Integrating Environmental, Social, And Governance (Esg) Principles Into Pension Fund Investment In Nigeria: Implications For Risk Management, Returns, And Sustainable Growth.
Ojoma John Sunday PhD
Independent Researcher, Abuja, FCT- Nigeria.
Obafemi Ojo Benjamin
PhD Student, Department of Accounting, Veritas University, Abuja, Nigeria
Osamo Caleb Kehinde PhD
Department of Finance, Veritas University Abuja, Nigeria
Keywords: ESG principles, Governance risks, Sustainable growth
Abstract
This study evaluates the outcome of integrating environmental, social, and governance (ESG) principles into pension fund investments in Nigeria, focusing on the tradeoff between risk management, financial performance, and sustainable economic growth. By deploying panel data from Nigerian Pension Fund Administrators (PFAs), the research employed various methods, including pooled Ordinary Least Squares (OLS), Fixed Effects (FE), Random Effects (RE), and System Generalized Method of Moments (GMM) estimators. Also, the study adopted the Sharpe ratio to gauge risk-adjusted performance and breaks down ESG integration into components like climate risk exposure, governance quality, infrastructure investment, and ESG screening mechanisms. The results show that integrating ESG principles can significantly boost pension fund performance, mainly by enhancing risk-adjusted returns and lowering exposure to environmental and governance risks. Climate risk exposure tends to hurt performance, while governance quality stands out as the most significant positive factor. Sustainable infrastructure investment also plays a beneficial role, albeit modestly, reflecting its long-term return potential. The study recommends that policymakers should focus on strengthening ESG regulatory frameworks, enhancing disclosure standards, and encouraging pension funds to invest in sustainable infrastructure projects.