Corporate Social Responsibility Press Release
provided by 
10.09.2008 - 08:33am ET
News from:
Partners for Financial Stability (PFS) Program
The Largest Listed Companies in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) Disclose More Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) Data
Reporting on Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) by the Largest Listed Companies in Eleven Central and Eastern European (CEE) Countries; Fifth-Time Comparison with Peers in BRIC and Ukraine
(CSRwire) WARSAW,POLAND. - October 9, 2008 – Today, the Partners for Financial
Stability (PFS) Program publishes its 11th semi-annual Survey of
Reporting on Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) by the Ten Largest
Listed Companies (by market capitalization) in 11 Central and Eastern
European (CEE) Countries. This edition of the survey was co-financed by
DWS Investments (Deutsche Bank Group). PFS Program Assistant Magdalena
Grabowska, PFS Program Intern Tomasz Pieczyk (Poland), PFS Program Intern
Nikola Smolcic (Croatia) and PFS Program Research Assistant Igor
Solodovnik conducted the survey from July 1 through September 30, 2008.
Companies in Czech Republic, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Slovakia and
Slovenia were surveyed for the 11th time; companies in Hungary and Poland
were surveyed for the tenth time; and companies in Bulgaria, Croatia and
Romania were surveyed for the ninth time. Moreover, a fifth analysis of
peer companies (the ten largest listed companies by market capitalization)
in Brazil, Russia, India and China (BRIC) as well as Ukraine allows for
ongoing benchmarking with these emerging market peers.
PFS Program surveys analyze the annual reports and websites of the ten
largest listed companies in the above-mentioned 11 CEE countries in order
to document the current disclosure practices of this “blue-chip” peer
group and identify best practice among the peer group. Whereas the
universe of companies surveyed may change over time due to changes in a
company’s market capitalization, the semi-annual surveys of reporting on
CSR represent a snapshot of this peer group's CSR disclosure practices on a
given day twice a year. Furthermore, by analyzing disclosures in both
annual reports and websites, the surveys track the timing of the
publication of the annual report and the related yet separate issue of
periodic disclosure, namely, how blue-chip companies keep their websites
data-rich and up-to-date. The surveys enable companies to benchmark their
disclosure practices against peers on a national, industry and regional
basis.
This survey analyzes companies' disclosures in English (in the
English-language annual report and on the English-language company
website) during the time period July 1 – September 15, 2008 on the
following three topics: corporate governance, environmental policy and
social policy. The record date for the disclosures is September 15, 2008.
This edition of the survey documents a higher level of online disclosure
of corporate governance information, continuing the trend over the past
five years. More information is also disclosed in the area of social
policy, compared with the previous survey published in April 2008.
Disclosure of information about environmental performance and
environmental standards as well as energy and water use increased, albeit
from still low levels; significant progress remains to be made by most
companies in disclosing detailed environmental data.
Overall, companies in BRIC outperform CEE peers in terms of the
availability of English-language websites and annual reports as well as
specific disclosures in all three areas. For example, 80% of the BRIC
companies surveyed disclose compliance with a corporate governance code in
the annual report, compared with 54% in CEE. 65% of the BRIC companies
surveyed disclose information about company-specific code of business
conduct/code of ethics in the annual report, compared with 16% in CEE. In
general, BRIC companies also provide more information on social policy and
environmental policy. However, the gap in all three areas is narrowing.
Due to the lack of a number of drivers, Ukrainian companies lag behind
both BRIC and CEE peers in all areas. However, the number of Ukrainian
companies with English-language annual reports and websites continues to
increase as does the amount of information disclosed in all three
categories.
Survey findings include the following: - 96% of the 110 CEE
companies surveyed have an English-language website on the record date of
September 15, 2008, compared with 96% in April 2008, 94.5 % in September
2007, 94% in April 2007, 94% in September 2006, 87% in April 2006, 89% in
September 2005 and 82% in April 2005. In comparison, 100% of the BRIC
companies surveyed and 70% of the Ukrainian companies surveyed have an
English-language website.
- 94% of the 110 CEE companies surveyed have a 2006/2007
English-language annual report online on the record date of September 15,
2008 compared with 100% in BRIC and 30% in Ukraine.
- 71% of the 110 CEE companies surveyed disclose information on employee
development/benefits in their annual reports available online. This is a
significant increase over the 64% recorded in the previous four
surveys.
- Nine Polish, eight Slovene, eight Hungarian, six Estonian, five Czech,
four Latvian, three Bulgarian companies, one Croatian, one Lithuanian and
one Romanian company disclose information regarding compliance with a
corporate governance code on the company website. Ten Estonian, nine
Slovene, seven Polish, seven Czech, seven Lithuanian, six Slovak, five
Bulgarian, four Hungarian, three Croatian, two Romanian companies disclose
this information in the annual report. This is the first time since the
survey was first conducted that more than 50% of the CEE companies
surveyed disclose information regarding compliance with a corporate
governance code in the annual report.
- 34% of the 110 CEE companies surveyed disclose information on
environmental performance in annual reports available on their website on
September 15, 2008 compared with 30% in April 2008, 33% in September 2007,
13% in April 2007, 25% in September 2006, 18% in April 2006, 22% in
September 2005, 24% in April 2005 and 27% in August 2004.
- 28 of the 110 CEE companies surveyed (26%) publish a stand-alone
English-language ESG report as of September 15, 2008. (This represents
the same percentage as in the most recent survey, conducted in April
2008.) Of the 28 reports published in CEE on the current record date, 25
(89%) use recognized standards and eight (28%) include a third-party
assurance statement.
- 17 of the 40 BRIC companies surveyed (42.5%) publish a stand-alone
English-language ESG report. Of the 17 reports published in BRIC, 15
(88%) use recognized standards and ten (59%) provide a third-party
assurance. No Ukrainian company produces such a report as of the record
date of September 15, 2008.
Note: The survey consists of the
three following documents: a report of the survey findings presenting
data aggregated by country; a database of individual data by company for
the ten largest listed companies in each of the 11 CEE countries; and a
separate database of individual data by company for the ten largest listed
companies in BRIC and Ukraine.
Starting today, the survey is available online at:
http://www.pfsprogram.org/capitalmarkets_research.php
About the Partners for Financial Stability (PFS) Program
The United States Agency for International Development (USAID) established
the Partners for Financial Stability (PFS) Program in 1999 as a
public-private partnership to help complete reforms necessary to create
sound, private and well-functioning financial sectors in the eight Central
and Eastern European (CEE) countries that have since joined the European
Union. In 2005, the geographical focus of the program shifted to South
East Europe (SEE).
East-West Management Institute (EWMI), a New York-based not-for-profit
organization, is currently the primary implementing partner.
The PFS Program is mandated to fill remaining gaps in the institutional
development of the financial sector in CEE and SEE countries through
regional integration and cooperation, selective technical assistance
programs and the practical application of lessons learned in neighboring
countries. The substantive areas covered under the PFS Program are:
accounting, auditing, banking, capital markets, insurance and pension
reform. For more information, please visit the PFS Program website at www.pfsprogram.org/capitalmarkets_research.php
For more information please contact:
Geoffrey Mazullo, Director Partners for Financial Stability (PFS) Program 00 48 22 620 5798 http://www.pfsprogram.org/
www.pfsprogram.org
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