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Examine the level of environmental, social and governance disclosure in sustainability report – a study of the Indian banking sector

Pooja Mishra (Institute of Business Management, GLA University, Mathura, India)
Tatavarty Guru Sant (Institute of Business Management, GLA University, Mathura, India)

International Journal of Innovation Science

ISSN: 1757-2223

Article publication date: 10 July 2023

Issue publication date: 22 February 2024

757

Abstract

Purpose

Sustainable development (SD) is widely acknowledged as the center around which all development efforts should revolve. Banking is a crucial component of SD, and the adoption of sustainable banking practices by various banking institutions is a powerful catalyst for its achievement. This paper aims to investigate the level of adoption of environmental, social and governance (ESG) indicators in India and the extent to which financial institutions use these strategies. In addition, the banks have been classified according to their sustainable banking performance and showing a relationship between ESG and sustainability.

Design/methodology/approach

An ESG framework has been developed for the Indian banking system that focuses on the behavior of banks. The evaluation of literature helps to identify the gaps in particular frameworks for analyzing sustainable banking practices in developing nations because of the variation in economic criteria between developed and developing countries. An attempt to construct a common framework for measuring the banking sector’s sustainable efforts has been done in the past. Specifically in India, where the social and environmental dimensions of sustainability are of equal importance to governance indicators, these studies fall short of providing relevant indicators. Multiple financial reports, nonfinancial reports, corporate social responsibility reports and business responsibility reports of this sector were analyzed using content analysis techniques against ESG indicators for sustainability attainment.

Findings

The result of this study shows that both the sectors are disclosing their environmental indicators more as compared to other dimensions. While the analysis says that private companies are going better than public companies in terms of disclosing their ESG indicators. As compared to the international banking sector, adoption of Global Reporting Initiatives standards, United Nations Environment Programme Financial Initiatives (UNEP FI), Green Credit Policy and Equator Principles (EP) is near to the ground in India. IDFC bank is the only entity that started implementing EP practices and Yes bank also is doing a wonderful implementation of the green policies and is the signatory to UNEP FI.

Practical implications

The current state of sustainable banking in India is reflected in the implementation of the proposed framework. To better integrate sustainability problems into banking, this study provides helpful information for banks and other stakeholders. In addition, this study corrects the lack of research in the Indian context on sustainable banking.

Originality/value

To the best of the authors’ knowledge by far, this is one of the prime studies to inspect the degree of ESG disclosure by the Indian banking sector in their sustainability report.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Data availability statement: Manuscript has no associated data.

Citation

Mishra, P. and Sant, T.G. (2024), "Examine the level of environmental, social and governance disclosure in sustainability report – a study of the Indian banking sector", International Journal of Innovation Science, Vol. 16 No. 2, pp. 420-442. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJIS-08-2022-0136

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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