Article 11: Integrated Reporting or Non-Financial Reporting?

C. Villiers, Jukka Mähönen
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引用次数: 15

Abstract

Traditional company reporting requirements concentrate on financial reporting, consisting of the balance sheet, the profit and loss account and the notes. A consensus exists that sustainability is hindered by the traditional accounting regime in which the emphasis on financial reporting has been at the expense of the social and environmental reporting requirements, leaving companies opportunities to escape full accountability for their externalities. Non-financial reporting gives additional information, especially on the environmental and societal impacts of a company’s activities. Integrated reporting tries to combine both financial and non-financial elements. The most important proponent of integrated reporting, the International Integrated Reporting Council (IIRC), regards integrated reporting as “a process founded on integrated thinking that results in a periodic integrated report by an organization about value creation over time and related communications regarding aspects of value creation. An integrated report is a concise communication about how an organization’s strategy, governance, performance and prospects, in the context of its external environment, lead to the creation of value in the short, medium and long term.” This Chapter focuses on companies’ reporting requirements and considers especially whether changes in the European Union’s (EU) reporting requirements for business entities are necessary to fulfil the duties set out in Article 11 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU), and whether the recent and pending new EU non-financial reporting requirements are sufficient to fulfil those duties. This Chapter explores this development and how it is likely to be affected by the more international progress towards integrated reporting. The Chapter also considers the prospects of success for the integrated report from the sustainability perspective, especially compared with the recent amendments in the EU law. It will suggest that whilst there is much promise in the EU plans and the IIRC’s plans, a number of potential limits will need to be addressed and new amendments proposed if full success is to be achieved. Our conclusion is that the integrated report presents an opportunity to close the information gap and to avoid any disconnect between financial and non-financial information, and so fulfil the requirements of Article 11 TFEU, but its success depends on the inclusion of a number of factors in the development and implementation of integrated reporting, presented at the end of the Chapter.
第11条:综合报告还是非财务报告?
传统的公司报告要求集中在财务报告上,包括资产负债表、损益表和票据。人们一致认为,传统的会计制度阻碍了可持续发展,在这种制度下,对财务报告的强调牺牲了对社会和环境报告的要求,使公司有机会逃避对其外部因素的全面问责。非财务报告提供了额外的信息,特别是关于公司活动对环境和社会的影响。综合报告试图将财务和非财务因素结合起来。综合报告的最重要的支持者,国际综合报告委员会(IIRC),将综合报告视为“一个建立在综合思考基础上的过程,该过程导致组织对价值创造和价值创造方面的相关沟通进行定期综合报告。”综合报告是关于组织的战略、治理、绩效和前景如何在其外部环境的背景下,在短期、中期和长期创造价值的简明沟通。”本章侧重于公司的报告要求,并特别考虑欧盟(EU)对商业实体的报告要求的变化是否必要,以履行《欧盟运作条约》(TFEU)第11条规定的职责,以及最近和即将出台的新的欧盟非财务报告要求是否足以履行这些职责。本章探讨了这一发展,以及它可能如何受到更多的国际综合报告进展的影响。本章还从可持续性的角度考虑了综合报告的成功前景,特别是与欧盟法律最近的修订进行了比较。这将表明,尽管欧盟的计划和IIRC的计划有很多希望,但如果要取得全面成功,还需要解决一些潜在的限制,并提出新的修正案。我们的结论是,综合报告提供了一个机会,可以缩小信息差距,避免财务和非财务信息之间的任何脱节,从而满足第11条TFEU的要求,但其成功取决于在本章末尾提出的综合报告的开发和实施中包含许多因素。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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