Abstract:
Purpose – The purpose of this study is to investigate the extent of voluntary
disclosure and its determinants of companies listed in Colombo Stok Exchange
(CSE).
Design/methodology/approach – Complying to the previous empirical studies on
corporate voluntary disclosures, the study surveyed the annual reports of 43 randomly
drawn sampled firms using 60 disclosure items constructed into four voluntary
disclosure indies namely corporate strategic disclosure index (CSDI), financial and
capital market information disclosure index (FCMDI), forward-looking disclosure
index (FLDI), social reporting disclosure index (SRDI) and total voluntary disclosure
index (TVDI). The sample firms were observed for three reporting periods from 2016
through 2018. Data was analyzed using descriptive statistics, correlation and OLS
regression analysis.
Findings – The study found that the extent of voluntary disclosures by firms listed in
CSE gradually grew over the years. Extents of disclosure of such corporate strategic
information as ‘ways of improvement in product/service quality and the customer
service’, ‘research development activities’ and ‘future product and development’ are
relatively higher than the other corporate and strategic information surveyed.
Financial and capital market related disclosure items that reflect on companies’
market value have been disclosed relatively at higher rates than the items that connect
to the assessment of current and potential risk, return and operating cash flows useful
for industry comparison. Forward looking information tends to be the lowest
disclosed voluntary information by companies surveyed. The study also concludes
that forward looking voluntary disclosures by Sri Lankan firms largely pertains to
external factors than the internal factors which mostly depends on managerial
discretion. Analyzing the determinant of voluntary disclosures, the study find that
firms size is a significant predictor positively impacting on the volume of voluntary
disclosures with respect to all voluntary disclosure models tested. Relatively new
companies volunteer more than older ones in disclosing voluntary information.
It is also documented that financial leverage significantly and positively impact on
many voluntary disclosure indices while profitability and ownership concentration do
not broadly impact on the spectrum of voluntary disclosures.Research limitations/implications – Following previous studies, this paper surveyed
only the annual reports of listed firms, which is a regular medium of companies’
disclosures. This paper however excludes voluntary disclosure contents in other such
media as company’s website, magazine and sustainability reports etc.
Originality value – Distinguished from similar empirical works, this disclosure
analysis been directed to items within disclosure constructs. This account of analysis
helps the inference of patters/ reasons/motives/attitudes that underlie voluntary
disclosures.