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Corporate social responsibility reporting : a business strategy by Australian banks?
The growth of voluntary corporate social responsibility (CSR) reporting reflects society's expectations for business to set higher ethical standards and to undertake business in a way that meets the profit imperative (the bottom line). Additionally, the community expects socially and environmentally responsible behaviour practices; the so-called triple bottom line approach. The paper briefly reviews the development of corporate social responsibility reporting from the perspective of two large Australian banks and attempts to understand their motivation for voluntary disclosure. Stakeholder theory and game theory provide a means to analyse why banks undertake CSR reporting. The paper compares Westpac and National Australia Bank's CSR reporting over the period 2004-2005 utilising external rating agencies and CSR reports to determine the extent of disclosure in relation to employees, environment, community and customers. The paper concludes with a discussion of the pros and cons of CSR, the role of regulation and recommendations for future policy direction.
History
Journal
Corporate ownership & controlVolume
7Issue
4Season
SummerPagination
213 - 228Publisher
Virtus InterpressLocation
Sumy, UkraineISSN
1727-9232eISSN
1810-3057Language
engPublication classification
C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journalUsage metrics
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