Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) has become a strategic tool for socio-economic development in India, especially after the Companies Act, 2013, which mandates companies meeting eligibility criteria to allocate 2% of net profits for CSR activities. This study presents a sector-wise comparative analysis of CSR effectiveness-the degree to which initiatives achieve their predefined targets-and impact, which refers to long-term societal and economic changes. The sectors analyzed include education, healthcare, rural development, environmental sustainability, and skill development, each showing distinct patterns of effectiveness and impact. For example, the education sector achieved 125% of its targets, leading to improved literacy by 3-5% and 60% of students gaining employment. Healthcare initiatives achieved 115% target fulfillment, resulting in a reduction of disease prevalence from 15% to 10% and increased health awareness by 30%. In contrast, rural development and environmental projects, despite reasonable effectiveness (84-85%), demonstrated gradual or delayed impact, with incremental income gains of INR 500-800 per month and carbon absorption of 40-50 tons/year respectively. Skill development programs achieved 120% of targets, resulting in 70% employment post-training and income increases of INR 8,000-12,000/month. The study concludes that while high effectiveness generally supports strong impact, sectoral differences, implementation challenges, and time horizons critically influence outcomes. The findings emphasize the need for robust monitoring systems, long-term planning, and transparent reporting to ensure sustainable and measurable CSR performance across India.
Fameeda (Sat,) studied this question.