| History
Promoting excellence in annual corporate reporting has a
long history in Malaysia. It started in 1985 with the launch of the Malaysian
Corporate Report Awards (MACRA) which was jointly organised by The Malaysian
Association of Certified Public Accountants (MACPA) and the Malaysian Institute
of Management (MIM). In 1988, Malaysian Institute of Accountants (MIA) and the
Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange (KLSE) collaborated to organise the National Annual
Report Awards (NARA). In recognition that the two awards shared common
objectives, 1990 saw the unification of the awards to become the National Annual
Corporate Report Awards (NACRA), which was jointly organised by KLSE, MIA, MIM
and MACPA.
Today, NACRA is the collaborative effort of Bursa Malaysia Berhad, Malaysian
Institute of Accountants, Malaysian Institute of Management and The Malaysian
Institute of Certified Public Accountants (MICPA).
NACRA Objectives:
- To promote greater and more effective communication by organisations
through the publication of timely, informative, factual and reader-friendly
annual reports
- To recognise and encourage excellence in the presentation of financial and
business information
- To create public awareness of the objectives of enterprises, their
operations and their financial performance
- To promote higher standards of corporate governance
The NACRA competition comprises five categories of Awards, namely:
- The Overall Excellence Award for the Best Annual Report of the Year;
- Industry Excellence Awards for Companies Listed on the Main Board, Second
Board and the MESDAQ Market;
- Presentation Awards comprising the Best Annual Report in Bahasa Malaysia
and the Best Designed Annual Report;
- Corporate Social Responsibility Awards; and
- Special Award for Non-Listed Organisations
The criteria for NACRA has been reviewed and enhanced each year to encourage
the disclosure of all material and relevant information beyond the statutory
requirements. Compliance with approved accounting standards and statutory
disclosure requirements has become the norm expected of all organisations.
Greater emphasis has been given to voluntary disclosure such as information
about the company’s long-term objectives, its strategic plans for growth,
initiatives to protect the environment through corporate social responsibility
projects. The aim is to promote more effective communication between the
organisation and its stakeholders.
Although new elements have been added over the years, the objective remains
essentially the same, to recognise and highlight the importance of good
financial reporting, not only to protect the interests of stakeholders, but to
ensure the effective functioning of the capital market. This is the very essence
of NACRA’s theme, Towards Accountability and Excellence.
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