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The EC published in April 2013 an amendment to the Fourth and Seventh Company Law Directive - known as Accounting Directives - targeting the disclosure of non-financial and diversity information of certain large companies. The legislative process has started, the new proposal is now in the hands of the two co-legislators – the European Parliament and the Council.
In this context, MEPs Richard Howitt and Raffaele Baldassarre recently co-hosted at the European Parliament in Brussels a high level multi-stakeholder roundtable called “Non-financial information disclosure: towards a more sustainable and comparable corporate reporting regime?”. At this event jointly organised by Aviva, ACCA and Eurosif, a distinguished line-up of experts from diverse horizons, including representatives from the EC and of Commissioner Barnier’s Cabinet, from the forthcoming Lithuanian Presidency, the French government, businesses, investors, accountants and NGOs, exchanged views on the potential impact of the newly published Directive for companies and their stakeholders, and discussed the way forward for corporate reporting.
Richard Howitt MEP, the Rapporteur on CSR who will be leading for the Employment Committee, said: "This packed event with standing room only is testament to the huge buzz and genuine support for Europe to act on non-financial reporting. Speaker after speaker from EU Governments, institutional investors, business organisations, the accounting fields, civil society and from Commissioner Barnier's cabinet hammered home the message that there is an urgent need for Europe's largest companies to report on their environmental, social and human rights impacts. I will be working in the Parliament over coming months to seek the strongest possible agreement and to make sure Europe leads the way on corporate transparency and truly integrated reporting."
The new proposal was welcomed by all speakers, who agreed that it is a good foundation for the future, as it is strong and bold, but in the meantime balanced and proportionate. There is of course room for improvements and clarification; some raised for example the issues of comparability, monitoring and enforcement of such provisions, as well as the need for further guidance for some specific sectors. A representative from businesses argued that EU policy should not interfere with companies’ disclosure of non-financial information, as they are best placed to decide themselves how to best communicate their CSR performance to stakeholders.
In response, there was a consensus amongst panellists that business as usual is no longer an option, traditional reporting is no longer up-to-date, and companies are no longer able to escape transparency requests from society, especially in light of recent scandals linked to working conditions and human rights in Bangladesh. Long-term issues need to be better addressed. Most panellists agreed that this calls for action at EU level, as consistency amongst the 27 Member States' reporting regimes is important for the Single Market, and this would avoid the fragmented practices which existed until now. It was stressed that legislation also acts as an accelerator for behaviours.
The issue of costs was also raised, but panellists insisted that the proposal will only apply to large companies over 500 employees, which should already have in place such a disclosure system and that implementing the new EU requirements should not add on administrative burden.
Helen Brand, ACCA Chief Executive, said: “The Commission proposals represent an important move towards enhancing the much-needed transparency, consistency and comparability in the non-financial information accompanying financial statements of large businesses. Given our global organisation and membership, ACCA fully endorses the suggestion that companies should rely on internationally-accepted frameworks to report this information. There should be a convergence of international, EU and national principles. In the spirit of ACCA’s founding values of opportunity and diversity, we also strongly welcome the requirement for large and listed enterprises to disclose information relating to boardroom diversity.”
It was stressed that the concept of materiality is key. Companies need to identify with due diligence the main risks in their policies, prioritise them and integrate these issues in the way they manage their business and activities. Some participants made a clear call for integrated reporting, which should be a mirror of integrated thinking and provide clear, concise and meaningful report in a holistic way.
François Passant, Executive Director of Eurosif, commented on a joint ACCA-Eurosif survey: “Looking at non-financial aspects of an investee company is becoming the new normal for investors. In a world where 80 per cent of a company's value is derived from its intangibles, where value chains are more global, complex and lean, and where more and more investors are looking into how companies adapt to climate change, non-financial transparency cannot be seen as a burden or a tick-box exercise anymore but as a necessity. The current proposal is one that Eurosif therefore strongly supports overall as it represents a key milestone in this journey”.