UPSC Mains 2016 GS4 Q13 — CSR and Development
ABC Ltd. is a large transnational company having diversified business activities with a huge shareholder base. The company is continuously expanding and generating employment. The company, in its expansion and diversification programme, decides to establish a new plant at Vikaspuri, an area which is underdeveloped. The new plant is designed to use energy efficient technology that will help the company to save production cost by 20%. The company's decision goes well with the Government policy of attracting investment to develop such underdeveloped regions. The Government has also announced tax holiday for five years for the companies that invest in underdeveloped areas. However, the new plant may bring chaos for the inhabitants of Vikaspuri region, which is otherwise tranquil. The new plant may result in increased cost of living, aliens migrating to the region, disturbing the social and economic order. The company sensing the possible protest tried to educate the people of Vikaspuri region and public in general that how its Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) policy would help overcome the likely difficulties of the residents of Vikaspuri region. In spite of this the protests begin and some of the residents decided to approach the judiciary as their plea before the Government did not yield any result. (a) Identify the issues involved in the case. (b) What can be suggested to satisfy the company's goal and to address the residents' concerns ? (300 words) 25
Question Decoded — examiner's intent
- Directive verbs
- Identifysuggest
- Scope keywords
- transnational companyunderdevelopedenergy efficient technologysocial and economic orderCorporate Social Responsibility (CSR)approach the judiciary
- Implicit sub-parts
- The ethical dilemma between economic utilitarianism (growth/employment) and the rights of a localized community (tranquility/order).
- The efficacy of the 'CSR as a bribe' approach versus 'Inclusive Development' as a legitimate strategy to gain social license.
- The role of the State in balancing industrial investment incentives with the protection of vulnerable inhabitants' lifestyles.
- Long-term mitigation strategies to prevent 'alienation' of locals due to migration and cost-of-living inflation.
- Common pitfalls
- Treating the protest as purely a law-and-order or PR problem rather than an ethical crisis of displacement and cultural disruption.
- Failing to address the specific 'tax holiday' and 'energy efficiency' components, which highlight the company's strong profit motive versus the residents' existential concerns.
- Focusing only on monetary compensation instead of addressing the 'social and economic order' and the 'alien migration' fear.
- Ignoring the judicial dimension; a good answer must address how to satisfy legal scrutiny through transparency and due process.
- Dimensions required
- Ethical (Utilitarianism vs. Rights-based approach)Socio-Economic (Gentrifcation and demographic shifts)Legal-Regulatory (Social Impact Assessment and Environmental Clearance)Corporate Governance (Social License to Operate)
- Marks allocation hint
Allocate approximately 75-100 words to identifying the multi-layered issues (Part A), ensuring you cover ethics, economics, and sociology. Devote the remaining 150-175 words to Part B, focusing on actionable solutions like participatory planning, skill development for locals to prevent 'alienation,' and a structured Social Impact Assessment (SIA) to move beyond mere CSR rhetoric.
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