Kaniz Sakina

Download Full PDF

ESG, which stands for Environmental, Social, and Governance, has been seen for a few decades, but it has been gaining momentum in recent years. It is believed that companies perform better when they are responsible and concerned about their surrounding environment, and societal issues and maintain proper governance throughout the organization (Youmatter, 2019). Investors are also taking an interest in companies that are open and outspoken about their ESG practices. This is not merely a theory, but an evidence-driven conclusion. 1700 companies were analysed by Amundi experts across MSCI indices (MSCI North America, MSCI EMU, MSCI Europe-ex EMU, MSCI Japan, and MSCI World) with their ESG scores. It is well documented that companies with better ESG scores pay better to investors (Youmatter, 2019), therefore, attracting more investors and paying more in return which then works like a chain reaction.

Another term associated with this concept is Sustainable and Responsible Investing (SRI). This concept allows investors to combine both financial return and social well-being. They make strategic investment decisions based on ESG factors that the companies have been regularly practicing (Palma-Ruiz, Apraiz, & Martínez, 2020). There are some ESG practices that an investor specifically looks for in the companies before considering them “responsible” and investing in them. Environmental factors that indicate responsible behaviour are energy efficiency, renewable energies sourcing, waste disposal, clean water treatment, and deforestation activities. Social factors to look for that companies focus on are diversity issues, working conditions, labor standards, employee law enforcement, and community engagement. The last element is related to governance factors which are indicated by tax compliance, risk management, agency problem, and board structure.

Corporate Social responsibility or ESG disclosures have been voluntary in the past years. In the US stock market, 83% of the registered companies disclose sustainability reports and responsible practices, of which most are considered voluntary (Christensen, Leuz, & Hail, 2021). Considering them as voluntary disclosures, it is questionable if those are verified efforts or manipulated numbers. Nevertheless, investors are more likely to trust actions when they are supervised and regulated rather than claimed to be voluntarily done. Considering this behaviour pattern, the Indian government has made it mandatory for all listed companies to disclose their CSR activities, making it a statutory obligation in new rules laid out in January 2021. This declares India as the first country to make CSR disclosure mandatory. However, the effectiveness of this new rule can only be measured if the CSR disclosures of Indian corporations are verified and proven to be well advocated.

The concept of ESG is not new but it is only been emphasized in recent years. Bangladesh is a developing Southeast Asian country, where corporations understand the value of being responsible. Many companies voluntarily disclose their efforts on being responsible. Their annual reports and websites content have separate CSR sections where they claim to execute many actions that have a positive impact on society. Bangladesh has gained momentum in its CSR disclosures but is quite new in the ESG spectrum. A close look at the Garment industry of Bangladesh reveals that the companies are vaguely stating their CSR practices. Their disclosures are more qualitative than quantitative. There is moreover a lack of consistency in the disclosure pattern in their annual reports over the years.

CSR or ESG seems like an element that is treated as a competitive instrument than making a company a more responsible operator. A randomly chosen sample of the top 10 garment companies in Bangladesh was analyzed through their websites and annual reports. Most of them explicitly announce the measures they undertake to impact the community positively. They have technologically advanced systems to make use of energy efficiently, wastewater disposal, carbon emission minimization, and environmentally friendly premises that all fall under the Environment element of ESG. Some of them are LEED-certified for being green and responsible players in society. Some of them maintain Sustainability reports that are somewhat consistent in showing their efforts.

The most emphasis is given to the Societal element of the ESG. Companies are transparent and explicit regarding their societal contribution. They are not only focused on child labor laws and working conditions anymore, but they go beyond the necessities. They have initiated women’s health centres, empowerment programs, breastfeeding in workplace practices, charity work, sponsorships, disability inclusion programs, and medical centres. Among them all, the most interesting initiative by the two companies of the sample size has been a “fair price” shop for employees, where they can buy daily necessity products at a subsidized price. Societal efforts have also been a promotional strategy to attract foreign buyers for decades. The smiling faces in the assembly line have been one of the eye-catching factors that ensure foreign buyers of the societal concern that these companies have and how responsibly they take of their employees.

The last element is the Governance of the ESG which is sincerely being inspected and examined by the auditing firms of Bangladesh. The auditing practice in Bangladesh is strict and structured, making it effective in maintaining the governance practices of companies in Bangladesh. The websites and annual reports vaguely share any agency issues, accountability, board structure transparency, and chain of command elements. However, the auditing firms check these elements annually and report somewhat accordingly which warrants the governance practices overall.

The topic of ESG is still fresh in Bangladesh and not many research and journal articles are published yet. This makes it a huge scope for researchers to invest their time and identify how Bangladesh can enter the ESG conversation like other countries already have. The corporations should also collaboratively steer towards ESG, now that they have been quite experienced in CSR reporting and practices.

 

References

Christensen, H. B., Leuz, C., & Hail, L. (2021). Mandatory CSR and sustainability reporting: economic analysis and literature review. Review of Accounting Studies, 26, 1176–1248. doi:https://doi.org/10.1007/s11142-021-09609-5

Palma-Ruiz, D. J., Apraiz, D., & Martínez, R. (2020). Socially Responsible Investing as a Competitive Strategy for Trading Companies in Times of Upheaval Amid COVID-19: Evidence from Spain. International Journal of Financial Studies, 8(3), 41. doi:https://doi.org/10.3390/ijfs8030041

Youmatter. (2019, January 28). “Responsible” Companies Perform Better On The Stock Market. Retrieved from Youmatter: https://youmatter.world/en/responsible-companies-perform-better-on-the-stock-market/