In recent years, the global financial landscape has witnessed an increasing demand for structured digital reporting, a trend that New Zealand has been slow to embrace. While many of New Zealand’s trading partners have made digital financial reporting mandatory, the country still lags in this area, relying on traditional paper-based or PDF financial statements. However, the New Zealand External Reporting Board (XRB) has made a compelling case for mandatory digital financial reporting in its recently published position paper. The benefits are clear: improved market transparency, more informed decision-making, and alignment with international standards. In this blog, we explore the key arguments put forward by the XRB, the growing demand for digital reporting, and why New Zealand needs to act now.
What is Digital Financial Reporting?
Digital financial reporting refers to the use of structured formats like Extensible Business Reporting Language (XBRL) and its variant, inline XBRL (iXBRL), to produce financial reports that are machine-readable. Unlike traditional PDFs, digital reports are embedded with XBRL ‘tags,’ which allow both humans and machines to efficiently read, extract, and analyze financial data. This ability to automate the extraction of data can save significant time and reduce human error in financial analysis.
iXBRL takes digital reporting a step further by combining human-readable and machine-readable formats in a single document, making it easier for investors, regulators, and analysts to interact with the data. Structured data, particularly in iXBRL, has become the global standard for transparent, consistent, and efficient financial reporting.
Global Adoption of Digital Financial Reporting
Countries accounting for more than 90% of global market capitalization have already implemented mandatory digital financial reporting. Leading economies like the United States, China, Japan, the European Union, India, and the United Kingdom have embraced this change to enhance their financial reporting infrastructure. Even smaller countries such as Singapore and South Korea have made strides, mandating digital filing for public companies since the mid-2000s. This shift toward digitalization ensures that financial markets in these regions operate with greater transparency and accuracy.
In contrast, New Zealand and Australia have yet to mandate digital financial reporting. While Australia allows voluntary digital filing, uptake has been minimal, and no such option exists in New Zealand. The voluntary nature of digital reporting in these countries has led to low participation because the perceived costs often outweigh the benefits in the eyes of reporting entities.
XRB’s Call for Action: Why New Zealand Needs Mandatory Digital Reporting
The XRB’s position paper outlines several reasons why New Zealand should consider mandatory digital financial reporting. Key among them is the potential for improved decision-making and market outcomes. By making financial information more accessible and analyzable, digital reporting can enhance investor confidence and market efficiency.
One of the key findings from a Retail Investor Confidence Survey conducted by Chartered Accountants Australia and New Zealand (CA ANZ) is that 68% of New Zealand investors support mandatory digital financial reporting. This statistic underscores the growing demand from market participants for more transparent and accessible financial data. Similarly, in Australia, 70% of investors expressed support for such a mandate, highlighting a shared sentiment across the Tasman.
The benefits of digital reporting extend beyond investors. It also offers significant advantages to regulators, standard setters, and other financial market participants. Machine-readable reports enable regulators to perform more in-depth risk analysis, model market behavior more effectively, and benchmark financial performance across industries. This capability can lead to better-targeted interventions and regulatory oversight, improving overall market stability.
Benefits of Digital Financial Reporting
The benefits of digital financial reporting are well-documented in global research, with both reporting entities and users of financial data standing to gain. Below are some of the key advantages:
- Enhanced Transparency and Access to Information
Digital reporting makes financial data more accessible and easier to analyze. Investors, regulators, and other stakeholders can extract data more quickly and accurately, leading to more informed decision-making. Machine-readable formats eliminate the need for manual data entry, which can introduce errors and slow down analysis. - Increased Capital Market Efficiency
By providing timely, accurate data, digital financial reporting helps to bridge information gaps between reporting entities and investors. This leads to more efficient capital allocation as investors are better equipped to make decisions based on reliable, structured data. - Lower Costs for Reporting Entities
While the initial setup costs for digital reporting can be high, especially in terms of software licensing and staff training, these costs tend to decrease over time. Entities that fully integrate iXBRL into their systems can expect a significant reduction in manual processes, including data processing, proofreading, and footnoting. The transition to continuous audit processes enabled by digital reporting can further reduce costs associated with auditing and financial statement preparation. - Improved Financial Reporting Quality
Digital reporting allows for greater consistency and accuracy in financial reporting. The use of XBRL tags ensures that data is reported uniformly across different entities and sectors, which can improve the overall quality of financial statements. This consistency is particularly beneficial in increasingly complex corporate reports that are difficult to analyze manually. - Facilitated Compliance with International Standards
Many jurisdictions, including the European Union, the United States, and Japan, already mandate digital financial reporting. New Zealand’s adoption of digital reporting would bring the country in line with global standards, making its markets more attractive to international investors. Moreover, digitalization extends to sustainability reports, with the International Sustainability Standards Board (ISSB) publishing the IFRS Sustainability Disclosure Taxonomy in 2024, which supports climate-related financial disclosures.
Challenges and Costs of Digital Reporting
Despite its many benefits, digital reporting comes with challenges, particularly for reporting entities. One of the most significant barriers is the upfront cost associated with transitioning to a digital reporting system. This includes the cost of purchasing software, training staff, and tagging financial data for the first time. However, these costs decrease over time as fewer staff members require training, and only new additions to financial reports need to be tagged.
Entities also face the decision of whether to fully integrate iXBRL into their accounting systems or use a bolt-on approach that converts PDF reports into digital formats. While the latter is less expensive, it also provides fewer benefits. In the United Kingdom, for example, most companies that file digital reports for tax purposes opt for PDF-to-XBRL conversions, which minimizes changes to their existing processes but does not take full advantage of digital reporting’s potential.
There are also costs associated with updating the government’s infrastructure to accept digital reports. For New Zealand, this would mean modernizing the Companies Office’s business registries and developing a national accounting taxonomy. However, these costs are outweighed by the long-term benefits of more efficient, transparent, and accessible financial markets.
Time for New Zealand to Take the Leap
The benefits of mandatory digital financial reporting are undeniable. From improving market transparency and decision-making to aligning New Zealand with global financial reporting standards, the case for digitalization is clear. While there are upfront costs, these diminish over time, and the long-term advantages to investors, reporting entities, and regulators far outweigh the initial investment.
The XRB’s call for government consultation on this issue is a critical step toward ensuring New Zealand’s financial markets remain competitive and aligned with global norms. With countries representing over 90% of global market capitalization already requiring digital financial reporting, New Zealand cannot afford to fall further behind. The time for mandatory digital financial reporting is now.