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The Integrated Reporting Committee of South Africa's Discussion PaperThe IRC of SA Discussion Paper outlined three categories of principles for the integrated report. The first included principles to define the scope and boundary of the report.47 The second pertained to the way in which the report's content was selected and the dependability of the information that comprised it: companies must ensure that the information they provide is appropriate (relevant), material, complete, neutral, and free from error. Thirdly, the information presented should be comparable and consistent, verifiable, timely, and understandable.48 The IRC of SA Discussion Paper also suggested specific elements of the report. It was to include a profile outlining its scope and boundary and an organizational overview discussing business model and governance structure. The company operating context was to be explained by including information on material issues, impacts and relationships, and identifying risks and opportunities. Strategic objectives and targets were to be covered along with the Key Performance Indicators (KPIs), Key Risk Indicators (KRIs) that would track performance, and a demonstration of the competencies required to pursue the objectives. The IRC of SA Discussion Paper also emphasized that the account of organizational performance, financial and nonfinancial, should include a list of objectives and targets, along with a discussion of whether or not they were achieved. Companies were to state future performance objectives and internal activities along with the structures required to achieve them, remuneration policies should be brought to light, and an analytical commentary on the company's current state and anticipated performance in the context of strategic objectives was to be described. The IRC of SA Discussion Paper also devoted a fair amount of attention to the topic of materiality, noting in its discussion of the second principle that it is defined differently for financial and nonfinancial information. For financial information, the IRC of SA Discussion Paper used the common definition: "For financial information, materiality is used in the sense of the magnitude of an omission or misstatement of accounting data that misleads users and is usually measured in monetary terms. Materiality is judged both by relative amount and by the nature of the item."49 For nonfinancial information, the IRC of SA Discussion Paper observed, "In the context of sustainability, materiality is a more difficult measure to define and a great deal of judgment is required."50 Recommending assurance on sustainability disclosures by an independent third party under the oversight of the audit committee, the IRC of SA Discussion Paper noted that "the organisation's board should ensure the integrity of the integrated report."51 Using a metaphor that has since gained considerable traction among members of the integrated reporting movement, it also observed that "Developing the ideal integrated report will be a journey for many organizations and so too will the extent and level of assurance."52 While companies were not required to follow the principles and elements in the IRC of SA Discussion Paper, and the JSE did not attempt to assess the extent to which they were doing so, it likely had credibility in the corporate community due to the impressive multistakeholder group that prepared it. The members of the Integrated Reporting Committee and the Integrated Reporting Committee Working Group included senior representatives from individual companies and investors, company and investor associations, accounting firms and the accounting association, the stock exchange, nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), and academics.53 After this groundbreaking publication was released, the International Federation of Accountants (IF AC) launched a revised edition of its sustainability framework, discussing the specifics of sustainable business operations—like stakeholder engagement, goal setting, carbon foot printing, KPIs, and the nature of integrated reporting.54 The IRC is now promoting the international harmonization of integrated reporting by working with the IIRC55 and, in March of 2014, the IRC of SA endorsed the International Integrated Reporting Framework (published in December 2013) as guidance for how to prepare an integrated report. |
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