CSR Assignment
CSR Assignment
JODHPUR
COMPANY LAW II
ASSIGNMENT (CA-II)
Submitted to:
Submitted by:
Niharika Choudhary
1120
Section A
VI Semester
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Where net profit excludes income from overseas branch & divided distributed by company
on which this section apply.
If any company on which CSR provisions were applicable cease to come in above criteria
for consecutive three years , they are not required to follow the provision of CSR
Enhanced Applicability
Mandatory Expenditure
Section 135(5) mandates 2 percent of the Average net profit during the three
immediately preceding financial years.
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Social and
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Tax Treatment of CSR Spending: Presently the Income Tax Law provides for
deduction under section 80G for donations to certain funds and institutions with
maximum limit of 10% of the total income. Deduction for CSR spending should
preferably be over and above deduction under section 80G to give a direct motivation
to companies to spend for CSR activities. Alternatively CSR may be declared as a
business expense and deduction may be allowed under the Income Tax Law. Apart
from this capital and revenue expenditure on CSR activities require separate tax
treatment to avoid future litigations. The Income Tax Law has to address these and
various other issues which we hope that government would be covering in the next
Budget of 2014.
CSR bill also recommends that local area action and collaboration are preferred thus,
paving way for wide cluster level actions. So, for example, automotive clusters might
see bigger OEMs pooling their resources to bring real impact for the residing
communities like educational/vocational institutes, comprehensive environment up
gradation programs, healthcare facilities etc. This also suggests that projects/schemes
designed exclusively for employees will not qualify under this act as it wants to
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135
and
is,
to
that
extent,
ultra
vires.
Definition of CSR: There appears to be a major contradiction in the rules in respect of the
meaning of the words 'corporate social responsibility'. The Companies Act, 2013, defines
CSR activities to mean an identified set of activities set out in the separate schedule to the
Act. However, a reading of the definition in the rules indicates that the list of CSR activities
provided in the rules (which also includes the schedule activities) is only illustrative and not
exhaustive. At the same time, an overall reading of the rules strongly suggests that the
scheduled activities alone will be considered for the purpose of CSR. Whether or not social
activities falling outside the purview of the schedule form a part of CSR activities still
remains doubtful.
Local Area Preference: The Act provides that a company should give preference to the local
area in which it operates for CSR spending. But its silent for situations where company has
more than one operational office in the same city and also it fails to address the location of a
factory, as opposed to the corporate office, the target of preference.
Contributions from political Parties: The CSR rules have rightly excluded contributions
directly or indirectly made to a political party from the scope of CSR activity. But, the act is
unclear on contributions made to institutions affiliated with one or more politicians or those
located in a constituency represented by a politician who has some form of regulatory
supervision or leverage over that company and also about activities/institutions being run
under the trusteeship or office of a politician.
Thus while the new rules are well-meaning, there is definitely room for further clarity and
certainty.
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