Herlin Tundjung Setijaningsih
Bina Nusantara University, Jakarta

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Does Corporate Governance Amplify the Sustainability-Performance Link? Evidence from Indonesian Mining Companies Deri Indriani; Herlin Tundjung Setijaningsih
Indonesian Journal of Taxation and Accounting Vol 3, No 2 (2025): December 2025
Publisher : Academic Bright Collaboration

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.66053/ijota.v3i2.337

Abstract

This study aims to examine the influence of green accounting and environmental performance on financial performance in Indonesian mining companies and to analyze whether corporate governance strengthens these relationships. The study is motivated by the growing convergence between sustainability practices and corporate financial objectives, as well as inconsistent empirical findings in prior research regarding the relationship between environmental initiatives and firm profitability. Using a quantitative explanatory approach with a deductive hypothesis-testing design, this research analyzes panel data from 40 mining companies listed on the Indonesia Stock Exchange during the 2020–2024 period, generating 200 firm-year observations. Data were obtained from annual reports, sustainability reports, and corporate governance reports, while environmental performance was measured using the PROPER rating issued by the Indonesian Ministry of Environment and Forestry. The analysis employed panel regression techniques using the Fixed Effect Model. The findings indicate that green accounting has a positive and significant effect on financial performance (β = 1.697, p < 0.01), while environmental performance demonstrates the strongest positive effect (β = 5.085, p < 0.01). Corporate governance also has a significant positive direct influence on financial performance (β = 1.683, p < 0.05) and strengthens the relationships between sustainability practices and financial outcomes through significant interaction effects between governance and both green accounting (β = 1.352, p < 0.05) and environmental performance (β = 0.231, p < 0.05). The results suggest that sustainability initiatives generate greater financial benefits when supported by effective governance mechanisms. However, the findings are limited to mining companies in Indonesia and may not be generalizable to other industries or institutional contexts. This study contributes to the sustainability accounting literature by integrating legitimacy theory and stakeholder theory with governance perspectives, highlighting corporate governance as an enabling mechanism that enhances the economic value of environmental practices in emerging market industries.
Corporate Governance and Sustainability Report Disclosure in Healthcare Companies: The Moderating Role of Profitability Aisyah Juliana; Herlin Tundjung Setijaningsih
Indonesian Journal of Taxation and Accounting Vol 3, No 2 (2025): December 2025
Publisher : Academic Bright Collaboration

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.66053/ijota.v3i2.338

Abstract

This study aims to examine the influence of corporate governance mechanisms on sustainability report disclosure in healthcare companies listed on the Indonesia Stock Exchange during the period 2021 to 2024 and to analyze the moderating role of profitability in these relationships. The research addresses the growing demand for environmental, social, and governance transparency and the need to understand how governance structures contribute to credible sustainability disclosure in a sector that generates significant environmental externalities. The study adopts a quantitative explanatory design using secondary data derived from annual reports and sustainability reports of healthcare companies. A purposive sampling technique resulted in a final sample of 20 firms with 80 firm year observations. Sustainability disclosure is measured using the Sustainability Report Disclosure Index based on the Global Reporting Initiative standards, while corporate governance variables include managerial ownership, independent commissioners, audit committee size, and institutional ownership. The data are analyzed using panel data regression with the Fixed Effect Model and Moderated Regression Analysis to test the moderating effect of profitability measured by return on assets. The results indicate that audit committees and institutional ownership have a significant positive effect on sustainability disclosure, while managerial ownership and independent commissioners do not show significant direct effects. Profitability significantly strengthens the relationship between managerial ownership and sustainability disclosure as well as between institutional ownership and sustainability disclosure, but does not moderate the influence of board level governance mechanisms. The findings are limited to healthcare companies in Indonesia and rely on disclosure indices derived from corporate reports, which may affect generalizability and measurement depth. This study contributes to the literature by extending agency theory in the context of sustainability governance and provides practical implications for corporate managers, regulators, and investors in strengthening governance mechanisms to improve sustainability transparency.