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“Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL” at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25 Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José Luís Lizcano Spanish Accounting and Business Administration Association [AECA]
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“Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL” at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25 Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José Luís.

Jan 01, 2016

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Page 1: “Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL” at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25 Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José Luís.

“Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL”

at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José

Luís LizcanoSpanish Accounting and Business Administration Association [AECA]

Page 2: “Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL” at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25 Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José Luís.

1998 - Hoffman - AICPA - XBRL International - global movement 2000 – University of Huelva – national and international research 2002 - AECA - provisional jurisdiction 2004 – Bank of Spain - XBRL Spain - CNMV - DGI – financial sector 2007 - Red.es - public sector - private sector 2008 – RSC taxonomy as a contribution to the global XBRL network

Page 3: “Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL” at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25 Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José Luís.

The concept of corporate social responsibility (CSR) emerged in the official discourse of the EU in 2000.

Comparative studies of corporate social responsibility (CSR) are relatively rare, certainly as contrasted with other related fields, such as comparative corporate governance or comparative corporate law.

Moreover, the field of empirical CSR research generally has been hampered by the lack of a consistent definition of the construct of CSR, as well as its operationalization and measurement, as recently pointed out by McWilliams, Siegel, and Wright (2006) and Rodríguez, Siegel, Hillman and Eden (2006).

Cynthia A. Williams and Ruth V. Aguilera

Page 4: “Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL” at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25 Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José Luís.

Lance Moir has collected many other definitions

Page 5: “Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL” at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25 Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José Luís.

CSR can be supported by a broad set of quality standards and proposals:

Page 6: “Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL” at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25 Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José Luís.

6,600,000 results in Google

Page 7: “Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL” at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25 Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José Luís.
Page 8: “Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL” at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25 Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José Luís.
Page 9: “Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL” at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25 Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José Luís.
Page 10: “Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL” at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25 Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José Luís.
Page 11: “Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL” at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25 Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José Luís.
Page 12: “Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL” at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25 Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José Luís.

CSR can be seen as a competitive advantage in the XXI century business environments: for instance, the growing use of green stock market indexes

Page 13: “Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL” at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25 Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José Luís.
Page 14: “Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL” at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25 Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José Luís.
Page 15: “Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL” at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25 Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José Luís.

Many recent citations in academic discussion

Page 16: “Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL” at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25 Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José Luís.

Many recent citations in academic discussion

Page 17: “Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL” at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25 Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José Luís.

Previous research in Pillar III

◦ We have studied the effect of size in transparency levels

◦ Basel II Pillar III requirements tested◦ Showing results…

The Bank of International Settlements, Basel, Switzerland

Page 18: “Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL” at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25 Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José Luís.

Banks must declare a lot of new information obligatory in their public Websites. [88 new items ordered by the BIS]

Are there any banks declaring this information in advance?

Only the greater banks satisfy those requirements today, in advance to the entry into force of Basel II -2008 in EU-.

If small banks do not declare it, they will fall in a lack of transparency and trust in front of their depositors and investors. Reasons: complexity, lack of data sources and efficient systems to collect complex financial risk information.

Page 19: “Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL” at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25 Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José Luís.

So, according to this first part, we have detected the need for help, specially in the smallest banks.

CSR increases its impact in the financial work.

Could it be a solution for small banks to increase the levels of transparency and also to anticipate future evolution on regulations?

Page 20: “Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL” at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25 Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José Luís.

CSR is expressed in different formats.

◦ Presentations◦ PDF◦ MS Excel spreadsheets◦ Video◦ …

All formats detected are mainly human-oriented, not tractable information.

Much work is needed to process CSR information in an efficient manner, and also to audit this new amount of data.

Page 21: “Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL” at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25 Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José Luís.
Page 22: “Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL” at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25 Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José Luís.
Page 23: “Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL” at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25 Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José Luís.
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Page 25: “Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL” at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25 Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José Luís.
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Page 28: “Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL” at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25 Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José Luís.

CSR lacks of a minimum of clarity, is too industry-specific and the format in which it is based is not suitable to comparisons.

A double solution:◦ Semantic agreement◦ Digital format

Page 29: “Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL” at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25 Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José Luís.

aeca (Spanish Association of Accounting and Management) www.aeca.es

Study in deep: international quality standards and proposals in different areas covered by the CSR umbrella.

In contact with the GRI consortium Taking full advantage of the highly active XBRL Spanish

Jurisdiction

Page 30: “Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL” at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25 Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José Luís.

Indicators grouped as follows:

The effort is to try to quantify as much as possible to reinforce comparisons and rankings.

Page 31: “Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL” at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25 Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José Luís.

No full technical advantages, for this first version, in order to guarantee the maximum of implantation. Dimensions and Formulas will be considered in the next future.

Tuples that allows, for each indicator, to provide the information, or to declare if the indicator is suitable for the business or not, or if the information required is suitable but not available.

Page 32: “Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL” at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25 Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José Luís.

The Discoverable Taxonomy Set consists of a list of three

taxonomies that are presented below

Page 33: “Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL” at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25 Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José Luís.
Page 34: “Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL” at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25 Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José Luís.
Page 35: “Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL” at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25 Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José Luís.
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RSC Taxonomy is internationally applicable. We will try to promote the use and knowledge of this proposal.

RSC could be an industry-validated instrument for academic research.

Some new projects for extensions: chemical industry, saving banks, public funds comptrollers, foundations and other non-for-profit entities.

RSC Taxonomy has been considered for international acknowledgement by XBRL International.

Page 37: “Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL” at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25 Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José Luís.

RSC will converge with the GRI Taxonomy in future versions, and will collect as much feedback as possible in this first stage.

RSC will incorporate more suggested quality standards and will evolve at the same time than the existing set of considered standards.

RSC will consider the application of some XBRL advances, like Dimensions and Formulas. Software vendors will be invited to design viewers and instance creators.

Page 38: “Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL” at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25 Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José Luís.

This taxonomy has been recently acknowledged by XBRL International, and we are now starting the international implementation stage, when the feedback will be essential.

So, all members and businesses implicated will appreciate to enjoy the opportunity to obtain your feedback after the conference.

Page 39: “Pillar III transparency: Corporate Social Reporting with XBRL” at the Banking Supervision Track, June 25 Enrique Bonsón, Francisco Flores and José Luís.

RSC Taxonomy◦ http://www.xbrl.es/informacion/rsc.html

AECA◦ http://www.aeca.es

University of Huelva◦ http://www.uhu.es ◦ The International Journal of Digital Accounting Research

http://www.uhu.es/ijdar

[email protected]