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    The Next Question for India’s CSR Ecosystem

    GovernanceAccountabilityThe Next Question for India’s CSR Ecosystem
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    The Next Question for India’s CSR Ecosystem

    The success of the Social Stock Exchange will ultimately be measured not only by the funds that pass through it, but also by the incentives it creates for the sector as a whole.

    By Desh Raj Singh

    Public policy is often assessed by its immediate impact. The longer-term consequences are usually harder to predict because reforms do more than change rules; they also influence behaviour.

    The recent decision allowing companies to deploy up to 10 per cent of their CSR expenditure through Social Stock Exchange-linked instruments falls into that category.

    At one level, the reform is straightforward. It seeks to bring greater transparency, stronger governance and improved accountability to the social sector. Organisations listed on the Social Stock Exchange are expected to meet disclosure and reporting requirements that provide companies with greater visibility into how resources are deployed and what outcomes are achieved.

    Few would disagree with these objectives.

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    Over the past decade, India’s CSR ecosystem has matured considerably. Companies today are expected to demonstrate not only that resources have been spent, but also that they have been spent effectively. Better governance standards, stronger reporting frameworks and greater transparency are natural outcomes of that evolution.

    The Social Stock Exchange represents another step in the same direction.

    Much of the discussion around the reform has focused on the immediate provision itself. Companies can now deploy a portion of their CSR expenditure through a regulated platform designed to improve transparency and accountability.

    That is the direct effect.

    The more interesting question is whether the reform could also have an indirect effect on how organisations are evaluated within the broader CSR ecosystem.

    Scale matters in this discussion. According to data reported on the National CSR Portal, corporate India spent nearly ₹35,000 crore on CSR activities in FY 2023-24. As corporate profits grow and more companies come within the ambit of CSR obligations, annual CSR spending is likely to increase significantly in the years ahead. When resources of that magnitude respond to new signals of credibility and governance, even subtle shifts in funding behaviour can have implications across the wider development ecosystem.

    Frameworks eventually become signals

    This is not because the regulations require it. They do not.

    Nor is there any indication that companies are expected to prioritise Social Stock Exchange-listed organisations while deploying the remainder of their CSR budgets.

    Yet institutional ecosystems are shaped by more than formal rules.

    In almost every sector, certain frameworks eventually become signals. Certifications become indicators of quality. Governance standards become indicators of reliability. Disclosure practices become indicators of organisational readiness.

    The social sector is unlikely to be an exception.

    For corporate decision-makers, this is understandable. Organisations that provide clearer disclosures, structured reporting and measurable outcomes are easier to evaluate. Better information reduces uncertainty and strengthens confidence in funding decisions.

    Indeed, one of the intended benefits of the Social Stock Exchange is precisely that it helps build such confidence.

    The question, therefore, is not whether the reform is beneficial. It clearly is.

    The question is whether the signals created by the reform eventually influence behaviour beyond the transactions that occur through the platform itself.

    Influences behaviour

    Today, the proportion of CSR expenditure that may be routed through Social Stock Exchange-linked instruments is limited. The overwhelming majority of CSR funding will continue to flow through existing channels.

    However, if exchange listing gradually comes to be viewed as one indicator of organisational credibility, companies may naturally take that into account while evaluating potential partners across their broader CSR portfolios.

    Whether such a shift occurs remains to be seen.

    But it is worth paying attention to because the most significant impact of many reforms often emerges not from the rules themselves, but from the incentives they create.

    That is particularly true in sectors where trust, accountability and credibility play a central role in decision-making.

    India’s CSR framework has evolved considerably since its inception, and the Social Stock Exchange represents a welcome addition to that evolution. Greater transparency, stronger governance and improved impact reporting can only strengthen confidence in the sector.

    The next phase of the conversation may therefore be less about how the platform functions and more about how it influences behaviour across the wider ecosystem.

    The success of the Social Stock Exchange will ultimately be measured not only by the funds that pass through it, but also by the incentives it creates for the sector as a whole. That is a question whose answer will become clear only with time.

    Desh Raj Singh works with the Sharda Welfare Foundation.

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