Context:
- The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 was introduced in the Lok Sabha and subsequently referred to a 31-member Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC) after objections from the Opposition.
- The Bill seeks to amend the Companies Act, 2013 and the Limited Liability Partnership (LLP) Act, 2008 to improve the regulatory framework and ease of doing business.
Key Highlights:
Government Initiative / Policy Details
- The Bill aims to:
- Decriminalize minor offences under corporate laws.
- Streamline compliance procedures.
- Reduce regulatory burden on businesses.
- Introduces provisions for:
- Hybrid Annual General Meetings (AGMs) and Extraordinary General Meetings.
- Strengthening investor protection mechanisms.
- Handling unpaid dividends.
Regulatory and Structural Changes
- Proposes a framework to convert specified trusts (SEBI/IFSC registered) into LLPs.
- Enables sub-delegation of powers to regulatory bodies such as the National Financial Reporting Authority (NFRA).
- Expands flexibility in corporate governance processes.
CSR and Compliance Changes
- Raises CSR applicability threshold from:
- ₹5 crore profits → ₹10 crore profits
- Extends time for transferring unspent CSR funds:
- From 30 days → 90 days
- Provides exemptions for small companies from:
- Certain CSR provisions
- Auditor-related compliance requirements
Stakeholders Involved
- Corporate entities (Companies & LLPs)
- Investors and shareholders
- Regulatory bodies (e.g., NFRA)
- Parliament (via Joint Committee scrutiny)
- Civil society (through CSR provisions)
Concerns Raised
- Opposition MPs argue:
- Possible dilution of parliamentary oversight
- Increased executive discretion via delegated powers
- Concerns over weakening accountability mechanisms
Relevant Prelims Points:
- Limited Liability Partnership (LLP):
- Hybrid business structure combining features of partnerships and companies
- Partners have limited liability
- Governed by LLP Act, 2008
- Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR):
- Mandated under Section 135 of Companies Act, 2013
- Applies to companies meeting criteria (net worth, turnover, or profit thresholds)
- Requires spending 2% of average net profits on social activities
- National Financial Reporting Authority (NFRA):
- Statutory body under Companies Act, 2013
- Regulates auditing and accounting standards
- Oversees auditors and ensures compliance
- Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC):
- Ad hoc committee constituted to examine specific Bills/issues
- Includes members from both Houses
- Enhances legislative scrutiny
- Possible UPSC areas:
- Difference between LLP vs Company
- CSR provisions and thresholds
- Delegated legislation in India
- Role of parliamentary committees
Relevant Mains Points:
- The Bill reflects India’s broader push towards improving Ease of Doing Business while modernizing corporate regulations.
- Decriminalization of minor offences:
- Reduces fear of penal action for procedural lapses
- Encourages entrepreneurship and compliance culture
- Concerns on governance and accountability:
- Increased delegation of powers to regulators like NFRA may reduce direct parliamentary oversight.
- Raises questions about checks and balances in corporate governance.
- CSR-related changes:
- Raising thresholds may reduce the number of companies under CSR ambit.
- Could impact corporate contribution to social development.
- Institutional implications:
- JPC referral shows importance of deliberative democracy.
- Highlights tension between regulatory flexibility and institutional accountability.
- Linkages for UPSC:
- GS 2 (Polity & Governance): Parliamentary oversight, delegated legislation
- GS 3 (Economy): Corporate governance, ease of doing business
- Ethics: Corporate responsibility vs profit motives
Way Forward
- Ensure balanced reforms that promote ease of doing business without diluting accountability.
- Strengthen parliamentary scrutiny mechanisms.
- Maintain transparency in delegated legislation.
- Safeguard CSR’s role in inclusive development.
- Promote stakeholder consultation before finalizing reforms.
UPSC Relevance:
- Prelims: LLP, CSR provisions, NFRA, JPC.
- Mains: Corporate governance reforms, balance between regulation and ease of doing business, role of parliamentary committees in law-making.
