An assessment of Information disclosures by Pharmaceutical Industry: Evidence from India

The information disclosed by the companies in their annual reports reveals much about company’s performance and prospects. Investors take the information as base for decision for investment. Under such circumstance, companies choose to disclose beyond what is mandatorily required. Theories like agen...

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Main Authors: Rupali Khanna, Bhupinder Pal Singh Chahal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidad Politécnica de Valencia 2019-10-01
Series:Multidisciplinary Journal for Education, Social and Technological Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://polipapers.upv.es/index.php/MUSE/article/view/11531
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spelling doaj-08225dc06ec04e84bfb493aa08787d3d2020-11-25T01:11:22ZengUniversidad Politécnica de ValenciaMultidisciplinary Journal for Education, Social and Technological Sciences2341-25932019-10-016214717410.4995/muse.2019.115317672An assessment of Information disclosures by Pharmaceutical Industry: Evidence from IndiaRupali Khanna0Bhupinder Pal Singh Chahal1Chandigarh UniversityChandigarh UniversityThe information disclosed by the companies in their annual reports reveals much about company’s performance and prospects. Investors take the information as base for decision for investment. Under such circumstance, companies choose to disclose beyond what is mandatorily required. Theories like agency theory, capital need theory and signaling theory support the need of voluntary disclosure. This study is about investigating the extent of Voluntary disclosure in pharmaceutical sector of India which is 3rd in World in terms of Volume of Trade. Objective: To investigate the extent of voluntary disclosure practices prevailing in pharma sector of India, for the year 2010-11 to 2017-18. Significance of the study: This study aims to explore the corporate aspect of pharmaceutical sector. Any growing avenue is a potential opportunity for investors looking for parking their money to get adequate returns. Thus, Indian Pharma sector has come up in flying colors as an avenue for investors to place their money owing to its 100% FDI . Investors have been looking for more and more information from this sector to ensure the safety of funds. Thus the extent of disclosures is worth studying to place a suggestion for the policymakers to introduce the changes in the present set of disclosure practices in pharmaceutical sector. Research Methodology: To understand the extent of voluntary disclosure, a disclosure checklist is constructed and descriptive statistics are carved out to reach the results. The checklist consists of 55 items which are not mandatory by law. The checklist is based on dichotomous scale of ‘1’ and ‘0’ representing presence and absence of the checklist item respectively. The cross sectional analysis is carried out to investigate the year wise and company wise disclosure for eight years. Findings: Though the study observes an increasing trends in the disclosure scores, but the findings are alarming to state that the highest score attained by any company throughout the period of 8 years was 37 (out of 55) not even meeting 80% of the total checklist score. This shows that pharmaceutical sector is not so friendly at disclosures. The probable reasons for such startling results are discussed in the study.https://polipapers.upv.es/index.php/MUSE/article/view/11531DisclosureVolatilitypharma listed companies
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rupali Khanna
Bhupinder Pal Singh Chahal
spellingShingle Rupali Khanna
Bhupinder Pal Singh Chahal
An assessment of Information disclosures by Pharmaceutical Industry: Evidence from India
Multidisciplinary Journal for Education, Social and Technological Sciences
Disclosure
Volatility
pharma listed companies
author_facet Rupali Khanna
Bhupinder Pal Singh Chahal
author_sort Rupali Khanna
title An assessment of Information disclosures by Pharmaceutical Industry: Evidence from India
title_short An assessment of Information disclosures by Pharmaceutical Industry: Evidence from India
title_full An assessment of Information disclosures by Pharmaceutical Industry: Evidence from India
title_fullStr An assessment of Information disclosures by Pharmaceutical Industry: Evidence from India
title_full_unstemmed An assessment of Information disclosures by Pharmaceutical Industry: Evidence from India
title_sort assessment of information disclosures by pharmaceutical industry: evidence from india
publisher Universidad Politécnica de Valencia
series Multidisciplinary Journal for Education, Social and Technological Sciences
issn 2341-2593
publishDate 2019-10-01
description The information disclosed by the companies in their annual reports reveals much about company’s performance and prospects. Investors take the information as base for decision for investment. Under such circumstance, companies choose to disclose beyond what is mandatorily required. Theories like agency theory, capital need theory and signaling theory support the need of voluntary disclosure. This study is about investigating the extent of Voluntary disclosure in pharmaceutical sector of India which is 3rd in World in terms of Volume of Trade. Objective: To investigate the extent of voluntary disclosure practices prevailing in pharma sector of India, for the year 2010-11 to 2017-18. Significance of the study: This study aims to explore the corporate aspect of pharmaceutical sector. Any growing avenue is a potential opportunity for investors looking for parking their money to get adequate returns. Thus, Indian Pharma sector has come up in flying colors as an avenue for investors to place their money owing to its 100% FDI . Investors have been looking for more and more information from this sector to ensure the safety of funds. Thus the extent of disclosures is worth studying to place a suggestion for the policymakers to introduce the changes in the present set of disclosure practices in pharmaceutical sector. Research Methodology: To understand the extent of voluntary disclosure, a disclosure checklist is constructed and descriptive statistics are carved out to reach the results. The checklist consists of 55 items which are not mandatory by law. The checklist is based on dichotomous scale of ‘1’ and ‘0’ representing presence and absence of the checklist item respectively. The cross sectional analysis is carried out to investigate the year wise and company wise disclosure for eight years. Findings: Though the study observes an increasing trends in the disclosure scores, but the findings are alarming to state that the highest score attained by any company throughout the period of 8 years was 37 (out of 55) not even meeting 80% of the total checklist score. This shows that pharmaceutical sector is not so friendly at disclosures. The probable reasons for such startling results are discussed in the study.
topic Disclosure
Volatility
pharma listed companies
url https://polipapers.upv.es/index.php/MUSE/article/view/11531
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