Felber, C.; Campos, V.; Sanchis, J.R. The Common Good Balance Sheet, an Adequate Tool to Capture Non-Financials? Sustainability2019, 11, 3791.
Felber, C.; Campos, V.; Sanchis, J.R. The Common Good Balance Sheet, an Adequate Tool to Capture Non-Financials? Sustainability 2019, 11, 3791.
Felber, C.; Campos, V.; Sanchis, J.R. The Common Good Balance Sheet, an Adequate Tool to Capture Non-Financials? Sustainability2019, 11, 3791.
Felber, C.; Campos, V.; Sanchis, J.R. The Common Good Balance Sheet, an Adequate Tool to Capture Non-Financials? Sustainability 2019, 11, 3791.
Abstract
In relation to organizational performance measurement, there is a growing concern about the creation of value for people, society and the environment. The traditional corporate reporting does not adequately satisfy the information needs of stakeholders for assessing an organization’s past and future potential performance. Practitioners and scholars have developed new non-financial reporting frameworks from a social and environmental perspective, giving birth to the field of Integrated Reporting (IR). The Economy for the Common Good (ECG) model and its tools to facilitate sustainability management and reporting can provide a framework to do it. The present study is the first one that empirically validates such metrics on a sample of 206 European firms. Consequently, it allows knowledge to advance as it checks their statistical validity and reliability.
Keywords
corporate sustainability; economy for the common good; stakeholders theory; shared value; corporate social responsibility.
Subject
Business, Economics and Management, Finance
Copyright:
This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.