Healthcare-Focused Impact Investing: Another Way To Invest For Change
For a long time, the common wisdom has separated philanthropy — that is, donations of financial resources toward social change — from investing, which is meant to support purely financial interests. However, impact investing — a term coined by the Rockefeller Foundation in 2007 — has grown as a movement by demonstrating that investing for returns does not have to be mutually exclusive with doing good.
7 Things to Know about Impact Investing and Saving Lives
1) Impact investing is the practice of making purposeful investments that help achieve social benefits – while generating financial returns. In the charitable space, impact investing has been embraced by several prominent foundations to ensure that assets committed to advancing social good through grant-making are invested in projects that align with those values.
My Path to Becoming an Impact Investor
I discovered impact investing shortly after my daughter Amy was diagnosed with severe chronic pancreatitis. Following decades of suffering from digestive problems and abdominal pain, Amy’s diagnosis odyssey included visits with over 50 primary care physicians and specialists and too many nights in the hospital.
What is Impact Investing?
Impact investing is the practice of making purposeful investments that help achieve social benefits – while generating financial returns. In the charitable space, impact investing has been embraced by several prominent foundations as a way to ensure that assets committed to advancing social good through grant-making, are invested in projects that align with those values.