Back "There are more and more young people who question the use that is being made of their money”

"There are more and more young people who question the use that is being made of their money”

David Díaz de Quijano, bachelor's degree in Business Management and Administration at UPF, is the coordinator of Oikocredit Catalunya, an association that promotes a model of cooperation based on ethical finance that uses the funds of socially conscious investors.
23.12.2016

 

David Díaz Quijano i Barbero has a bachelor’s degree in Business Management and Administration (2001) from Pompeu Fabra University and a master’s degree in Business Communication, specializing in digital technologies (2003), from UPF-BSM (then IDEC).

Since 2008, he has been the coordinator of Oikocredit Catalunya, an association that promotes a model of cooperation based on ethical finance and global justice and uses the funds of socially conscious investors.

Oikocredit Catalunya gives support to Oikocredit International, a credit cooperative (not a bank) that provides funding for microfinance, fair trade organizations, cooperatives and SMEs.

Funded privately through the investments of more than 51,000 individuals and organizations, in 2015 Oikocredit surpassed 1,000 million euros in total assets, with disbursements for its partner organizations of 419 million, and net lendable funds raised of 102 million euros.

 How do you remember your time spent at UPF? 

I think that for many people the time spent at university is one of great discoveries when your personal concerns are aroused. For me it was really like that, and even though I always thought that the teaching of Business Management and Administration, at least at that time, was scarcely critical and plural, I do have fond memories of it.

— You have recently returned to the campus to participate in the UPFeina and UPF Solidària fairs. How was the experience? 

It is always nice to return to your roots a little... and do so after being away for a few years, and at events like these two fairs, it’s very exciting. At both fairs I have met students who are about to finish their studies, and I think it has been very interesting for them to find out about other types of companies and organizations like the one I represent, that make generating economic benefits and generating social benefits compatible.

— Where does your interest in ethical finance and the social solidarity economy stem from? 

Already during my studies I started doing some volunteer work with social organizations and NGOs, and I got interested in other ways of doing economics. After, I worked for a few years on communication issues in the third sector, and via the NGO Setem I got to know about ethical finance and Oikocredit, and I was really excited by the huge impact I could see they had by generating improvements in society through economic activity. It was also a way to re-apply my background in the world of business with strong ethics.

Our activity also has a positive social and environmental impact

— How do Oikocredit Catalunya and Oikocredit International interrelate? 

Oikocredit is an international cooperative dedicated to raising funds from individuals and institutions of “developed” countries to finance business projects with a positive social and environmental impact in “developing” countries, mainly in Latin America, Africa and Asia. At Oikocredit Catalunya within the cooperative we basically represent the individuals and institutions in our country who want to invest their savings, and disseminate this business model and ethical finance in general.

— Oikocredit is not a banking institution. Which services does it provide and which does it not compared to ethical banks? 

As a non-bank credit cooperative, Oikocredit offers only a fixed-term ethical investment “product”, by acquiring shares in its capital. Therefore, it is a complement to the banking and financial services that other ethical finance banking institutions, such as Triodos Bank and Fiare Banca Etica, may provide.

— With which institutions does Oikocredit work? What process does an investor’s money follow until it materializes in development projects? 

Approximately 80% of Oikocredit’s activity focuses on microfinance, through local microfinance institutions, and the other 20% focuses directly on productive projects in the agricultural sector, manufacturing, fair trade or renewable energy. The money that any individual can invest is used to provide loans to such projects through our network of regional branches, led by highly qualified local staff, who assess the projects both economically and socially and environmentally and manage the loans.

— What are the implications for the investors in Oikocredit that is a cooperative? 

Being a cooperative, all strategic decisions must be approved at a meeting, where each direct member has a vote, regardless of their participation in the capital. As such it is a more participatory and more democratic model than other business forms, and with its 40 plus years of history, Oikocredit has also demonstrated that it is feasible and efficient.

— What is the significance of the fact that Oikocredit provides investors with a triple result: social, environmental and financial? 

Basically, that our goal is not to maximize economic benefits and that’s that, but that we will always do so so that our activity also has a positive social and environmental impact, which ultimately reverts throughout society, and in our investors.

— Do your customers seek the profitability of their funds or for them does that come in second place? 

In fact in our case we do not speak of customers but of partners, which already shows a different character. And although profitability is also essential in our business, most people who invest in Oikocredit do so to make transparent and ethical use of their funds and not so much to make large financial profits.

 Is your target population mainly young people? Does the more elderly population find it difficult to put its trust in alternatives for investing their money? 

Indeed, our partner profile is an average age of 55, quite high! But there are more and more young people who question the use that is being made of their money, no matter how little, and who are interested in ethical finance, and we intend to bring it to the generations of the future.

Perhaps we should ask what are the interests underlying banking secrecy

— Are people sufficiently aware of the use made of the money the entrust to traditional banks? How compatible is banking secrecy with today’s information overload society? 

There is growing awareness of the impacts of our consumption decisions, but even so there are still many people who do not even know that their bank may be investing their money to finance armed conflicts such as the war in Syria. With regard to banking secrecy and information overload, ethical finance institutions publish all their investments and transactions for those who wish to consult them, and it has been shown that this has no negative impact on their results. So, perhaps we should ask what are the interests -and implications- underlying banking secrecy and the opacity of much of our financial system.

— Should universities deal in greater depth with the issue of the social solidarity economy and ethical finance in their syllabuses? 

In our country, ethical finance and the social economy still account for a relatively small percentage of GDP. But their high social impact, especially in the current context of structural crises we are experiencing, I believe more than justifies their increasing presence in all syllabuses, especially in the faculties of economics and business.

Multimedia

SDG - Sustainable Development Goals:

Els ODS a la UPF

Contact