“…Comparability is a basic property of financial statement that enables users to identify similarities in and differences between two sets of economic phenomena (Financial Accounting Standards Board [FASB], ; International Accounting Standards Board, ). Meanwhile, comparability is conducive to lowering information acquisition and processing costs and enhancing the quality of information available to financial statement users (Barth, Landsman, Lang, & Williams, ; De Franco, Kothari, & Verdi, ; Zhang, ). In contrast to previous studies on the association between CSR and reporting quality measures that primarily determine the nature of relevance and faithful representation in financial statements, comparability requires at least two items from at least two different entities or two accounting periods, thereby distinguishing this property from other characteristics (e.g., relevance and faithful representation) that focus on financial items in a single entity or period (De Franco et al, ; Endrawes, Feng, Lu, & Shan, ).…”