The number of companies reporting on CSR spending as well as total CSR spends by listed companies have increased every year since fiscal 2015, signifying improved compliance. Even as companies intensify their efforts to give back to society, total CSR spend as a percentage of average profit has increased beyond the mandated 2% mark, according to a new report by CRISIL, a leading, agile and innovative global analytics company.
A large majority of both public sector undertakings and private sector companies continued to focus on spending more than the stipulated 2% on CSR.
Compliance is increasing
On aggregate, companies continue to be on mandate with spends of 2.12% – an increase from 2.01% in the previous fiscal. Of the 1,387 listed companies, 918, or 66%, spent 2% or more of their profits – a tad higher than 64% the previous fiscal – while 10%, or 140 companies, spent 3% or more. This was a slight uptick from the 119 companies, or 9%, in the previous fiscal.
45% of the total spend came from companies that spent between 2.01% and 2.99% of their profits on CSR. At the other end, 468 companies, or 33.8%, did not meet their spending mandate in fiscal 2020. Of these, 233 companies spent less than 1%. Of the 1,387 companies, 1,210 had figured in the list of spenders in the previous fiscal as well. As many as 776, or 64%, of these increased their CSR spend on-year. While 422 or 35% reduced spend, 12 companies, or 1%, logged no change.
Except for the Rs. 500-999 crore sales bracket, more than half of the companies in other sales brackets spent 2% or more. The number of companies with net sales of more than Rs 1,000 crore increased from 552 in fiscal 2019 to 567 in fiscal 2020. Of these, as much as 59% spent 2% or more of their profits, marginally lower than in fiscal 2019. The number of companies with net sales of Rs. 10,000 crore fell slightly to 92 from 95 in the previous fiscal. However, 61% of these spent 2% or more of their profits on CSR, up from 59% the previous fiscal.



