An Explanatory Model of Materiality in Sustainability Accounting: Integrating Accountability and Stakeholder Heterogeneity
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materiality and Its Sustainability Applications
2.1. Materiality and Its Basic Logic
2.2. Materiality in Sustainability Accounting
2.3. The Theoretical Deficiencies
3. Accountability and Stakeholder Heterogeneity
3.1. Materiality and Accountability
3.2. Stakeholder Heterogeneity
4. The Heterogeneity–Accountability Materiality Model
4.1. The Elementary Materiality Process
- (1)
- The agent understands the interests and expectations of the principal who has enforcement power over the agent;
- (2)
- The agent takes action or refrains from taking action in response to an event;
- (3)
- The agent gives an account about their action or non-action to the principal;
- (4)
- Giving a false or inaccurate account would lead to the agent being sanctioned by the principal.
- An issue matters to the principal, so the principal should make an effort to resolve the issue according to the basic logic of materiality;
- The principal is unable to resolve the issue directly and therefore engages the agent to do so, which triggers an accountability relationship where the agent is expected to resolve the issue and provide an account to the principal regarding the action taken;
- If this account is not forthcoming, or if the account does not satisfy the principal, the agent would be sanctioned by the principal; hence, this issue matters to the agent;
- As the issue matters to the agent, the agent should take action to resolve the issue and, as required by the accountability relationship, an account must be given to the principal to explain the action taken;
- If the agent’s account fails to satisfy the principal and the issue remains unresolved, this issue will still matter to the principal, who would continue to sanction the agent until satisfied with the action taken and the account given.
4.2. The Transparency Condition for the Materiality Process
4.3. The Heterogeneity–Accountability Materiality Process
4.4. The Materiality Web and Rules
5. An Illustrative Case
5.1. Materiality Accounts
5.2. Materiality Practices in a Heterogeneous Stakeholder Environment
5.3. Explaining the “Mismatch” Phenomenon
6. Discussion and Concluding Remarks
6.1. Discussion
6.2. Concluding Remarks and Future Research
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Criteria of Assessing Stakeholder Actions | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Rating Action Level | The media (S1) | The public (S2) | Government (S3) | NGOs (S4) | Community (S5) |
1 Inaction | No report | No rejoinder | No sanction | No social movement | No engagement |
2 Concern | Neutral media reporting | Some concern; relatively neutral attitude | Warning; letters from government officials to Exxon | Press releases; Website reporting | Official complaints; continual monitoring |
3 Moderate action | Exposed and criticised in some influential media | Moderate criticism | Official governmental critique; moderate punishment | Localised campaign | Target blame at and/or demonstrate against Exxon |
4 Strong action | Extensive long-term negative reporting | Extensive unified concern; public blame | Significant punitive measures | Large-scale campaigns; organise consumer boycott; litigation | Community intervention; litigation |
Criteria for Quantifying the Firm’s Managerial Action | |
---|---|
Managerial action level | Strength of managerial action |
Decisive action (level 4) | Large investment in solutions |
Moderate action (level 3) | Moderate investment in solutions |
Minimal action (level 2) | Minimal action or expressed intention to act |
Inaction (level 1) | No evidence of action; indifference |
Criteria for Quantifying the Firm’s Reporting Practice | |
Reporting level | Reporting practice |
Extensive (level 4) | Special purpose themed report |
Moderate (level 3) | Included in standard reports |
Minimal (level 2) | Public statement by executive |
None (level 1) | No formal reporting or information releases |
Stakeholder | Actions of Exxon Stakeholders and Management | Assessment |
---|---|---|
1 Media | Frequent, extensive, and critical reporting overwas conducted over a long period by major news networks directly blaming Exxon. | strong (4) |
2 Public | Widespread public concern was unified as strong negative opinion against Exxon. | strong (4) |
3 Government | Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Trustee Council established to manage environmental damage and restoration. Court ruled that Exxon was to pay punitive damages of USD 507.5 million. | strong (4) |
4 NGOs | NGOs voiced extreme concern regarding the impacts of the oil spill; located offices in Alaska; and engaged the media to criticise and campaign internationally against Exxon. | strong (4) |
5 Local community | Alaskan residents worked throughout the region to restore the ecosystem. Local resident groups were formed to protect local fisheries. | strong (4) |
Managerial | Exxon acted promptly by paying large fines and funding clean up and restoration costs; it engaged in active public relations through media announcements. | decisive (4) |
Reporting | Exxon responded promptly to the oil spill event by releasing information and advertising through the media. Exxon maintains a section of its website dedicated to the Exxon Valdez event. | extensive (4) |
Stakeholder | Actions of Exxon Stakeholders and Management | Assessment |
---|---|---|
1 Media | Extensive reports by major US media outlets (CNN, Fox, New York Times, Wall Street Journal), which all took a strong critical stance against Exxon on the grounds of public safety and environmental protection. | strong (4) |
2 Public | No evidence of social campaigns or boycotts. | concern (2) |
3 Government | Montana’s governor declared a state of emergency and criticised Exxon for failing to respond quickly and effectively. The US EPA requested immediate clean up measures and safety improvement. | moderate (3) |
4 NGOs | NGOs (Greenpeace, Sierra Club, Friends of the Earth) criticised Exxon’s slow response and demanded accountability, full disclosure, and improved environmental management practices. There was no evidence of consumer campaigns or boycotts, nor litigation involving large compensation. | moderate (3) |
5 Local community | Although the risk level was uncertain, local communities reliant on the river for farm irrigation and drinking water were concerned about pollution. They blamed Exxon and requested an immediate clean up. | moderate (3) |
Managerial | Exxon agreed to pay USD 1.6 million in compensation and agreed to clean up contaminated area. | moderate (3) |
Reporting | Exxon disclosed relevant information to the public through official media statements and in the Exxon 2011 corporate citizen report. | moderate (3) |
Stakeholder | Actions of Exxon Stakeholders and Management | Assessment |
---|---|---|
1 Media | Media were critical of scandal without directly blaming Exxon. | moderate (3) |
2 Public | No evidence as to the public’s response. | inaction (1) |
3 Government | The FCPA exempted payments that facilitated routine government actions; the US Department of Justice attorney ruled that the exemption covered Exxon’s signature bonus payments, and took no action against Exxon. The US oil industry became concerned about the competitive impact of anti-bribery legislation. | concern (2) |
4 NGOs | The Human Rights Watch and Global Witness expressed dissatisfaction concerning the lack of transparency regarding the payments. The International Consortium of Investigative Journalists’ investigation resulted in strong and clear criticism of Exxon for engaging in bribery for commercial gain. | moderate (3) |
5 Local community | There was no observable connection of this event to relevant local communities | inaction (1) |
Managerial | Lee Raymond (the then head of Exxon) explained that, although he was unsure whether the governance record of the Angolan leaders was satisfactory, Exxon had scrupulously observed its contract confidentiality with the government, thereby suggesting that Exxon recognised the potential significance to stakeholders of the Angola scandal. No evidence of direct action taken by Exxon is available. | minimal (2) |
Reporting | No reporting or disclosure of this event. Lee Raymond made a public statement that it was not the company’s role to disclose how its foreign investment funds were spent. | minimal (2) |
Stakeholder | Actions of Exxon Stakeholders and Management | Assessment |
---|---|---|
1 Media | There was no extensive media coverage of this event, although there was some criticism of Exxon in The Guardian and in the Wall Street Journal. | concern (2) |
2 Public | There is no evidence of general public concern regarding this event. | inaction (1) |
3 Government | Senators Rockefeller and Snowe wrote to Exxon expressing concern on moral and scientific grounds. There is no evidence that the US government required Exxon to cease or disclose this funding. | concern (2) |
4 NGOs | The UK Royal Society released an open letter in 2007 asking Exxon to stop this funding. The Union of Concerned Scientists compared Exxon’s tactics to those used by the tobacco industry, and criticised Exxon for misrepresenting and denying climate change science. There is no evidence of consumer campaigns, boycotts, or litigation. | concern (2) |
5 Local community | There is no specific local community relevant to this issue. | inaction (1) |
Managerial | Exxon continued to sponsor 41 climate sceptic organisations. | inaction (1) |
Reporting | Exxon’s manager for public affairs, Kenneth Cohen, stated in 2006 that funding of the Competitive Enterprise Institute and “a handful” of similar groups had ceased, but he refused to reveal names of these organisations. However, given the continued funding of denial groups, the minimal information disclosed by Exxon was vague and misleading. | none (1) |
Event | S1 | S2 | S3 | S4 | S5 | U1 | U2 | … | Ug | M | R |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 4 | c1 | c2 | … | Cg | 4 | 4 |
2 | 4 | 2 | 3 | 3 | 3 | c1 | c2 | … | Cg | 3 | 3 |
3 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 1 | c1 | c2 | … | Cg | 2 | 2 |
4 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 1 | c1 | c2 | … | Cg | 1 | 1 |
Materiality in Financial Accounting | Current state of Materiality in Sustainability Accounting | Heterogeneity–Accountability Materiality Model (New Model Developed in This Study) | |
---|---|---|---|
1. Applying materiality | Binary; Magnitude of the issue. | Continuum; Quantification; Significance to stakeholders and firm indexed by their actions. | Current sustainability accounting method is synthesised into the new construct of materiality. |
2. Heterogeneity | Assumed Homogeneity. | Report to all stakeholders as a homogeneous whole. | Stakeholder heterogeneity paradigm is integrated into the HAM model and depicted as a materiality web. |
3. Accountability–materiality connection | Not defined | Unresolved. | The accountability process [57] and the materiality logic [6] are integrated into the HAM model. |
4. Matters to whom? | Matters to shareholders. | Materiality refers to an issue that matters to stakeholders, or the firm, or both. | An issue that matters to stakeholders must also matter to the firm through the principle–agent logic in the accountability principle. |
5. Reporting and management | Materiality only applied to reporting practices. | Materiality relevant to either managerial or reporting practices. | Materiality’s management and reporting functions are connected, thus enabling the discharge of accountability to stakeholders. |
6. Mismatch phenomenon | No explanation. | No explanation. | “Mismatch” occurs when the transparency condition is not met, and it is resolved by the activation of transparency mechanisms. |
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Zhou, Y.; Lamberton, G.; Charles, M.B. An Explanatory Model of Materiality in Sustainability Accounting: Integrating Accountability and Stakeholder Heterogeneity. Sustainability 2023, 15, 2700. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15032700
Zhou Y, Lamberton G, Charles MB. An Explanatory Model of Materiality in Sustainability Accounting: Integrating Accountability and Stakeholder Heterogeneity. Sustainability. 2023; 15(3):2700. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15032700
Chicago/Turabian StyleZhou, Yining, Geoff Lamberton, and Michael B. Charles. 2023. "An Explanatory Model of Materiality in Sustainability Accounting: Integrating Accountability and Stakeholder Heterogeneity" Sustainability 15, no. 3: 2700. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15032700
APA StyleZhou, Y., Lamberton, G., & Charles, M. B. (2023). An Explanatory Model of Materiality in Sustainability Accounting: Integrating Accountability and Stakeholder Heterogeneity. Sustainability, 15(3), 2700. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15032700