Essays on ESG disclosure, performance and assurance
Abstract
In this dissertation, economic implications of ESG disclosure, performance and
assurance are examined in three essays. It is evident in the recent developments that the
need for a sustainable and responsible investments is beyond discussion and becoming
inevitable. An integral element required to make such investments is ESG information.
The role and importance of ESG, especially to investment decisions, is attracting
regulators’ interest in approaching the provision of ESG information through
mandatory disclosure. Moreover, credit rating agencies are showing interest into the
implications of ESG to credit risks. The purpose of this thesis is, therefore, to examine
the reception of the mandatory EU ESG disclosure, and to examine the potential
monitoring and signaling roles of third-party ESG assurance. The overall results of the
thesis are three-fold. First, in examining the perception of investors towards EU
directive on mandatory ESG disclosure, essay one shows a negative stock market
reaction which indicates investors’ assessment of the directive as costly. The costs may
include administrative and reporting costs of complying the mandate and potential
proprietary and political costs following the reporting. Second, using sample firms from
EU, essay two shows a higher ESG performance for firms that assure their ESG reports
than firms that do not assure ESG reports. The results confirm the signaling role of an
independent third-party assurance to differentiate between ESG performances. Firms
with higher ESG performance has the incentive to use third-party ESG assurance to
differentiate themselves from counterparts with an inferior ESG performance,
otherwise both types of firms could be pooled together. Third, in line with monitoring
theory of assurance and risk mitigation role of ESG to credit risks, essay three shows a
mediated role of third-party ESG assurance on credit ratings. The results shows that
the third-party ESG assurance indirectly leads to a reduced credit risk transferred
through an enhanced ESG performance.
Parts of work
1. Zelalem Abay. Does the market react to mandating ESG disclosure? A regression discontinuity based evidence. Int. J. Accounting, Auditing and Performance Evaluation. Forthcoming. 2. Zelalem Abay. The signaling role of voluntary ESG assurance. Int. J. Managerial and Financial Accounting. Forthcoming. 3. Zelalem Abay. ESG and the monitoring role of assurance in credit risks
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
University of Gothenburg
Institution
Department of Business Administration ; Företagsekonomiska institutionen
Disputation
Torsdag den 21 april 2022, kl. 13.15 i sal B33, Handelshögskolan, Vasagatan 1, Göteborg
Date of defence
2022-04-21
zelalem.berhane.abay@gu.se
Date
2022-03-31Author
Abay, Zelalem
Keywords
ESG
disclosure
assurance
performance
signaling
monitoring
credit risk
risk-mitigation
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-88623-24-9
Language
eng