Harmonising ESG disclosure frameworks in insurance: developing a strategic scoring model for global governance
保険におけるESG開示フレームワークの調和:グローバルガバナンスのための戦略的スコアリングモデルの開発 (AI 翻訳)
Fahru Azwa Mohd Zain, Mohd. Faharizan Hassan
🤖 gxceed AI 要約
日本語
本研究は、保険・タカフル業界におけるサステナビリティ報告の断片化に対処するため、ISSB、ESRS、GRIを統合した統一スコアリングモデル(USHS-I/T)を開発・実証した。マレーシアの保険会社・タカフル事業者に適用し、環境・社会・ガバナンス・財務の4次元で開示品質を評価。気候関連やガバナンスでは収束が見られる一方、生物多様性や請求の公平性、ESG調整ソルベンシー比率でギャップが存在する。
English
This study develops and empirically applies the Unified Sustainability Harmonisation Score for Insurance/Takaful (USHS-I/T), integrating ISSB, ESRS, and GRI frameworks. Applied to Malaysian insurers (2021-2023), it reveals strong convergence in climate and governance disclosures but gaps in biodiversity, claims fairness, and ESG-adjusted solvency ratios. The framework offers a benchmarking tool for regulators, insurers, and investors.
Unofficial AI-generated summary based on the public title and abstract. Not an official translation.
📝 gxceed 編集解説 — Why this matters
日本のGX文脈において
日本ではSSBJが国際的なサステナビリティ開示基準と整合を進めており、本モデルは異なるフレームワークの調和を図る手法として参考になる。特に保険業界における開示の統一性向上に寄与する可能性がある。
In the global GX context
This paper contributes to the global push for disclosure harmonisation by providing a concrete scoring model that integrates ISSB, ESRS, and GRI. It offers a practical tool for emerging markets to benchmark ESG disclosure quality, aligning with global standards and enhancing comparability.
👥 読者別の含意
🔬研究者:The USHS-I/T framework provides a validated methodology for harmonising multiple ESG standards, advancing disclosure research in insurance and takaful.
🏢実務担当者:Insurers and takaful operators can use the scoring model to identify reporting gaps and improve ESG credibility with stakeholders.
🏛政策担当者:Regulators can adopt the framework as a benchmarking tool to enhance disclosure comparability and support sustainable finance ecosystems.
📄 Abstract(原文)
This study aims to address the persistent fragmentation in sustainability reporting within the insurance and takaful sector, resulting from the coexistence of multiple frameworks, including the International Sustainability Standards Board (ISSB), European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS) and Global Reporting Initiative (GRI). The research develops and empirically applies the Unified Sustainability Harmonisation Score for Insurance/Takaful (USHS-I/T), providing a structured tool to benchmark disclosure quality and align global standards with industry-specific requirements. The study adopts a conceptual and comparative framework-building approach supported by Delphi validation with regulators, academics and practitioners. A crosswalk of ISSB, ESRS, and GRI indicators was classified into four dimensions: Environmental, Social, Governance, and Finance-specific, and scored using a weighted three-point system. The framework was empirically applied to Malaysian insurers and takaful operators (2021–2023 reports), and reliability was confirmed through Cronbach’s α (0.90), split-half and inter-coder tests. The framework also differentiates between narrative and measurable disclosures, recognising that qualitative explanations are important for contextual interpretation while quantitative indicators are essential for comparability and assurance. The results demonstrate strong convergence in climate-related and governance disclosures, while significant gaps remain in biodiversity, claims fairness and finance-specific indicators such as environmental, social and governance (ESG)-adjusted solvency ratios. Conventional insurers outperform takaful operators in governance and finance-specific metrics, whereas takaful operators show strengths in community engagement and ethical governance structures associated with Shariah oversight rather than theological compliance. The study explicitly clarifies that these governance structures are treated solely as institutional mechanisms and are excluded from ESG scoring to preserve universality and comparability. The study is based on secondary disclosure data from a Malaysia-specific sample, which limits generalisability across regions. Nevertheless, it opens pathways for cross-country comparisons, longitudinal studies and further integration of impact assessment into harmonisation models. The reframing of Shariah governance as an ethical construct enhances the transferability of the framework across diverse institutional settings. The USHS-I/T framework provides regulators with a benchmarking tool to enhance disclosure comparability, supports insurers and takaful operators in identifying reporting blind spots, and offers investors a transparent metric for evaluating ESG credibility. By emphasising universal ethical principles reflected in Shariah governance rather than religious conformity, the framework encourages takaful operators to strengthen financial inclusion, community support and responsible conduct while aligning with global sustainability standards. This supports greater stakeholder trust and positions insurance and takaful institutions as contributors to sustainable finance ecosystems. To the best of the authors’ knowledge, this study is among the first to operationalise a harmonised ESG and finance scoring model for insurance and takaful by integrating ISSB, ESRS and GRI into a unified, decision-useful framework. The study offers a secular, universally applicable harmonisation model that accommodates industry-specific governance structures without embedding theological content into ESG measurement. It advances theoretical discourse by linking legitimacy, stakeholder and institutional perspectives to a validated scoring protocol, providing a practical tool for accelerating disclosure harmonisation in emerging markets.
🔗 Provenance — このレコードを発見したソース
- semanticscholar https://doi.org/10.1108/ijoes-09-2025-0524first seen 2026-05-05 21:43:32
gxceed は公開メタデータに基づく研究支援データセットです。要約・翻訳・解説は AI 支援で生成されています。 最終的な解釈・検証は利用者が原典資料に基づいて行うことを前提とします。