During the current year, 81 of the 100 companies disclosed they have undertaken an impact assessment, up from 59 companies in FY16, Economic Report said.
Corporates have spent Rs.70.5 bn, an increase of 8% compared to the previous year on CSR (corporate social responsibility)initiatives. This puts the CSR spend at 98% of the prescribed spend – based on the Act, The S&P BSE 100 companies were required to spend Rs.72.0 bn on CSR, according to a recent report released by IiAS, a proxy advisory firm.
The report says companies spent 1.9% of their three-year average profits, PSUs met the 2% target spend. However, the actual spend at Rs.20.6 bn this year was lower by 13.8% following a 26% decline in their three-year average profits. The private sector spent Rs.47.3 bn, at an average of 1.8%.
Over 30% of the aggregate FY17 spend was made towards education projects while another 30% was spent on rural development and healthcare projects. Addressing hunger, poverty and malnutrition, and environment sustainability related projects are gaining new grounds as there seems to be substantial increase in CSR spend in these areas, said the report.
Contributions to the Prime Minister’s Relief Fund, and technology incubators have declined by 89% this year.
A lacuna till now has been disclosures on impact assessment. This is changing. During the current year, 81 of the 100 companies disclosed they have undertaken an impact assessment, up from 59 companies in FY16.
The Companies Act 2013 expects businesses to spend 2% of their three-year average profits on social initiatives. Even before the Act was put in place companies recognized they need to think about more than just profits – and did so.
But since CSR has become mandatory, companies have embraced social causes with a fervour. They now apply the same rigour to causes as diverse – as hunger, poverty, healthcare, education, environmental sustainability, and rural development, as they bring to their business.
(Credit: Economic Times)