Directive 2014/95/EU: Are Italian Companies Already Compliant?

According to Directive 2014/95/EU on disclosure of non-financial information from 2017 onwards, large companies (exceeding 500 employees) headquartered in Member States will be required to provide a series of social, environmental, and governance statements. The Directive was transposed into Italian...

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Main Authors: Andrea Venturelli, Fabio Caputo, Simona Cosma, Rossella Leopizzi, Simone Pizzi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2017-08-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/9/8/1385
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spelling doaj-6bbec45596864a8aba9130f172d38b842020-11-24T21:54:10ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502017-08-0198138510.3390/su9081385su9081385Directive 2014/95/EU: Are Italian Companies Already Compliant?Andrea Venturelli0Fabio Caputo1Simona Cosma2Rossella Leopizzi3Simone Pizzi4Department of Economic Sciences, University of the Salento, Lecce 73100, ItalyDepartment of Economic Sciences, University of the Salento, Lecce 73100, ItalyDepartment of Economic Sciences, University of the Salento, Lecce 73100, ItalyDepartment of Economic Sciences, University of the Salento, Lecce 73100, ItalyDepartment of Economic Sciences, University of the Salento, Lecce 73100, ItalyAccording to Directive 2014/95/EU on disclosure of non-financial information from 2017 onwards, large companies (exceeding 500 employees) headquartered in Member States will be required to provide a series of social, environmental, and governance statements. The Directive was transposed into Italian law by Legislative Decree 254 of 30 December 2016.The aim of this paper is to evaluate the information gap for Italian companies and,consequently,the adjustments required by the new Directive on non-financial information. In order to analyze the level of non-financial and diversity disclosure, we created an assessment model called “Non-financial information score”, which records the required information as a percentage. We apply it to a sample of 223 large companies.The results (with an average NFIscore of about 49%) show that, in spite of what has previously emerged in the European debate about the application of the Directive on the part of large companies, an information gap remains, although the implementation of the directive should help to fill it in the coming years.In this sense, the potential contribution of the EU directive to non-financial disclosure in Italy appears to be greater than we had expected. Thus, in accordance with the literature, this paper appears to confirm the role of regulation in improving the quality of disclosure of non-financial information.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/9/8/1385non-financial informationdiversity informationEU non-financial reporting directiveLegislative Decree 254/2016CSR reporting
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andrea Venturelli
Fabio Caputo
Simona Cosma
Rossella Leopizzi
Simone Pizzi
spellingShingle Andrea Venturelli
Fabio Caputo
Simona Cosma
Rossella Leopizzi
Simone Pizzi
Directive 2014/95/EU: Are Italian Companies Already Compliant?
Sustainability
non-financial information
diversity information
EU non-financial reporting directive
Legislative Decree 254/2016
CSR reporting
author_facet Andrea Venturelli
Fabio Caputo
Simona Cosma
Rossella Leopizzi
Simone Pizzi
author_sort Andrea Venturelli
title Directive 2014/95/EU: Are Italian Companies Already Compliant?
title_short Directive 2014/95/EU: Are Italian Companies Already Compliant?
title_full Directive 2014/95/EU: Are Italian Companies Already Compliant?
title_fullStr Directive 2014/95/EU: Are Italian Companies Already Compliant?
title_full_unstemmed Directive 2014/95/EU: Are Italian Companies Already Compliant?
title_sort directive 2014/95/eu: are italian companies already compliant?
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2017-08-01
description According to Directive 2014/95/EU on disclosure of non-financial information from 2017 onwards, large companies (exceeding 500 employees) headquartered in Member States will be required to provide a series of social, environmental, and governance statements. The Directive was transposed into Italian law by Legislative Decree 254 of 30 December 2016.The aim of this paper is to evaluate the information gap for Italian companies and,consequently,the adjustments required by the new Directive on non-financial information. In order to analyze the level of non-financial and diversity disclosure, we created an assessment model called “Non-financial information score”, which records the required information as a percentage. We apply it to a sample of 223 large companies.The results (with an average NFIscore of about 49%) show that, in spite of what has previously emerged in the European debate about the application of the Directive on the part of large companies, an information gap remains, although the implementation of the directive should help to fill it in the coming years.In this sense, the potential contribution of the EU directive to non-financial disclosure in Italy appears to be greater than we had expected. Thus, in accordance with the literature, this paper appears to confirm the role of regulation in improving the quality of disclosure of non-financial information.
topic non-financial information
diversity information
EU non-financial reporting directive
Legislative Decree 254/2016
CSR reporting
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/9/8/1385
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