Abstract

Corporate financial statements address multiple stakeholders’ needs. International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRSs), among others, allow two different classifications, “by function of expense” and “by nature of expense”, for the statement of profit and loss and other comprehensive income for the period (from now on, also identified in short as “Income Statement”, or “IS”). XBRL standards ensure compliance and consistency in financial statements’ drafting and filing. XBRL taxonomies reflect the Income Statement IFRS disclosure requirement in the {310000} and {320000} codifications, respectively. Given the recent EU enhanced regulations that proposed extend mandatory ESG reporting to SMEs, this study aims to design and recommend an additional Income Statement to embed structured Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) disclosure. A restatement of the IS is organised following an adjusted Value-Added perspective to fit the purpose of sustainability disclosure. The above-mentioned Income Statement should be suitable and adaptable for entities of any size and operating in any industry. This goal can be achieved through customised input weighting. Therefore, this applied research can fill a current financial ESG disclosure gap, ensuring financial statements’ comparability and encouraging additional mandatory disclosures through standardisation. Two more items in the XBRL (IFRS-based) structure are suggested, leading to the introduction of one fully structured statement “{330000}—Statement of comprehensive income, profit or loss, by Added Value, ESG based” and a semi-structured “{814000}—Notes—ESG Ratings and Reporting” to better discuss and disclose the assumptions and results of the ESG Statement.

Highlights

  • ESG disclosure is becoming increasingly regulated and essential to the stakeholders, more aware and sensitive to Environmental, Social, and Governance perspectives

  • The authors started with the existing literature analysis on the following broad topics: ESG reporting, Sustainability Reports, XBRL applications, and financial statements regulations

  • Value-Added Income Statement (VAIS) [24,25] and the existing ESG rating risk methodologies implemented by Sustainalytics [26] and MSCI [27]

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Summary

Introduction

ESG disclosure is becoming increasingly regulated and essential to the stakeholders, more aware and sensitive to Environmental, Social, and Governance perspectives. Corporations play a significant role in the communities in which they operate [1,2,3]. Their accountability [4,5] should be considered, measured, and systematically disclosed to ensure transparency, comparability, and stakeholders’ awareness [6,7]. Sustainability Reports, discretionarily presented by the companies [8,9]. Structured financial statement disclosure, unlike ESG reporting, is enforced and highly regulated by laws, accounting standards, and other regulations [10,11,12].

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