UK, France, Spain and Italy all score above 9.0 for their compensation policies – with Germany lagging on 6.7. Germany also comes last on ‘ESG Governance’ (6.2), largely due to its relatively narrow ESG reporting scope, fewer banks undertaking ESG-related audits, and fewer banks linking board compensation to ESG targets.
Banks across all the five largest economies performed lowest on ‘board diversity’ (4.4), due to lower performance on board gender and cultural diversity and relative lack of clarity on board structure policy.
Anne-Marie Balfe, EY EMEIA Talent Leader, comments: “When it comes to enhancing gender representation in their businesses, it is imperative that banks are continually doing more to improve across all areas and at all levels. More diverse workforces create higher performing teams that better reflect the customers they serve. Banks need to keep taking serious action where D&I is concerned if they are to remain competitive and agile within the wider financial sector.”
ENDS
Notes to editors
- The EY Sustainable Finance Index includes data from 1,100 financial services firms from around the world, including 806 banks, 217 insurers and reinsurers and 140 wealth and asset management firms.
About the EY Sustainable Finance Index
The Index monitors more than 200 ESG-related disclosures for more than 1,100 financial services firms worldwide. It reviews the breadth and depth of each institution’s disclosure against these individual parameters, which have been grouped into 25 categories under the three environmental, social and governance components. This data is compiled into a scoring system, which ranks countries as they progress on their sustainability journey, creating a score out of ten (the ESG score), as well as measuring the extent of disclosure on activity (the disclosure rate), expressed as a percentage. The Index will introduce new parameters over time, allowing it to adapt to the industry’s evolving thinking on sustainable finance.
The Index is aligned with the Stakeholder Capitalism Metrics set out by the World Economic Forum (WEF) and International Business Council (IBC). It is not yet possible to directly map the Index’s 229 individual parameters with WEF-IBC’s 21 core themes, since many of WEF-IBC’s themes do not yet have specific metrics. However, as WEF-IBC’s work continues, our parameters will evolve with it, ensuring that the Index remains aligned with the Sustainable Development Goals and that it tracks developments by the Global Reporting Initiative, the Sustainability Accounting Standards Board (SASB) and the Taskforce on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures (TCFD).
About EY
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