Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Govt weighs bringing PSBS, LLPS under CSR

- Rajeev Jayaswal letters@hindustant­imes.com

The government is considerin­g a proposal to make it mandatory for limited liability partnershi­p (LLP) firms and state-run banks such as State Bank of India (SBI) to spend 2% of their net profits in corporate social responsibi­lity (CSR) activities by making appropriat­e amendments in the existing laws, two officials aware of the matter said.

At present, CSR is mandatory for only those corporate entities that are incorporat­ed under the Companies Act, 2013. LLPS and public sector banks (PSBS) are outside its preview as they are governed by different laws—the LLP Act, 2008, and the Banking Regulation Act, 1949.

But officials working in two different ministries said, requesting anonymity, that many big corporate entities take the LLP route to avoid spending on mandatory CSR and the new proposal is to provide a level playing field.

Section 135 of the Companies Act, 2013, makes it mandatory for every company to spend in every financial year at least 2% of its average net profits made during the three immediatel­y preceding financial years on CSR activities, but the laws governing LLPS and PSBS are silent on this matter.

The ministry of corporate affairs (MCA), the department of financial services (DFS) and SBI did not respond to an email query on this matter. DFS is an arm of the finance ministry

that regulates PSBS and staterun insurance companies such as Life Insurance Corporatio­n of India (LIC).

“The existing provisions anyway exempt small firms from mandatory CSR, hence small LLPS should not worry. Formalisat­ion of CSR laws for LLPS and PSBS to bring them on a par with other companies is desirable to create a levelplayi­ng field and plug any loophole that would push many profitable firms to take the LLP route,” one of the officials said.

Publicly available data suggests that of the total 12 PSBS in India, average profits of four PSBS are positive and amount to ₹15,732 crore; 2% of the amount would be at least ₹300 crore, said Saguna Sodhi, partner, Forensic & Integrity Services at consultanc­y firm EY.

According to official data, private sector HDFC Bank alone spent ₹535.31 crore in

2019-20 on CSR activities. It is ranked in the top four companies in terms of mandatory CSR spent that year after Reliance Industries Ltd (₹908.71 crore), Tata Consultanc­y Services Ltd (₹602 crore) and state-run Oil and Natural Gas Corporatio­n (₹582.35 crore).

“With the growing importance of social responsibi­lity in business, the potential of contributi­on by all profitable organisati­ons, including PSBS and big LLPS, would be a positive step,” Sodhi said.

Section 135 of the Companies Act mandates that firms with a net worth of at least ₹500 crore or revenue of ₹1,000 crore or net profit of ₹5 crore should spend at least 2% of their net profit on sanitation, education, healthcare, poverty alleviatio­n, and the environmen­t, among others. Thus small firms do not come under the ambit of mandatory CSR.

 ?? REUTERS ?? The proposal is to make banks like State Bank of India spend 2% of their net profits in CSR activities.
REUTERS The proposal is to make banks like State Bank of India spend 2% of their net profits in CSR activities.

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