Understanding Environmental, Social and Governance Reporting and Assurance Expectations Gap
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University of Ghana
Abstract
Expectation gap has been an issue in the accountancy profession for a long time and several studies
have been done in attempting to close the gap. However, studies on expectations gap in
environmental, social, and governance (ESG) reporting and assurance has been underexplored.
This research explores the expectations gap existing in ESG reporting and assurance, based on
insights from the context of a developing country. The study adopts the qualitative research
approach where data was collected using semi-structured interviews. The purposive sampling
technique was used to sample ESG report providers (the manufacturing companies listed on the
Ghana Stock Exchange (GSE)), assurance providers (the auditing firms of these manufacturing
companies), and users of the reports (the regulators of the report and assurance providers as well
as civil society organizations that are concerned with ESG related issues).
The findings reveal that the ESG reporting and assurance expectations gap exists in the developing
country. The gaps identified were the knowledge gap, performance gap, evolution gap. These gaps
exist primarily because the ESG reporting and assurance landscape is in the budding stage in the
developing country context. The study provides insights that the report and assurance providers
can draw from in designing capacity-building programmes and trainings. The findings also provide
implications for governments, regulatory bodies, and standard setters to consider in formulating
policies, developing regulations, and adopting standards for effective ESG reporting and
assurance.
Description
MPhil. Accounting
