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Lok Sabha passes Companies Amendment Bill

Nirmala Sitharaman said the draft law will also ensure more accountability and better enforcement to strengthen the corporate governance norms.

Nirmala Sitharaman in lok sabha
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Published : Jul 26, 2019, 6:13 PM IST

Updated : Jul 27, 2019, 2:27 PM IST

New Delhi: Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Friday said the government has de-registered 4 lakh shell companies as the Lok Sabha approved a bill seeking to tighten CSR norms and ensuring stricter action for non-compliance of the company law regulations.

Piloting the Companies Amendment Bill 2019, the minister said companies not spending the mandatory 2 per cent profit on Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) activities for a total period of four years will be required to deposit the amount in a special account.

Lok Sabha passes Companies Amendment Bill

The amendments in the Companies Act, she added, were aimed at improving ease of doing business and also reducing the compliance burden on the companies, especially the smaller ones.

The Bill was later passed by the Lower House unanimously after Congress leader Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury withdrew statutory resolution opposing it.

Responding to the concerns of members on shell companies, Sithsaraman said the word "shell companies" has not been defined in the rule book, but it is loosely referred to inactive companies or those which do not maintain a registered office.

Read More:No plan to raise rail fares for now: Piyush Goyal

"Four lakh companies have been identified and de-registered," she said, adding non-maintenance of registered office will be a ground for de-registration of companies.

A key change in the Bill pertains to CSR spending, wherein companies would have to mandatorily keep unspent money into a special account.

Under the Act, companies earning profit of over Rs 5 crore, turnover of Rs 100 crore or networth of more than Rs 500 crore are required to shell out at least two per cent of their three-year annual average net profit towards CSR activities.

India, Sitharaman said, has become the first country to make CSR spending mandatory through a law.

The companies will have one year to firm up the CSR proposal and another three years to spend funds.

In case money remains unspent for one plus three years, the money will have to be moved to an escrow account, she said, adding it could even be the Prime Minister's, Relief Fund.

The bill empowers the Registrar of Companies (ROC) to initiate action for removal of the name of the company from Register of companies if it is not carrying on any business or operation in accord with the company law.

Among other things, the bill also provides for re-categorisation of 16 minor offences as purely civil defaults, transferring of functions with regard to dealing with applications for change of financial year to Central government and shifting of powers for conversion from public to private companies from NCLT to the central government, as well as more clarity with respect to certain powers of the National Financial Reporting Authority (NFRA).

New Delhi: Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Friday said the government has de-registered 4 lakh shell companies as the Lok Sabha approved a bill seeking to tighten CSR norms and ensuring stricter action for non-compliance of the company law regulations.

Piloting the Companies Amendment Bill 2019, the minister said companies not spending the mandatory 2 per cent profit on Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) activities for a total period of four years will be required to deposit the amount in a special account.

Lok Sabha passes Companies Amendment Bill

The amendments in the Companies Act, she added, were aimed at improving ease of doing business and also reducing the compliance burden on the companies, especially the smaller ones.

The Bill was later passed by the Lower House unanimously after Congress leader Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury withdrew statutory resolution opposing it.

Responding to the concerns of members on shell companies, Sithsaraman said the word "shell companies" has not been defined in the rule book, but it is loosely referred to inactive companies or those which do not maintain a registered office.

Read More:No plan to raise rail fares for now: Piyush Goyal

"Four lakh companies have been identified and de-registered," she said, adding non-maintenance of registered office will be a ground for de-registration of companies.

A key change in the Bill pertains to CSR spending, wherein companies would have to mandatorily keep unspent money into a special account.

Under the Act, companies earning profit of over Rs 5 crore, turnover of Rs 100 crore or networth of more than Rs 500 crore are required to shell out at least two per cent of their three-year annual average net profit towards CSR activities.

India, Sitharaman said, has become the first country to make CSR spending mandatory through a law.

The companies will have one year to firm up the CSR proposal and another three years to spend funds.

In case money remains unspent for one plus three years, the money will have to be moved to an escrow account, she said, adding it could even be the Prime Minister's, Relief Fund.

The bill empowers the Registrar of Companies (ROC) to initiate action for removal of the name of the company from Register of companies if it is not carrying on any business or operation in accord with the company law.

Among other things, the bill also provides for re-categorisation of 16 minor offences as purely civil defaults, transferring of functions with regard to dealing with applications for change of financial year to Central government and shifting of powers for conversion from public to private companies from NCLT to the central government, as well as more clarity with respect to certain powers of the National Financial Reporting Authority (NFRA).

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Last Updated : Jul 27, 2019, 2:27 PM IST
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