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Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)

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Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)

In a market economy, businesses do not operate in isolation from society. They use society’s resources, labour, infrastructure and markets, and therefore have a responsibility to contribute to social welfare. Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) reflects this idea by encouraging companies to go beyond profit-making and support areas such as education, health, skill development, environment, rural development and welfare of vulnerable sections.

In India, CSR is especially important because it can help make economic growth more inclusive by linking corporate success with community development, social justice and environmental sustainability.

CSR Provision in India

  • Corporate Social Responsibility Under Section 135
    • Section 135 of the Companies Act, 2013 (“Act”) provides that certain companies must mandatorily contribute a certain amount towards CSR activities. As per the Act, ‘Corporate Social Responsibility’ means and includes but is not limited to:
      • Projects or programmes relating to activities specified in Schedule VII to The Act.
      • Projects or programmes relating to those activities which are undertaken by the Board of Directors of a company in ensuring the recommendation of the CSR Committee of the Board as per declared CSR Policy along with the conditions that such policy will cover subjects specified in Schedule VII of the Act.
  • Applicability 
    • The provisions of CSR applies to every company fulfilling any of the following conditions in the preceding financial year: 
      • Net worth of more than ₹500 crore
      • Turnover of more than ₹1000 crore
      • Net profit of more than ₹5 crore
  • CSR Spending Requirement 
    • Every eligible company must spend at least 2% of its average net profits of the immediately preceding three financial years on CSR activities. 
    • If the company has not completed three financial years since its incorporation, it must spend 2% of its average net profits made during the immediately preceding financial years as per its CSR policy. 
  • CSR Committee 
    • Eligible companies are required to constitute a CSR Committee of the Board.
    • The CSR Committee generally performs three main functions: 
      • it recommends the CSR policy
      • recommends the amount of expenditure
      • monitors the CSR policy from time to time
  • Role of the Board 
    • After considering the recommendations made by the CSR Committee, approve the CSR policy for the Company and disclose the contents of the Policy on its website.
    • The Board must ensure only those activities must be undertaken which are mentioned in the policy.
    • The Board of Directors shall make sure that the company spends in every financial year, a minimum of 2% of the average net profits made during the three immediately preceding financial years as per CSR policy.
  • Schedule VII Activities
    • CSR spending must be on activities mentioned under Schedule VII of the Companies Act. These include areas such as education, healthcare, poverty reduction, gender equality, environmental sustainability, rural development, skill development, protection of national heritage, welfare of armed forces veterans, sports, and disaster management.
CSR Activities under Schedule VII
#Activity
1Health & Sanitation
Eradicating poverty, hunger and malnutrition, promoting health care including sanitation and preventive health care, contribution to the Swachh Bharat Kosh set-up by the Central Government for promotion of sanitation and making available safe drinking water.
2Education
Improvement in education including special education and employment, strengthening vocational skills among children, women, elderly and the differently-abled and livelihood enhancement projects.
3Gender & Equality
Improving gender equality, setting up homes and hostels for women and orphans, empowering women, setting up old age homes, day care centres and other facilities for senior citizens and measures for reducing inequalities faced by socially and economically backward groups.
4Environment
Safeguarding environmental sustainability, ecological balance, protection of flora and fauna, animal welfare, agroforestry, conservation of natural resources and maintaining quality of soil, air and water including contribution for rejuvenation of river Ganga.
5Heritage & Culture
Protection of national heritage, art and culture including restoration of buildings and sites of historical importance and works of art; setting up public libraries; promotion and development of traditional arts and handicrafts.
6Armed Forces
Measures for the benefit of armed forces veterans, war widows and their dependents, CAPF and CPMF veterans and their dependents including widows.
7Sports
Training to stimulate rural sports, nationally recognized sports, Paralympic sports and Olympic sports.
8Relief Funds
Contribution to the Prime Minister's National Relief Fund, PM CARES Fund or any other fund set up by the Central Government for socio-economic development and welfare of Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes, other backward classes, minorities and women.
9R&D
Contribution to incubators or research and development projects in science, technology, engineering and medicine, funded by the Central Government, State Government, PSUs or any agency of the Central or State Government.
10Institutions
Contributions to public funded Universities, IITs, National Laboratories and autonomous bodies under DAE, DBT, DST, DRDO, ICAR, ICMR, CSIR and others engaged in research aimed at promoting Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
11Rural Development
Rural development projects.
12Slum Development
Slum area development. Slum area means any area declared as such by the Central Government, any State Government or any other competent authority under any law for the time being in force.
13Disaster Management
Disaster management, including relief, rehabilitation and reconstruction activities.
  • Transfer and Use of Unspent Amount
    • If a company fails to spend 2% of its net average profits for CSR, it must transfer unspent CSR amount to the following specified funds within six months from the end of the financial year:
      • A contribution made to the Prime Minister’s National Relief Fund.
      • Any other fund is initiated by the central government concerning socio-economic development, relief and welfare of the scheduled caste, minorities, tribes, women and other backward classes.
      • A contribution made to an incubator is funded either by the central government, the state government, public sector undertaking of the state or central government, or any other agency.
      • Contributions made to:
        • Public-funded universities
        • Indian Institute of Technology (IITs)
        • National Laboratories and Autonomous Bodies established under:
          • Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR)
          • Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR)
          • Department of Atomic Energy (DAE)
          • Department of Biotechnology (DBT)
          • Department of Pharmaceuticals
          • Ministry of Ayurveda, Yoga and Naturopathy, Unani, Siddha and Homoeopathy (AYUSH)
          • Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology 
          • Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR)
          • Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) 
          • Department of Science and Technology (DST) engaged in conducting research in technology, science, medicine, and engineering aimed at encouraging Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
    • In case of the unspent amount relating to an ongoing project under the company’s CSR policy, the company will transfer the unspent amount to an exclusive account to be opened by a company, known as ‘Unspent Corporate Social Responsibility Account’, in any scheduled bank within 30 days from the end of the financial year.
      • The company must use the funds in the ‘Unspent Corporate Social Responsibility Account’ towards its obligations under the CSR policy within a period of three financial years from the date of the transfer.
      • In a case where the company fails to utilise the funds at the end of the three financial years, the funds should be transferred to the specified fund mentioned above within a period of 30 days upon completion of the third financial year.

Importance of CSR in India

  • Promotes Inclusive Growth
    • CSR can help extend the benefits of economic growth to weaker sections through projects in education, healthcare, sanitation, skill development, nutrition, livelihoods and rural development.
      • CSR directly addresses social inequities — health camps, skill development, livelihood programs
      • Corporations operating in resource-rich but poor regions — mining— use CSR to give back to affected communities
      • Livelihood programs — skill training, self-help group support, agricultural extension — improve incomes of marginalised communities
      • CSR in rural development — water conservation, sanitation, rural roads — improves quality of life beyond urban centres
      • Supports women empowerment — SHG formation, women entrepreneurship, vocational training for women
      • Addresses last-mile development challenges that government programs struggle to reach

  • Supplements Government Efforts
    • Government resources alone may not be sufficient to address all developmental challenges. CSR can support public programmes by providing additional funds, technology, managerial efficiency and innovation.
      • CSR mobilises private corporate resources for public good — supplementing state capacity
      • Mandatory 2% of average net profit rule generated approximately ₹25,000–27,000 crore annually in recent years
      • CSR fills critical gaps in government service delivery — particularly at local and community level
      • Enables faster, more flexible deployment of resources than bureaucratic government spending
      • Reaches areas and populations that government programs often miss — tribal communities, urban slums, remote villages
  • Education and Human Capital Development 
    • Education is the largest recipient of CSR funds in India — reflecting corporate recognition of human capital importance
    • Infrastructure support — school buildings, toilets, libraries, labs — improving learning environment
    • Scholarship programs — supporting meritorious students from poor backgrounds
    • Digital literacy and computer education — bridging technology access gap
    • Teacher training programs — improving quality of education delivery
  • Healthcare and Nutrition 
    • CSR funds mobile health clinics, health camps, hospitals in underserved areas
    • Mother and child health — nutrition programs, immunisation drives, ante-natal care
    • Disease-specific interventions — tuberculosis, malaria, cancer screening — complementing government health programs
  • Supports Local Community Development
    • Companies can contribute to the development of communities around their areas of operation through schools, health camps, drinking water facilities, skill centres, roads and livelihood projects.
  • Encourages Responsible Capitalism
    • CSR ensures that capitalism does not remain purely profit-driven. It encourages companies to consider social welfare, environmental protection and ethical responsibility along with business growth.
  • Improves Corporate Accountability
    • CSR makes companies more accountable to society. It pushes businesses to think about the social and environmental impact of their activities.
  • Reduces Social Inequality
    • CSR projects can target vulnerable groups such as women, children, persons with disabilities, tribal communities, rural poor and informal workers, thereby supporting social justice.
  • Promotes Environmental Sustainability
    • CSR funds can be used for afforestation, water conservation, renewable energy, waste management, biodiversity protection and climate resilience.
  • Builds Trust Between Business and Society
    • When companies invest in community welfare, it improves their legitimacy and public trust. This reduces conflict between industries and local communities.
  • Encourages Innovation in Social Sector
    • Corporates bring professional management, technology, data systems and efficiency. This can improve the delivery of social welfare projects.
      • CSR enables social innovation — trying new approaches to development challenges
      • Corporations bring management efficiency, technology, and scale to social programs
      • Successful CSR pilots can be adopted and scaled by government — CSR as policy laboratory
  • Contributes to Nation-Building
    • CSR helps align private sector resources with national priorities such as poverty reduction, education, health, skill development, Swachh Bharat, Digital India, gender equality and Sustainable Development Goals.

Issues with CSR in India

  • Compliance-Oriented Approach
    • Many companies treat CSR as a legal obligation rather than a genuine social responsibility.
    • The focus often becomes “spend 2% and report it” instead of creating long-term social impact.
      • Minimum spend to avoid penalty — not maximising social impact
      • CSR reports filled with optics-driven activities — tree plantations, one-day health camps — rather than sustained interventions
      • “Greenwashing” and “Social washing” — companies claim CSR credit for activities that primarily serve business interests
      • Board CSR committees are perfunctory — meet rarely, exercise minimal strategic oversight
  • Poor Needs Assessment
    • CSR projects are often designed without proper local consultation.
    • As a result, companies may fund visible activities like school buildings or toilets, but ignore deeper issues such as livelihood insecurity or health access.
      • A new report by the Developmental Intelligence Unit (DIU) has found that CSR fund investments lack transparency, often duplicate government schemes, and involve minimal community participation in project design. 
  • Uneven Regional Distribution
    • CSR spending is often concentrated in industrialised and urbanised states where companies operate.
    • Backward, tribal, remote and aspirational districts may receive less CSR support even though their development needs are greater.
    • Bihar, Odisha, Jharkhand, UP, MP — states with greatest developmental need — receive disproportionately low CSR 
      • Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Delhi, and Gujarat accounted for 60% of CSR spending, while Aspirational Districts (per NITI Aayog) received less than 20% of the total CSR pool. 
  • Preference for Brand Visibility
    • Companies prefer projects that improve corporate image, such as high-visibility infrastructure, public events or publicity-driven campaigns.
    • Less visible but important areas like mental health, disability support, nutrition, primary healthcare, capacity building and institutional strengthening may be neglected.
  • Short-Term and Fragmented Projects
    • Many CSR projects are small, scattered and one-time in nature.
    • They may provide immediate relief but fail to create sustainable outcomes because there is no long-term planning, follow-up or maintenance.
      • Short project cycles — annual CSR budgets — prevent long-term, sustained interventions needed for genuine impact 
      • Companies change CSR focus areas frequently — no continuity, no deep impact
      • Multiple small grants to many NGOs — fragmented, sub-scale, insufficient for meaningful change
  • Weak Monitoring and Impact Assessment
    • CSR reports often mention money spent and activities completed, but not the real outcomes.
    • For example, a company may report the number of toilets built, but not whether they are being used, maintained or improving sanitation behaviour.
      • Report by the Developmental Intelligence Unit (DIU):There is a lack of impact assessment, with most corporations relying on output indicators (e.g., number of people trained, number of toilets built) instead of impact metrics (e.g., long-term employment, reduction in open defecation). 
      • No standardized impact measurement framework — companies report inputs and activities, not outcomes
      • CSR reports focus on money spent and activities conducted — not lives changed or problems solved
      • Self-reporting by companies — no independent verification of CSR claims
      • Without rigorous impact measurement, it is impossible to distinguish effective from ineffective CSR
      • Companies have no incentive to report failure — success stories dominate, learning from failure absent
      • Academic and research engagement with CSR impact is minimal in India
  • NGO and Implementing Agency Issues
    • Companies lack in-house capability to implement complex social programs — depend on implementing partners 
    • Companies often depend on NGOs or local agencies for implementation.
    • Due diligence on NGO partners is weak — funds sometimes reach unqualified or fraudulent organizations 
    • Problems arise due to weak capacity, poor transparency, inflated claims, duplication of work or even diversion of funds.
  • Limited Community Participation
    • Local communities are often treated as beneficiaries rather than partners.
    • This reduces ownership and leads to poor sustainability after the company or NGO exits the project.
  • Sectoral Imbalance
    • Education and healthcare dominate CSR spending — other critical areas underfunded
    • Mental health, disability, elderly care, gender-based violence — chronically underfunded through CSR
    • Livelihood and agricultural development — most impactful for rural poor — relatively neglected 
    • Companies choose visible, media-friendly activities over less glamorous but more impactful interventions 
  • Governance and Accountability Gaps 
    • CSR committees — often lack independent, qualified members with social sector expertise
    • Board oversight of CSR is minimal — delegated to junior management or CSR departments
    • Conflict of interest — companies funding CSR activities that benefit their own business — supplier training, consumer education
    • Political capture — companies pressured to fund politically favored projects
  • Lack of Convergence with Government Schemes
    • CSR often works in isolation from government programmes.
    • Better convergence with district administration, local bodies, aspirational district plans, SDGs and local development priorities can improve impact.
  • Legal and Regulatory Issues 
    • Section 135 — mandatory CSR — creates a tax-like obligation rather than genuine voluntary responsibility
    • Companies resent compulsion — undermines the spirit of corporate citizenship
    • Penalty provisions — non-compliance attracts fines — but enforcement has been weak and inconsistent
    • Eligible activity list (Schedule VII) — rigid, limiting companies from innovating in CSR approaches
  • Small Company Burden vs Large Company Under-performance 
    • Many small companies find 2% net profit obligation burdensome during difficult years
    • Large profit-making conglomerates — despite enormous resources — often engage in low-impact, high-visibility CSR
    • PSUs under government pressure — their CSR directed toward government priority programs — reducing genuine corporate discretion
    • Loss-making companies — exempt — but their operations may cause the most social and environmental harm

Way forward

  • Strengthening the Regulatory Framework 
    • Reform Schedule VII — make eligible activities broader and more flexible — allow companies to innovate in CSR approaches
    • Develop national CSR strategy — identify priority sectors and geographies where CSR should be directed
    • Strengthen MCA enforcement — consistent penalty application for non-compliance and misreporting
    • Mandate independent third-party audit of CSR expenditure and impact — not self-reporting
    • Develop CSR credit trading — companies exceeding 2% can sell credits to those struggling to identify impactful projects
  • Redirecting CSR to Underserved Geographies 
    • Introduce tax incentives for CSR spending in aspirational districts and tribal areas
    • Develop CSR opportunity maps — district-level need mapping to guide corporate investment
    • Encourage CSR consortiums — multiple companies pooling resources for large-scale intervention in underserved regions
    • Link government contract eligibility to CSR spending in priority geographies
    • Promote sector-specific CSR clusters — companies in same industry collectively addressing shared social impacts
  • Improving Implementation Quality 
    • Build NGO capacity and accreditation system — credible implementing partner ecosystem
    • Promote long-term CSR commitments — 3–5 year program funding rather than annual grants
    • Encourage direct implementation by companies using internal expertise — rather than pass-through grants
    • Develop CSR project preparation support — help companies design rigorous, impactful programs
    • Promote cross-sector partnerships — corporate + government + civil society for maximum impact
  • Institutionalising Impact Measurement 
    • Develop national CSR impact measurement framework — standardised indicators across sectors
    • Mandate outcome reporting — not just expenditure and activity — in annual CSR reports
    • Establish independent CSR impact observatory — track and publish sector-wide CSR effectiveness
    • Build research partnerships with academic institutions — rigorous evaluation of CSR programs 
  • Evolving Corporate Culture 
    • Develop CSR leadership programs — build corporate social responsibility as a professional competency
    • Recognise and reward genuine CSR leadership — national awards, public recognition, regulatory benefits
    • Encourage employee volunteering — leverage corporate human capital not just financial resources
  • Strengthen Local Needs Assessment
    • Companies should design CSR projects after proper consultation with local communities, panchayats, district administration and civil society organisations. This will ensure that CSR addresses real local needs rather than publicity-driven goals.
  • Promote Convergence with Government Schemes
    • CSR should supplement government schemes in areas like education, health, skilling, sanitation, nutrition, water conservation and livelihood creation. This can prevent duplication and improve scale.
  • Support MSMEs, SHGs and Local Enterprises
    • CSR can be used to build local capacities by supporting self-help groups, farmers’ producer organisations, artisans, small entrepreneurs and skill-development centres.
  • Promote Transparency
    • Companies should disclose not only CSR expenditure, but also project location, implementing agency, beneficiaries, outcomes and impact assessment reports.

CSR in India has the potential to make corporate growth more socially responsible and inclusive. However, its success depends on moving beyond token charity and legal compliance. CSR must become a tool for community empowerment, social justice, environmental sustainability and local development. Therefore, India needs a shift from cheque-book CSR to outcome-oriented CSR, where companies do not merely spend, but create lasting social impact.

Sample Mains Questions

Q1. What is Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)? Discuss the CSR provisions under the Companies Act, 2013.
(150 words, 10 marks)

Q2. Examine the role of Corporate Social Responsibility in promoting inclusive growth in India.
(250 words, 15 marks)

Q3. Discuss the major challenges associated with Corporate Social Responsibility in India. Suggest measures to improve its effectiveness.
(250 words, 15 marks)

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