Abstract
Purpose - The study focuses on all nonfinancial companies representing four Gulf countries namely: Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, UAE and Qatar. It provides a comparative analysis of the extent of Integrated Reporting practices amongst 217 listed companies in 2013 and 2014.
Design/Methodology/Approach - The sample comprises all nonfinancial companies listed on the respective stock markets. An integrated reporting index comprising 43 items was developed based on a review of the extant literature and the IIRC framework. A descriptive analysis follows which explores the extent of integrated reporting amongst the sample companies.
Findings - The results indicate that the Integrated Reporting is still in an embryonic stage with companies listed on the UAE and Saudi Arabia stock exchanges taking the lead. The results show great variation amongst the surveyed companies which could reflect the voluntary nature of IR practices and the absence of a universally‐recognised framework that guides such practices, resulting in companies having discretion in terms of the nature and extent of their IR practices.
Practical Implications - This paper provides evidence from the Gulf region with respect to the extent of integrated reporting practiced there, as the majority of prior studies focus on countries with developed capital markets. The results presented in this paper should therefore be of interest to regulators and standard‐setters charged with developing accounting standards related to integrated reporting.
Originality/Value - To the best of the authors' knowledge this is the first study to investigate IR practices in the Middle East and North Africa region, so it could be regarded as an important step in understanding how this area of research is moving forward in developing countries context and should provide a springboard for future research in this area.
Design/Methodology/Approach - The sample comprises all nonfinancial companies listed on the respective stock markets. An integrated reporting index comprising 43 items was developed based on a review of the extant literature and the IIRC framework. A descriptive analysis follows which explores the extent of integrated reporting amongst the sample companies.
Findings - The results indicate that the Integrated Reporting is still in an embryonic stage with companies listed on the UAE and Saudi Arabia stock exchanges taking the lead. The results show great variation amongst the surveyed companies which could reflect the voluntary nature of IR practices and the absence of a universally‐recognised framework that guides such practices, resulting in companies having discretion in terms of the nature and extent of their IR practices.
Practical Implications - This paper provides evidence from the Gulf region with respect to the extent of integrated reporting practiced there, as the majority of prior studies focus on countries with developed capital markets. The results presented in this paper should therefore be of interest to regulators and standard‐setters charged with developing accounting standards related to integrated reporting.
Originality/Value - To the best of the authors' knowledge this is the first study to investigate IR practices in the Middle East and North Africa region, so it could be regarded as an important step in understanding how this area of research is moving forward in developing countries context and should provide a springboard for future research in this area.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 78-93 |
Number of pages | 16 |
Journal | Business Strategy and Development |
Volume | 4 |
Issue number | 2 |
Early online date | 14 Sept 2020 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 4 Jun 2021 |
Keywords
- accounting
- integrated reporting
- stakeholder theory
- developing countries
- Gulf