b'Look at the following caption-less picture, from the impact investing web page of UBS, the worlds largest private bank:Does anyone really think that a Swiss global financial giant, managing trillions of dollars, is going to invest in small-scale rice cultivator X in Asian country Y, while delivering competitive returns to anony-mous institutional investors in country Z? UBS could have chosen a photo of an engineer working at Tesla. Or an American farmer flying an eBee Ag drone. Instead, they chose an Asian farmer, working slowly, putting his or her hands in the soil. Beyond those perfectly imperfect rows of rice paddies, I see, in the use of this photo for these purposes, layers of sublimated ruefulnessruefulness about the industrialization of farming, ruefulness about the difficulty of maintaining human contact across layers of financial intermediation, ruefulness about the inability of financial institutions to stay grounded, ruefulness about the inability of global markets to support stewardship and cultivation that operate at human scale and at natures pace.6677'