The Determinants of ESG Data Requirements for SMEs in the European Union: Insights and Challenges from Hungary

Authors

Dorottya Sebestyén
Széchenyi István University, Albert Kázmér Faculty of Agricultural and Food Sciences
https://orcid.org/0009-0002-6788-0981

Synopsis

Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) reporting obligations formally target large corporations, yet small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) increasingly encounter indirect but consequential ESG information requirements. This study examines how EU non-financial governance regulation has evolved from voluntary disclosure practices into a structured policy architecture that progressively embeds SMEs through spillover mechanisms. The analysis is based on a structured review of key EU legislative instruments–including the transition from the Non-Financial Reporting Directive (NFRD) to the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD), the 2025 Omnibus simplification package, and the Voluntary Sustainability Reporting Standard for SMEs (VSME)–interpreted in light of relevant academic scholarship. The findings show that SME exposure is systemically driven through value chain transmission, financial governance dynamics, and policy recalibration. In Hungary, limited reporting capacity and interpretative uncertainty intensify these challenges. The study argues that while the VSME approach may enhance proportionality, effective implementation depends on policy coherence and strengthened organizational capabilities.

Author Biography

Dorottya Sebestyén, Széchenyi István University, Albert Kázmér Faculty of Agricultural and Food Sciences

Győr, Hungary. E-mail: sebestyen.dorottya@sze.hu

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Published

July 3, 2026

License

Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

How to Cite

Sebestyén, D. (2026). The Determinants of ESG Data Requirements for SMEs in the European Union: Insights and Challenges from Hungary. In J. Belak & S. Oberman Peterka (Eds.), Sustainable Governance in the Age of Artificial Intelligence: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on ESG, Digital Transformation and Corporate Responsibility (pp. 831-852). University of Maribor Press. https://doi.org/10.18690/um.epf.7.2026.44