During the current reporting season, we have noted that companies are being placed under the spotlight as investors and ratings agencies increase their focus on how organisations are ensuring success by protecting their workforce and prioritising mental health.
With 15%[1] of the world’s working population estimated to experience a mental disorder at any given time, and mental ill-health now becoming one of the most common causes of work-limiting conditions (aged 44 and below[2]), it is unsurprising that investors, alongside ratings agencies, are placing more emphasis on analysing what companies are doing to support workforce mental wellbeing.
What are investors and ratings agencies are looking for in disclosures?
Owing to the financial and non-financial impacts mental health can have on companies, investors are increasingly viewing mental health as a critical element of a company’s ESG performance. Investors and ratings agencies have evolved their approach to mental health by incorporating it into ESG frameworks. The recently published CCLA Corporate Mental Health Benchmark is a good example of this evolution. The benchmark is the culmination of a joint project between the CCLA and Chronos Sustainability, with support from an expert panel, which has been designed as a tool for investors to assess and monitor companies on their mental wellbeing efforts, while also holding them accountable to claims.
Investors and analysts are looking for companies to show exactly how they are monitoring, embedding and improving employee wellbeing, going beyond ‘boilerplate’ statements across communications. The benchmark highlighted that while 93% of UK companies stated mental health was a priority for them, less than half equip line managers with the necessary mental health training to monitor wellbeing. Investors are calling for companies to look beyond boilerplate commitments and produce concrete targets for things such as manager training on mental health to illustrate a commitment to supporting employee wellbeing.
Alongside this, the study found that only a third of UK companies are using employee feedback to inform their mental wellbeing programmes. Investors are looking to understand exactly how companies are actively engaging with and listening to their employees on a regular basis to ensure wellbeing programmes are fit for purpose.
Looking to the future of reporting, we are seeing more and more human-related issues being integrated into regulation. The ISSB has announced that it will integrate disclosures on risks and opportunities related to human capital into its next round of research to develop its next standards. The recent formation of the TISFD also signals an intention to place greater scrutiny on human-related issues. It could be suggested that mental health along with other human-related issues will become the ‘norm for reporting’, with investors’ expectations only expected to grow in the near future.
How should companies respond?
With investor expectations around mental health only expected to grow, based on its research, the CCLA has encouraged companies to consider the following actions[3]:
1. Acknowledge workplace mental health as an important consideration for the businessDiscover how Luminous can help you integrate mental health into your corporate communications and investor engagement strategy. Contact us today to explore tailored solutions to meet evolving investor expectations.
[1] https://ghdx.healthdata.org/gbd-2019
[2] https://www.mentalhealth.org.uk/explore-mental-health/statistics/mental-health-work-statistics#:~:text=Mental%20ill%20health%20is%20now,has%20more%20than%20quadrupled4.
[3] https://www.ccla.co.uk/documents/global-investor-statement-workplace-mental-health/download?inline
[4] https://group.legalandgeneral.com/media/o4harb42/legal-and-general-2023_annual-report-and-accounts.pdf
[5] https://www.firstgroupplc.com/~/media/Files/F/Firstgroup-Plc/Responsibilty%20Reports/policies/firstgroup-dignityat-work-policy.pdf
[6] https://www.firstgroupplc.com/~/media/Files/F/Firstgroup-Plc/Responsibilty%20Reports/policies/firstgroup-equal-opps-diversity-policy.pdf
[7] https://www.sage.com/en-gb/company/sustainability-and-society/#reports