Context:
- The Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Amendment Bill, 2026 seeks to amend the FCRA Act, 2010, which regulates foreign funding to NGOs, associations, and individuals in India.
- The Bill aims to strengthen transparency, accountability, and regulatory oversight, but has also raised concerns about centralisation and impact on civil society.
Key Highlights:
Objective of the Amendment
- Ensure better monitoring and utilisation of foreign funds.
- Prevent misuse of funds affecting national interest, sovereignty, and public order.
Major Provisions Introduced
- Creation of “Designated Authority”
- A new authority empowered to:
- Take control of assets created using foreign funds.
- Manage, supervise, and dispose of such assets if registration is cancelled or surrendered.
- Cessation of Registration Certificate
- Registration will automatically cease if:
- Renewal is not applied for or denied
- Registration expires
- Assets and funds may be vested with the Designated Authority.
- Asset Management Framework
- Provides a mechanism for handling foreign-funded assets when organisations become defunct or non-compliant.
- Enhanced Compliance and Monitoring
- Stricter provisions for:
- Reporting and disclosures
- Renewal procedures
- Utilisation of funds
- Increased accountability of office bearers and NGOs.
- Safeguards on Usage of Funds
- Ensures funds are not used for activities that:
- Affect national security
- Disturb public order
- Undermine sovereignty and integrity of India
Stakeholders Involved
- NGOs, trusts, and civil society organisations
- Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA)
- Beneficiary communities dependent on NGO services
Significance / Concerns
- Strengthens regulatory control and transparency.
- Raises concerns over:
- Excessive centralisation
- Possible impact on NGO autonomy and functioning
- Implications for democratic space and civil society participation
Relevant Prelims Points:
- FCRA Act, 2010:
- Regulates acceptance and utilisation of foreign contributions.
- Applicable to individuals, NGOs, associations, companies.
- Foreign Contribution:
- Includes donations, delivery, or transfer of funds or articles from foreign sources.
- Registration Requirement:
- Mandatory for entities engaged in cultural, economic, educational, religious, or social activities.
- Key Restrictions under FCRA:
- Prohibits funding for activities against national interest.
- Restricts certain categories (e.g., public servants, judges, election candidates).
- FCRA Account Rule:
- Foreign funds must be received in a designated bank account (SBI, New Delhi branch).
- Amendments in 2020 (Background):
- Prohibition on sub-granting (transfer of funds).
- Cap on administrative expenses (20%).
- Mandatory Aadhaar identification for key functionaries.
- New Concept (2026 Bill):
- Designated Authority for asset control and management.
Relevant Mains Points:
Rationale Behind the Bill
- Prevent diversion and misuse of foreign funds.
- Strengthen national security framework.
- Improve regulatory clarity and administrative efficiency.
Key Issues and Concerns
- Impact on Civil Society
- Increased compliance may:
- Limit operational flexibility
- Reduce foreign funding inflows
- May affect sectors like health, education, welfare services.
- Centralisation of Power
- Enhanced powers to Centre may lead to:
- Reduced institutional autonomy
- Concerns over executive overreach
- Asset Control Provisions
- Government control over NGO assets may:
- Create uncertainty
- Discourage foreign donors
- Democratic and Rights Concerns
- Possible impact on:
- Freedom of association (Article 19)
- Role of NGOs in advocacy and accountability
- Balance between Regulation and Freedom
- Core issue:
- Ensuring transparency and security without restricting legitimate civil society activity
Way Forward
- Introduce clear safeguards against arbitrary cancellation.
- Ensure consultative approach with NGOs and stakeholders.
- Strengthen domestic funding sources (CSR, philanthropy).
- Promote ease of compliance with digital transparency tools.
- Maintain balance between national security and democratic freedoms.
UPSC Relevance
- GS II – Governance, civil society, fundamental rights.
- GS III – Internal security, financial regulation.
- GS IV – Ethics in governance, transparency vs autonomy.
