Connecting the COVID-19 pandemic, environmental, social and governance (ESG) investing and calls for ‘harmonisation’ of sustainability reporting

•Calls for harmonised ‘sustainability reporting’ standards are underpinned by myths.•It is a myth that a Global sustainability standard-setting body is urgently needed.•Financial materiality should not be paramount in determining sustainability disclosures.•Investor needs cannot be satisfied by cons...

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Veröffentlicht in:Critical perspectives on accounting 2022-01, Vol.82, p.102309-102309, Article 102309
Hauptverfasser: Adams, Carol A., Abhayawansa, Subhash
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description •Calls for harmonised ‘sustainability reporting’ standards are underpinned by myths.•It is a myth that a Global sustainability standard-setting body is urgently needed.•Financial materiality should not be paramount in determining sustainability disclosures.•Investor needs cannot be satisfied by consistent and comparable metrics alone.•Calls for harmonisation overlook needs of non-investor stakeholders. We critically examine the call for ‘harmonisation’ of sustainability reporting frameworks and standards that occurred alongside an increase in environmental, social and governance (ESG) investing during the COVID-19 pandemic. We identify three myths that have been promulgated in calls for ‘harmonisation’ that seek to: simplify sustainability reporting and ESG analysis and shift the control for standard-setting to an investor-oriented private sector body. We argue that the myths are based on deception, misunderstandings, and disregard for both academic research and the views of sustainability practitioners. They demonstrate a lack of regard for different users of corporate sustainability information, a lack of analysis of the alternatives, an overestimation of the International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) Foundation’s expertise and mischaracterisation of sustainable/ESG financing.
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subjects COVID-19
ESG
Harmonisation
Sustainability reporting
title Connecting the COVID-19 pandemic, environmental, social and governance (ESG) investing and calls for ‘harmonisation’ of sustainability reporting
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