Title of article :
The power of the lens: A comparative analysis of two views of the Fiji Development Bank
Author/Authors :
Helen Irvine، نويسنده , , HemantDeo ، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Abstract :
Purpose – Recently enacted Australian law governing financial services requires investment
managers to report to what extent social considerations are employed in portfolio construction. Using
the principal-agent framework as an interpretive backdrop, the paper aims to analyse institutional
responses to the introduction of the legislation.
Design/methodology/approach – The paper distinguishes formal, claimed accountabilities from
practised accountabilities. It identifies practised accountabilities by examining legislative
requirements, noting responses of mainstream investment banking institutions in the period of
legislative development, interviewing a sample of investment managers, and examining a sample of
information disclosures issued in the initial period of the legislation.
Findings – The paper finds that while appeasing investment managers and the lobby group that
urged for the disclosures, the non-prescriptive regulations promise little in terms of promoting the
integrity of management practices. Initial disclosures were poor, providing little basis for
comparability.
Research limitations/implications – The paper provides a basis to investigate accountabilities in
service-based contractual relationships, particularly managed investments.
Originality/value – The paper introduces a new research field: social reporting in financial services.
The period reviewed was the initial reporting period in which Australian practitioners were required
to issue social reports. Counterpart European legislation has not attracted scholarly attention.
A contribution is made to critical research on social investment.
Keywords :
Financial services Law reform , Social audit , AustraliaPaper type Research paper
Journal title :
Accounting Auditing and Accountability Journal
Journal title :
Accounting Auditing and Accountability Journal