This disclosure asks an organisation to explain the most important indirect economic effects it has on people, businesses and communities beyond its own direct spending and revenues. In practice, that means describing where its activities create or reduce economic value for others, such as through jobs, local procurement, skills, infrastructure, supply chains, or changes in access to markets and services. The focus is on the impacts that matter most, not every possible knock-on effect.
The practical question is how broadly the organisation has looked across its operations and value chain, rather than only highlighting a few flagship sites or isolated success stories. It should identify the significant effects, explain where they occur, and show why they are material. A useful report will distinguish between positive and negative impacts and make clear whether the picture reflects the whole organisation or only selected locations or activities.
This LRA educational guidance supports disclosure preparation. For the exact requirements, always refer to the official GRI source.
A quick mental checklist before you prepare this disclosure — tick each as you settle it.
Key datapoints to prepare
How to prepare it
Request examples and supporting evidence of indirect economic impacts
Translate the disclosure into an internal business question — then adapt it to your organisation's own language.
Use your organisation’s own language first, then map it to the disclosure. For example, if you talk about downstream effects, community spillovers, local multiplier effects, or wider value creation, use those terms in the request and only translate them into the reporting label at the end. Keep the ask practical: ask for the examples, the basis for judging importance, and the supporting sources.
Please provide the GRI 203-2 evidence for significant indirect economic impacts.
Why it fails: This uses framework language only, so the owner may not know what to pull, where to look, or how to frame it in their own records. It also does not ask for the practical evidence needed to show the examples and the basis for judging importance.
Please send the examples of wider economic effects from [period] that your team has identified, plus the evidence showing why they matter. Use your own internal terms, and include the source documents, the outside reference points used, and any stakeholder input that informed the judgement.
Notes that turn data into a disclosure
LRA training templates — adapt them to your organisation, and check the official source before sign-off.
Explain how the organisation defined an indirect economic effect, how it selected the examples included, and what basis it used to judge importance against outside reference points and stakeholder priorities.
Set out what the figures show about the organisation’s wider economic influence beyond its own operations, and why the selected effects are considered significant in practice.
If the pattern has changed, describe whether that reflects a different set of effects being identified, a shift in the importance assigned to them, or changes in the external reference points used for comparison.
Preparation tools & forms
Professional preparation tools for GRI 203-2 — free with an LRA Community membership. Register once (it's free) and every download unlocks, together with the Disclosure Library, templates and the LRA AI-assistant.
For each claim, check the evidence
Evidence pack to prepare
Common reporting gaps
Mistakes to avoid when collecting the data
Where judgement is often needed
Illustrative examples
Synthetic, written by LRA — not from a company report, not text from any standard.
*Synthetic example only.* We set out the main knock-on effects we identified from our network upgrade programme and showed why they matter beyond our own operations. - The largest effect was local contractor spend: £18 million of work went to 64 small firms, supporting an estimated 210 jobs in the supply chain and lifting business rates receipts in two districts by £0.6 million. - We judged these effects to be material because they aligned with local authority priorities on employment and SME growth, and because the combined value was equivalent to 7% of our annual capital spend, which we used as an internal benchmark for scale.
Illustrative only: the disclosure names the main downstream effects we identified, then explains why we treated them as important by comparing them with a simple internal scale measure and with local stakeholder priorities.
*Synthetic example only.* Our product expansion programme created several wider economic effects outside our sites, which we summarised in plain terms for readers. - We estimated £9.4 million of extra demand for regional packaging, transport and maintenance suppliers, alongside 38 apprenticeships and trainee roles created by those suppliers; no single supplier accounted for more than £1.2 million. - We considered these effects significant because they were large relative to our £62 million procurement budget, and because they matched stakeholder concerns raised in our community panel about skills, local purchasing and resilient jobs.
Illustrative only: the disclosure identifies the main spillover effects from our activity and explains their importance by reference to a budget-based comparison and to issues raised by stakeholders.
How companies report GRI 203-2
Real reports where this topic is disclosed. These are report practice, not exact disclosure templates to copy.

Scenarios to work through
A preparer has two candidate impacts from a regional supplier programme: 18 local jobs created through a training partnership, and a one-off community grant of £40,000. Internal review shows the jobs effect is larger and more persistent, while the grant is helpful but limited in reach.
A business unit wants to report a new logistics hub because it reduced delivery times for customers, but the evidence only shows an internal efficiency gain and no clear effect on suppliers, workers, or the surrounding area.
The reporting team has identified three impacts: 120 temporary construction jobs, £2.4 million spent with local firms, and a rise in footfall for nearby shops during the project period. External benchmark data shows the local business district is under pressure, and community feedback ranks jobs and local spending as top priorities.
A preparer has a draft note that says the company supports the local economy through procurement, training, and community investment, but it does not separate the actual indirect effects from general activity. The evidence file contains a list of specific outcomes, including 35 apprenticeships, £1.1 million of local supplier spend, and 9 new micro-business contracts.
Related framework references
How this disclosure maps across the major reporting frameworks.
Questions this page answers
The page says to prepare two datapoints: the key indirect impacts and the context that shows why those impacts are significant. Use the step-by-step preparation section to turn that into a clear scope, method and evidence trail before drafting.
Use the page’s preparation steps to define which indirect impacts you are covering and the context used to judge significance. Keep the scope consistent with the evidence pack so the draft can be supported later.
The page includes an evidence pack with five items for assurance readiness, alongside five assurance claims to verify. Build the pack around the claim, the risk it addresses and the evidence that supports it.
The page is designed for sustainability/ESG managers, HR or data owners, and assurance reviewers, so ownership should sit with the people who can explain the impacts and provide the evidence. Use the workbook to assign tasks and keep the trail clear.
The page has a section on common reporting gaps and mistakes, which is there to help you avoid weak scope, thin evidence or unclear drafting. Check those points before you finalise the disclosure.
The Download Centre includes a Prep & Assurance workbook in .xlsx format and a printable Library Card in .pdf. Use the workbook to organise the preparation steps, evidence and assurance checks, then use the draft-output section to shape the final text.
Yes, but only as a synthetic illustration. The page says the example is illustrative and includes a quantitative table where relevant, so use it to see how the disclosure can be structured rather than copying it as a real company example.
The page’s draft-output section points you to visualisation ideas, narrative starters and a GRI content-index line. That gives you a practical starting point for turning the prepared data into a draft disclosure.
Use the five assurance claims, the five-item evidence pack and the common gaps section together. That helps you check whether the claim, the risk and the evidence line up before a reviewer sees the draft.
The page includes a ‘From company reports’ table that links to real published reports where the topic is disclosed. Use it for reference only, not as a substitute for your own scope, method and evidence.
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