MUMBAI: Cumulative spending on corporate social responsibility (CSR) has shot past the magical Rs 50,000 crore mark in just four years since the legislative mandate was implemented.
A CRISIL estimate shows spending by listed companies rose 12% on-year in fiscal 2018 to Rs 10,000 crore – the first time it has reached this mark. Assuming the same rate of growth, spending by unlisted companies is estimated to be Rs 5,100 crore for the year, taking the total for the year to Rs 15,100 crore.
With this, cumulative spending over the four years stands at Rs 34,100 crore for listed companies and Rs 18,900 crore for unlisted ones, totalling Rs 53,000 crore.
Overall, 1,913 companies met the eligibility criteria, of which, 667 were unable to spend for various reasons. Of the balance 1,246, over two-thirds spent 2% or more of their profits, compared with 57% in fiscal 2017. And 12%, or 153 companies, spent 3% or more.
Interestingly, the on-year growth in spending on CSR by our select set was the same as the on-year growth in its profit – at 12% – indicating it is stabilising.
Large companies continued to hog the credit, both in the public and private sectors.
Energy companies opened their purse the widest, with 51 of them accounting for 23% of the overall spending, followed by manufacturing, financial services and information technology services.
Among the states, average CSR spend per company was the highest in the National Capital Territory, closely followed by Karnataka and Maharashtra. In terms of the quantum of spend, Tamil Nadu saw a whopping 26% jump, followed by Maharashtra with 22% and Karnataka with 19%.
As for the spending heads, while education & skill development and healthcare & sanitation remained the top spending heads, two areas grew at a fast clip – spending on national heritage protection has tripled and that on promotion of sports has more than doubled since fiscal 2015.
And as in the previous years, nearly three-fourths of eligible companies used implementing agencies. Meanwhile, the rules of the game have changed, with the Companies (Amendment) Act, 2017, saying eligibility criteria would now be based on financials of the ‘immediately preceding financial year’ rather than the earlier stipulation of ‘any three preceding financial years’. The estimate shows this can shrink the universe a little in years to come, in terms of both number of companies and their total spend.
More importantly, as spending reaches meaningful proportions, there is a need to improve the quality and impact of all that spend on the ground.
(Reported by India CSR Network)