The Impact of a Change in Regulation on Environmental Disclosure: SAB92 and the US Chemical Industry

Kathryn Bewley, Vanessa Magness

Abstract


This study investigates environmental disclosure in the annual reports of US public companiesin the chemical industry during a time when there was a substantial change in reporting regulation.This change concerned contingent environmental liabilities. We draw on signal theoryand the economic cost perspective to generate predictions about environmental disclosurestrategies. We find evidence that managers use disclosure to distinguish their companies fromother companies: first by disclosing environmental liabilities that many other companies did notreveal; and later by disclosing other future-oriented financial information. We assumed initially,that this behaviour was indicative of signaling strategy. We find, however, that the companieswhich we initially thought were signaling have higher levels of pollutant emissions (perdollar of assets) than non-signaling companies. This evidence does not support our earlier assumption.We argue that public concern about this industry, and the fact that emissions levelsare open to public scrutiny, lowers the disclosure-cost threshold for high emission companies,leading managers to disclose information they previously withheld. Copyright © www.iiste.org

 


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Issues In Social and Environmental Accounting (ISEA) - ISSN: 1978-0591