The trend of voluntary carbon disclosure practices in Malaysia: Substantive or symbolic?

Purpose: This study aimed to examine the trend of voluntary carbon disclosure (henceforth referred to as VCD) practices in Malaysia. It also intended to examine whether the pattern VCD practices are substantive or symbolic. Design/methodology/approach: A content analysis of annual reports was used t...

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Main Authors: Abd. Rahman, Noor Raida, Abdul Rasid, Siti Zaleha, Basiruddin, Rohaida
Format: Article
Published: Universal Publishers 2020
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Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/91819/
http://www.gbmrjournal.com/vol12no4.htm
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spelling my.utm.918192021-07-28T08:47:50Z http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/91819/ The trend of voluntary carbon disclosure practices in Malaysia: Substantive or symbolic? Abd. Rahman, Noor Raida Abdul Rasid, Siti Zaleha Basiruddin, Rohaida HB Economic Theory Purpose: This study aimed to examine the trend of voluntary carbon disclosure (henceforth referred to as VCD) practices in Malaysia. It also intended to examine whether the pattern VCD practices are substantive or symbolic. Design/methodology/approach: A content analysis of annual reports was used to examine the quality of VCD against a checklist developed by Abd Rahman et al. (2019). The study sample comprised 1,675 annual reports of companies listed on Bursa Malaysia over a period of seven years from 2010 to 2016. Data were then analysed using the Friedman and Wilcoxon signed-rank tests. Findings: Findings show that the quality of VCD, both substantive and symbolic disclosure practices, had significantly increased during the study period. Moreover, current VCD practices are largely substantive in nature and is intended to reflect accountability. Research limitations/implications: The results can be merely interpreted only across the target samples, which covers a study period of seven years. Practical implications: Findings draw the attention of the manager to specific aspects of VCD that require improvement and provide an empirical basis for policy makers and regulators when developing future VCD regulatory guidelines. Originality/value: This study provides insights into the journey of VCD practices in Malaysia and contributes to the corpus of contemporary literature by examining substantive and symbolic disclosures in the context of developing countries. Universal Publishers 2020-12 Article PeerReviewed Abd. Rahman, Noor Raida and Abdul Rasid, Siti Zaleha and Basiruddin, Rohaida (2020) The trend of voluntary carbon disclosure practices in Malaysia: Substantive or symbolic? Global Business And Management Research: An International Journal, 12 (4). pp. 308-320. ISSN 1947-5667 http://www.gbmrjournal.com/vol12no4.htm
institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
building UTM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
content_source UTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utm.my/
topic HB Economic Theory
spellingShingle HB Economic Theory
Abd. Rahman, Noor Raida
Abdul Rasid, Siti Zaleha
Basiruddin, Rohaida
The trend of voluntary carbon disclosure practices in Malaysia: Substantive or symbolic?
description Purpose: This study aimed to examine the trend of voluntary carbon disclosure (henceforth referred to as VCD) practices in Malaysia. It also intended to examine whether the pattern VCD practices are substantive or symbolic. Design/methodology/approach: A content analysis of annual reports was used to examine the quality of VCD against a checklist developed by Abd Rahman et al. (2019). The study sample comprised 1,675 annual reports of companies listed on Bursa Malaysia over a period of seven years from 2010 to 2016. Data were then analysed using the Friedman and Wilcoxon signed-rank tests. Findings: Findings show that the quality of VCD, both substantive and symbolic disclosure practices, had significantly increased during the study period. Moreover, current VCD practices are largely substantive in nature and is intended to reflect accountability. Research limitations/implications: The results can be merely interpreted only across the target samples, which covers a study period of seven years. Practical implications: Findings draw the attention of the manager to specific aspects of VCD that require improvement and provide an empirical basis for policy makers and regulators when developing future VCD regulatory guidelines. Originality/value: This study provides insights into the journey of VCD practices in Malaysia and contributes to the corpus of contemporary literature by examining substantive and symbolic disclosures in the context of developing countries.
format Article
author Abd. Rahman, Noor Raida
Abdul Rasid, Siti Zaleha
Basiruddin, Rohaida
author_facet Abd. Rahman, Noor Raida
Abdul Rasid, Siti Zaleha
Basiruddin, Rohaida
author_sort Abd. Rahman, Noor Raida
title The trend of voluntary carbon disclosure practices in Malaysia: Substantive or symbolic?
title_short The trend of voluntary carbon disclosure practices in Malaysia: Substantive or symbolic?
title_full The trend of voluntary carbon disclosure practices in Malaysia: Substantive or symbolic?
title_fullStr The trend of voluntary carbon disclosure practices in Malaysia: Substantive or symbolic?
title_full_unstemmed The trend of voluntary carbon disclosure practices in Malaysia: Substantive or symbolic?
title_sort trend of voluntary carbon disclosure practices in malaysia: substantive or symbolic?
publisher Universal Publishers
publishDate 2020
url http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/91819/
http://www.gbmrjournal.com/vol12no4.htm
_version_ 1706956998539476992
score 13.211869