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Benchmarking Corporate Political Spending Practices & Disclosure

By Randi Morrison posted 11-16-2023 06:23 PM

  

The newly released annual “2023 CPA-Zicklin Index of Corporate Political Disclosure and Accountability” benchmarks corporate political spending practices and disclosure among nearly all of the S&P 500 (496 companies as of April 15, 2023) and the 496 companies in the Russell 1000 index that are not constituents of the S&P 500 (as of June 30, 2023).* Results are focused on the former group of companies, with the report noting little change from last year’s report among the balance of the Russell 3000. Not surprisingly, the report reveals significant differences in practices and disclosure between the two company groups.

Among the key S&P 500 findings are these concerning board political spending oversight:

  • Just over 63% of companies require general board oversight.
  • Nearly 57% of companies have a board committee that reviews direct contributions/expenditures.
  • More than half of companies have a board committee that reviews payments to tax-exempt groups.
  • Nearly 10% of companies charge a board committee with approval of their political expenditures.

A sample disclosure report and model disclosures are here.

*See footnote 11 of the report for an explanation of the Russell 1000 companies.

See the current CPA-Wharton Zicklin Model Code of Conduct in Appendix I of the report; “Political spending increasingly seen as ESG metric as transparency rating reaches new milestone” (IR Magazine); and additional resources on our Political Contributions & Disclosure topical page

                          This post first appeared in the weekly Society Alert!

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