💥Join UPSC 2027,2028 Mentorship (June Batch) + XFactor Notes & Microthemes PDF

In contemporary world, corporate sector’s contribution in generating wealth and employment is increasing. In doing so, they are bringing in unprecedented onslaught on the climate, environmental sustainability and living conditions of human beings. In this background, do you find that Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) is efficient and sufficient enough to fulfill the social roles and responsibilities needed in the corporate world for which the CSR is mandated? Critically examine.

CSR refers to the responsibility of companies to operate ethically, contribute to sustainable development, and minimise negative social and environmental impacts while pursuing profits.

“The business of business is not just business.”

The Paradox- Wealth Generation vs. Environmental Onslaught

CSR fulfilling social role and responsibilities

Mandatory Compliance in India (2% of profits) has channeled nearly into social sectors.

Disaster Response- Eg- Reliance funded plants to produce medical oxygen during COVID.

Innovation in Education- Eg- “Hole-in-the-wall” project by Sony and NIIT for computer literacy to slum children.

Project Nanhi Kali (Mahindra Group) – Providing 10 years of academic support and material kits to underprivileged girls to reduce dropout rates.

Healthcare Infrastructure- Eg- Vedanta’s “Nand Ghar” initiative for transforming Anganwadis into modern child welfare centers.

Skill Development- Eg- Mahindra & Mahindra’s “Hunar” program for training in specialized technical skills.

Kaushalya (Tata Motors) – Training unemployed youth using a “Learn and Earn” model.

Sanitation & Water- Eg- ITC’s “Mission Sunehra Kal” for promoting “Climate Smart” agriculture through watershed development

Transition to Renewable Energy- Eg- Adani Foundation’s projects for solar-powered rural electrification.

Women Empowerment- Eg- HUL’s “Project Shakti” for creating a network of micro-entrepreneurs (“Shakti Ammas”) to sell hygiene products.

Issues with CSR

Greenwashing- Using CSR for PR. Eg- Coca-Cola’s “World Without Waste” campaign while being world’s top plastic polluter for years.

Peripheral Activity- CSR is often a “side project”.

Geographical Bias- concentrated in industrialized states, ignoring backward regions like Bihar or the Northeast.

The “Checklist” Approach- focus on spending the money rather than the impact or outcome.

Lack of Expertise, leading to poorly designed projects.

CSR (2%) is a fraction of the cost of the “Externalities” the company causes

Crony CSR- channeling funds into “in-house” foundations or politically connected NGOs.

Difficulty in Measuring Impact- no universal standard to quantify the “Social Return on Investment” (SROI).

A Way Forward

ESG Integration in core investment and operational strategy.

Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) for the entire lifecycle of product. Eg- plastic waste management.

Impact measurement through third-party ethical audits.

Circular Economy- Shifting from “Take-Make-Dispose” model to “Reduce-Reuse-Recycle.”

True sustainability requires Systems Change, where profit and planet are seen as mutually inclusive.