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Rediff.com  » Business » CSR spend by listed companies highest-ever in FY19

CSR spend by listed companies highest-ever in FY19

By Sachin P Mampatta
December 13, 2019 13:53 IST
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The biggest spend (Rs 4,406 crore) was for Schedule VII (II), which involves “promoting education, including special education and employment enhancing vocation skills, especially among children, women, elderly and the differently abled and livelihood enhancement projects”.

Companies spent Rs 1,1867.20 crore under the corporate social responsibility (CSR) model in 2018-19 (FY19) - the highest such expenditure since it became a must in FY15.

The Companies Act required firms to spend at least two per cent of their average net profit over the preceding three years on CSR projects.

 

The spends could be under heads ranging from education and health care, to sports or for ensuring gender equality.

The FY19 spend was 17.2 per cent higher than Rs 1,0128.3 crore spent during the previous year, showed the data from corporate tracker nseinfobase.com. It was Rs 6,552.5 crore in FY15.

The biggest spend (Rs 4,406 crore) was for Schedule VII (II), which involves “promoting education, including special education and employment enhancing vocation skills, especially among children, women, elderly and the differently abled and livelihood enhancement projects”.

The next biggest spend (Rs 3,206.5 crore) was under Schedule VII (I). This involves initiatives for “eradicating hunger, poverty and malnutrition, promoting health care, including preventive health care and sanitation, including contribution to the Swachh Bharat Kosh (set up by the central government for the promotion of sanitation and making available safe drinking water)”.

Rural development projects got Rs 1,319 crore.

Contributions for environmental purposes and towards the benefit of armed forces and disaster management are also among the causes for which companies can make allocations.

It was also noted that richer states like Maharashtra and Gujarat received the bulk of corporate largesse, while poorer states and those in the northeast were largely overlooked.

Maharashtra received Rs 931.4 crore from over 501 companies - nearly half the 1,015 companies, of the 1,360 firms listed on the National Stock Exchange, which are required to make some spends for CSR purposes and for whom the data is available.

Maharashtra tops the country in terms of gross state domestic product at factor cost at current prices (with the base year of 2011-12), shows the Reserve Bank of India data.

Gujarat is also in the top five.

States like Bihar, which rank lower on development, also ranked lower on corporate largesse.

It received contributions from 209 companies in FY19 and the amount spent was Rs 274.2 crore.

States in the northeast received even less.

Arunachal Pradesh got Rs 134.2 crore from 170 companies.

Similar numbers were seen in other states of the region like Sikkim and Meghalaya.

Larger allocations seem to have prompted closer attention as to how the money is being spent, according to experts.

Amit Tandon, founder and managing director of Institutional Investor Advisory Services India (IiAS), said: "There are more and more companies which are doing impact assessment... people recognise the need to do it," he said.

Pranav Haldea, managing director at Prime Database, said low CSR budget could act as a constraint for some companies to adopt monitoring mechanisms.

"It may only make sense for firms with very large budgets. Smaller companies may find it too expensive to employ an agency for external audits regularly," he said.

Photograph: Rupak De Chowdhuri/Reuters

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Sachin P Mampatta in Mumbai
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