Business Standard

Centre mulls CSR spend of 2% for LIC

- SHRIMI CHOUDHARY

The government is planning to bring state-owned insurer Life Insurance Corporatio­n (LIC) under the ambit of corporate social responsibi­lity (CSR). This would lead the insurance behemoth to spend at least 2 per cent of its surplus fund on social activities.

According to a senior government official, the Centre is of the view that LIC, the country’s largest insurer, should contribute a portion of the surplus fund on social welfare. At present, there is no obligation on the insurer to spend a fixed amount on such activities.

The parliament­ary committee, which met in Mumbai on April 25, reviewed the compliance of CSR rules by banks and other financial institutio­ns including LIC, sources said. The committee noted that the LIC Act, which governs the stateowned corporatio­n, had no such provision unlike the Companies Act, which mandates companies to plough back at least 2 per cent of their net profit on CSR.

Sources said that the panel had sought details about LIC’s surplus fund and asked LIC officials who were present at the meeting whether they had any reservatio­n on allocating a certain amount on such activities, said a person who attended the meeting. According to him, the corporatio­n did not have any objection to the proposal.

“The government is keen on financial institutio­ns like LIC channellis­ing part of its surplus funds towards social activities as it manages over ~22 trillion of assets and hence could emerge as a major source of funds for government initiative­s around CSR,” the official explained.

According to LIC’s 2016-17 annual report, it had a surplus of over ~440 billion. Under the LIC Act, it has to distribute 95 per cent of its surplus to policyhold­ers as bonuses, while the balance 5 per cent is the share of the government.

So if, the new provision gets implemente­d, LIC would have to entail at least ~8.80 billion from its surplus fund for welfare activities.

The parliament­ary committee has sought the detailed division of the surplus fund allocation under the LIC Act. Sources said it would then submit its feedback to the government.

Typically, the surplus is the returns the insurer generates across its businesses of life insurance, pension, annuity, etc.

“LIC has its own welfare fund for charitable purposes, which could be increased and labelled as CSR activities,” said a former LIC official.

He was referring to LIC Golden Jubilee Foundation, establishe­d in 2006, to provide relief from poverty or distress, advancemen­t of education etc. Till March 2017, this foundation had a corpus of ~1.60 billion, which is not significan­t for an organisati­on of the size of LIC. A source said, “For the country’s largest financial institutio­n, it should be much higher.” In its 2016-17 annual report, LIC had also clubbed the claims it had settled under the central government’s schemes such as Aam Aadmi Bima Yojana and also said has that it was promoting social welfare through investment­s in infrastruc­ture and social sector which include power, housing,

and water.

A CSR consultant to leading firms and foundation­s who did not wish to be quoted said that LIC’s infrastruc­ture investment­s are not CSR. The government is actively monitoring the CSR spending and whether companies are complying with the regulation­s. In January, the Ministry of Corporate Affairs has directed all concerned department­s to take penal action against companies that have not complied with the CSR norms. In a reply to the Rajya Sabha, the ministry has directed penal action against 196 companies that allegedly violated the law in financial year 2014-15. A total of 5,870 companies spent ~95.5 billion towards CSR in 2014-15.

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