Measuring investment success not only by financial returns but by the economic justice outcomes created throughout supply chains and communities.
Zera Yacob's commitment to economic justice challenges the conventional definition of investment returns as purely financial metrics. This Sophos tradition encourages investors to ask: Does this company enable workers to support their families with dignity? Are profits distributed equitably or concentrated among executives? Does the business model perpetuate wealth inequality or create pathways to economic participation? Socially responsible investors aligned with Yacob's reasoning track justice-oriented metrics alongside stock performance: wage ratios between executives and workers, supply chain transparency, community reinvestment, and wealth-building opportunities for marginalized populations. This expanded definition of returns recognizes that sustainable financial performance ultimately depends on just economic relationships, making economic justice not merely ethical but strategically sound.
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