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Indian Firms Need To Invest In CSR Activities To Attract Foreign Investments: Business Leader Rajesh Chhabara

Indian Firms Need To Invest In CSR Activities To Attract Foreign Investments, Says Business Leader Rajesh Chhabara
A customer walks past CSR Ltd. white sugar products on a shelf at a supermarket in Melbourne, Australia, on Tuesday, Jan. 12, 2010. Bright Food Group Co., the biggest food company in Shanghai, offered as much as A$1.5 billion ($1.4 billion) cash for CSR Ltd.'s sugar unit to gain raw materials after global prices more than doubled in the past year. Photographer: Luis Enrique Ascui/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Bloomberg via Getty Images
A customer walks past CSR Ltd. white sugar products on a shelf at a supermarket in Melbourne, Australia, on Tuesday, Jan. 12, 2010. Bright Food Group Co., the biggest food company in Shanghai, offered as much as A$1.5 billion ($1.4 billion) cash for CSR Ltd.'s sugar unit to gain raw materials after global prices more than doubled in the past year. Photographer: Luis Enrique Ascui/Bloomberg via Getty Images

SINGAPORE -- Indian companies need to improve on their Corporate Social Responsibility disclosure to attract more foreign investments, an Indian-origin business leader said today.

Indian companies have a mandatory two per cent spending on Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) which was improving their standings globally. But there was a need to do more work, Rajesh Chhabara, Managing Director of Singapore-based investment consultancy CSR Works said.

"Businesses in India has a very strong tradition of community related or charity work but that is not CSR or sustainability," Chhabara said while calling on the need to build on such community work into an internationally- recognised CSR format.

Indian companies are rated just behind Japan, China, Hong Kong and Taiwan, the Asian leaders in CSR. They need to improve on their CSR disclosure to attract a bigger share from USD 21.4 trillion in the globally-spread Socially Responsible Investment Funds (SRI), he said.

But there are more opportunities to attract the investment from the Global Sustainable Investment Alliance (GSIA) which in 2014 had an estimated USD 21.4 trillion in SRI funds for companies that disclose their social and environmental performance such as through annual Sustainability Reporting.

The SRI funds has seen a phenomenal growth from USD 550 billion in 2012 which are meant for investing globally in companies that qualify on the basis of regular disclosure of sustainability performance by reporting to relevant authorities.

Chhabara estimated that only 0.6 per cent or USD 12.8 billion of this huge funds were being invested in Asian companies which are transparent in their CSR activities.

To support the Asian companies, CSR Works organised its inaugural Asia Sustainability Reporting Awards on 28 January, 2016, with the support of the British and the Canadian High Commissions in Singapore.

"In line with global trends, more and more companies in Asia are embarking on sustainability reporting. Our aim is to encourage and promote sustainability disclosure by honouring those who have demonstrated leadership in sustainability reporting," Chhabara said.

CSR is a form of corporate self-regulation integrated into a business model.

India's Birla Carbon won Asia's Best online CSR Communication and Asia's Best Materiality Report awards while YES Bank took Asia's Best Community Reporting honor from 180 entries.

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