Abstract

There are two purposes of this study. The first is to compare the environmental disclosure practices in the annual report of Indonesian and Malaysian manufacturing companies. The second is to test the impact of firm characteristics on environmental disclosure, both in Indonesia and Malaysia. Firm characteristics are represented by firm size, profitability, liquidity, firm age, and audit firm size. Under the Slovin’s Formula and purposive sampling method, 82 Indonesian and 167 Malaysian manufacturing companies are selected. Dichotomy approaches are used to measure the dependent variable of environmental disclosure. There are 9 main aspects which include 30 items of environmental according to Sustainable Reporting Guidelines version 3.1. Different proxies consist of the natural logarithm of total assets, return on equity ratio, current ratio, the natural logarithm of firm age, and audit firm size (BIG 4 and Non-Big 4) is used as a measurement of the independent variable of firm characteristics. Comparison and relation in this study tested by analysis of descriptive statistics, t-test, and multiple regression. A score of environmental disclosure both in Indonesia and Malaysia is only 18,33%. The result indicates that the environmental awareness of businessmen in manufacturing companies still low. The result of the t-test shows that there is a difference in environmental disclosure between Indonesia and Malaysia. The multiple regression analysis shows that firm size, audit firm size, and firm age are significant predictors of environmental disclosure both in Indonesia and Malaysia. Profitability and liquidity show no influence on environmental disclosure in both countries.

Highlights

  • Public attention, from the general public to environmentalists, to environmental problems that arise as a result of company activities is increasing

  • The multiple regression analysis shows that firm size, audit firm size, and firm age are significant predictors of environmental disclosure both in Indonesia and Malaysia

  • Secondary data for Indonesia is obtained from the Indonesia Stock Exchange with the website www.IDX.co.id and secondary data for Malaysia is obtained from Bursa Malaysia with the website www.bursamalaysia.com

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Summary

Introduction

From the general public to environmentalists, to environmental problems that arise as a result of company activities is increasing. One of the most recent environmental issues in Indonesia is the case of the largest and increasingly widespread karst mining in Java. Another case is PT WINA (a subsidiary of Wilmar) which proposes to increase forest clearing in a 150 ha concession in Balikpapan Bay (www.mongabay.co.id, 2014). Forest destruction in Kalimantan was carried out by four foreign companies owned by Malaysia and Singapore (bbc.com/Indonesia, 2019). The World Wide Fund for Nature (2014) mentions several environmental problems facing Malaysia, such as deforestation, inland, and marine water pollution, soil and coastal erosion, Rudi Zulfikar overfishing and destruction of marine corals, air pollution, and waste disposal (Hussein, Yusof, and Jaafar, 2020). Water pollution mainly comes from vehicle engines, power terminals, and the use of fuel by industry (Sumiani, Haslinda, and Lehman, 2007)

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