MCA PROPOSES MANY NEW AMENDMENTS TO THE COMPANIES ACT 2013, PUNISHING COMPANIES THAT FAILED TO SPEND 2% CSR AND “FIT AND PROPER” CRITERIA FOR DEBARRING DIRECTORS FROM HOLDING BOARD POSITION.
BAN ON HOLDING BOARD POSITIONS
The move is a fallout of the IL&FS scandal, where
the government was forced to supersede the board and take control but realised
that it can do little to bar the disqualified directors, including some top
names of the corporate sector, from holding board positions as the new
Companies Act did not provide for such as action.
APPLICATION TO NCLT TO BAR DIRECTORS FOR 5 YEARS
As a result, it has decided to go back to the Companies
Act 1956, which allowed the Centre to not just seek the removal of persons
concerned with the management of a company and suspected of “fraud,
misfeasance, persistent negligence or default in carrying out his obligations
under the law or breach of trust” but also barred them from being appointed
board members for five years from the date of removal. Under the new law the
government will have to move an application before the NCLT.
LEVY OF PENALTY THAT DO NOT SPEND 2% TOWARDS CSR
MCA proposes to levy penalty on companies that do not
meet the mandated 2% spending requirement towards corporate social
responsibility (CSR).
The move to introduce a penalty on companies not
meeting the CSR obligation was inserted as over 40% of the entities were not
complying with the requirement, with close to a fifth not spending any money.
“Companies have been given five years now. It is high time they start complying
with the rules.
DISCLOSURE ON SBO
Companies now have to disclose the details of
significant beneficial ownership, an obligation that was so far cast on
shareholders. The government saw it as a loophole and has sought to plug it.
The rules mandate that details of all shareholders with interest of 10% or more
in a company, either direct or indirect, have to be disclosed.
MANDATORY DEMATERILISATION OF SHARES FOR ALL CATEGORY OF COMPANIES
The government has sought powers to mandate dematerialization
of shares for all category of companies, a move that was recently extended to
public unlisted companies. The step is seen to be crucial to identify the real
owners of unlisted companies, which often remain hidden or can be benami
holdings.
SPEEDING UP THE PROCESS FOR LISTING FOR COMPANIES
The government has proposed amendments to company law
to strengthen the regulatory framework relating to the SFIO and NFRA, while
simultaneously introducing measures to accelerate the listing process for
companies.
NEW CSR IMPLEMENTATION OPTIONS
·
MCA has
also amended Schedule VII to allow CSR spending via Zero Coupon Zero Principal
(ZCZP) instruments issued by registered Not-for-Profit Organizations on Social
Stock Exchanges.
·
Companies
can allocate up to 10% of their CSR expenditure through these instruments.
·
This aims
to ease compliance and provide transparent funding channels for NGOs.
BROADER AMENDMENTS IN THE BILL
DECRIMINALISATION OF OFFENCES:
Several violations will now attract civil penalties instead of
imprisonment.
SIMPLIFIED COMPLIANCE:
·
Electronic
service of documents permitted.
·
AGMs can be
held virtually, but at least one physical meeting every 3 years is mandatory.
Certain companies may be exempted from appointing auditors.
· Small company definition expanded: Paid-up capital limit raised to ₹20 crore; turnover limit raised to ₹200 crore.
Merger/amalgamation approvals: Threshold reduced from
90% to 75% shareholder/creditor approval.
# YOUR COMPLIANCE PARTNER R V SECKAR, FCS, LLB 79047
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