête Des Banques Privées
Suisses. Trois Exemples de Trajectoires Contrastées.” Revue Vaudoise de Généalogie et d’histoire de
Familles 30:49–62.
Mader, Philip. 2013. “Rise and Fall of Microfinance in India: The Andhra Pradesh Crisis in
Perspective.” Strategic Change 22(1–2):47–66. doi: 10.1002/jsc.1921.
Mazbouri, Malik, and Sébastien Guex. 2010. “L’historiographie Des Banques et de La Place
Financière Suisses Aux 19e-20e Siècles.” doi: 10.5169/SEALS-306555.
24
Servet, Jean-Michel. 2006. Banquiers Aux Pieds Nus: La Microfinance. Paris: Odile Jacob.
Soule, Sarah A. 2009. Contention and Corporate Social Responsibility. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press.
Suckert, Lisa. 2018. “Unravelling Ambivalence: A Field-Theoretical Approach to Moralised
Markets.” Current Sociology 0(0):0011392117737820. doi: 10.1177/0011392117737820.
Taylor, Marcus. 2011. “‘Freedom from Poverty Is Not for Free’: Rural Development and the
Microfinance Crisis in Andhra Pradesh, India: Rural Development and Microfinance in Andhra
Pradesh, India.” Journal of Agrarian Change 11(4):484–504. doi: 10.1111/j.1471-0366.2011.00330.x.
Tekula, Rebecca, and Kirsten Andersen. 2019. “The Role of Government, Nonprofit, and Private
Facilitation of the Impact Investing Marketplace.” Public Performance & Management Review
42(1):142–61. doi: 10.1080/15309576.2018.1495656.
Waeger, Daniel, and Sébastien Mena. 2019. “Activists as Moral Entrepreneurs: How Shareholder
Activists Brought Active Ownership To Switzerland.” Pp. 167–85 in The Contested Moralities of
Markets. Vol. 63, Research in the Sociology of Organizations, edited by S. Schiller-Merkens and P. Balsiger.
Emerald Publishing Limited.
Ziolo, Magdalena, Filip Fidanoski, Kiril Simeonovski, Vladimir Filipovski, and Katerina
Jovanovska. 2017. “Sustainable Finance Role in Creating Conditions for Sustainable Economic
Growth and Development.” Pp. 187–211 in Sustainable Economic Development: Green Economy and
Green Growth, edited by W. Leal Filho, D.-M. Pociovalisteanu, and A. Q. Al-Amin. Cham: Springer
International Publishing.