Rick Cohen, a journalist for the Nonprofit Quarterly, wrote this article about social impact bonds in 2014. Rick died suddenly a few weeks ago, and it was a great loss. He was a fighter for social justice. When he led the National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy, he lacerated the Walton Family Foundation for its greedy, self-serving ways in two reports. After he left NCRP, this year’s report on the Waltons treated the far-right foundation with kid gloves, almost praising its lust to eliminate unions and public education.

 

In Rick’s article of 2014, he explains what social impact bonds are and why they are a terrible idea. He would have been outraged to see them embedded in the reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965, now called (absurdly) the Every Child Succeeds Act, which is a different way of saying “no child left behind.”

 

Rick offers eight reasons to worry about social impact bonds (“pay for success”), which were then a new idea.

 

Here is one of them:

 

Is it possible that a potential SIB/PFS downside is that private capital might overly influence the decision-making and priorities of government through the SIB/PFS model? As one advocate testified in a Congressional hearing, a SIB “improves decision-making by bring market discipline to government decisions about which programs to expand, as investors will only put their dollars behind programs with a strong evidence base.” If government overly focuses on programs that will attract private investors, the results might work to the investors’ benefit, but not necessarily to the benefit of appropriately identifying and prioritizing social initiatives that don’t generate private capital interest. Should private investors determine “which programs to expand,” or should public debate and discussion in a democratic process about human needs be the determining factors?

 

Is the investment “for the kids” or “for the investors”? Let the market decide. Rick would not agree.

 

R.I.P. to Rick Cohen. He will be sorely missed.