Lok Sabha sends Corporate Law Amendment Bill 2026 to JPC
UPSC Study Note: Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 — Lok Sabha Reference to JPC
1. At a Glance
- The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 seeks to amend two statutes simultaneously: the Companies Act, 2013 and the Limited Liability Partnership (LLP) Act, 2008, making it a composite corporate-law reform bill. [S1][S2]
- Core thrust: decriminalisation of minor procedural violations (replacing imprisonment/criminal fines with civil monetary penalties) and rationalisation of compliance burdens — the second major decriminalisation wave after 2020. [S1][S3]
- UPSC relevance: intersects GS-II (Parliament, legislation), GS-III (Indian economy, ease of doing business, corporate governance, CSR), and Ethics (GS-IV on CSR obligations).
- Bill was sent to a Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC) by Lok Sabha (March 23, 2026) — procedurally significant as a rare pre-passage detailed scrutiny mechanism for economic legislation. [S1][S2]
2. Why in the News
- March 23, 2026: Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman introduced the Bill in Lok Sabha; the House immediately adopted a motion (by voice vote) to refer it to a JPC comprising members from both Houses of Parliament. [S2][Article]
- JPC reporting deadline: Last day of the first week of the Monsoon Session, 2026. [S1]
- Opposition members — Manish Tewari (Congress), Saugata Roy (Trinamool Congress), and T. Sumathy (DMK) — raised objections, claiming the Bill dilutes mandatory CSR (2% of profit) provisions; the FM refuted this. [Article]
- Business Standard reported the Bill also proposes to empower NFRA (National Financial Reporting Authority), adding a regulatory-strengthening dimension. [S3]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 2013 | Companies Act, 2013 enacted — replaced Companies Act, 1956; introduced CSR mandate (Section 135), NFRA, class action suits. |
| 2008 | LLP Act, 2008 enacted — created a hybrid business structure combining corporate and partnership features. |
| 2019 | Companies (Amendment) Act, 2019 — first round of decriminalisation; shifted some offences to in-house adjudication. |
| 2020 | Companies (Amendment) Act, 2020 — major decriminalisation: 46 offences re-categorised; introduced producer company provisions. |
| 2021 | Company Law Committee (CLC) reconstituted under Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA). |
| 2022 | CLC submitted its report identifying further gaps in compliance architecture, recommending additional decriminalisation and merger threshold revision. [S1][Article] |
| 2026 (March) | Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 introduced in Lok Sabha; referred to JPC. [S1][S2] |
- Driving rationale: World Bank Ease of Doing Business rankings; PM's vision of reducing "inspector raj"; aligning India's corporate law with global best practices (UK Companies Act model, Singapore LLP framework).
4. Core Static Facts
Bill identity - Short title: The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 [S1] - Introduced in: Lok Sabha, March 23, 2026 [S2] - Introduced by: Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman [Article] - Acts amended: Companies Act, 2013 + LLP Act, 2008 [S1] - Nodal ministry: Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA) - Parliamentary referral: JPC — report deadline: last day of first week, Monsoon Session 2026 [S1]
Key substantive provisions [S1][Article]
| Provision | Before Bill | After Bill |
|---|---|---|
| CSR applicability threshold (net profit) | Not explicitly quantified in Act (rules-based) | Updated to ₹10 crore or such sum as prescribed |
| Shareholder approval for mergers/amalgamations | 90% | 75% |
| Creditor approval threshold (mergers) | 90% | 75% |
| Minor procedural lapses | Criminal liability (fine/imprisonment) | Civil monetary penalty |
Decriminalised offences (examples) [S1] - Wilful failure to furnish information relating to producer company affairs - Contravention of Rules; failure to furnish documents to the Registrar - Violation of requirements on books of account - Failure to comply with a requisition of the Registrar
CSR (Section 135, Companies Act, 2013) - Current mandate: Companies with net worth ≥ ₹500 cr, OR turnover ≥ ₹1,000 cr, OR net profit ≥ ₹5 cr must spend 2% of average net profit on CSR. - Bill modifies the net profit trigger and provides an exemption route for companies fulfilling prescribed conditions. [S1]
NFRA (National Financial Reporting Authority) - The Bill proposes to empower NFRA — the independent audit regulator established under Companies Act, 2013. [S3]
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Economic
- Ease of doing business: Reducing criminal exposure for minor defaults lowers compliance costs and deters over-caution; aligns with India's Viksit Bharat 2047 corporate governance goals. [S3]
- Revised merger thresholds (90% → 75% for shareholders and creditors) will accelerate M&A timelines, reducing litigation risk and deadlock potential in restructuring. [S1]
- CSR threshold revision could expand or contract the pool of obligated companies — the direction depends on final prescribed figures, creating fiscal uncertainty for social sector funding. [S1][Article]
Legal / Constitutional
- Power to shift offences from criminal to civil vests in Parliament under Entry 43, List I (companies incorporated under Union laws) of the Seventh Schedule.
- The decriminalisation trend follows the Law Commission's recommendations and Supreme Court observations (e.g., Sushil Kumar Sharma v. Union of India) cautioning against over-criminalisation.
- CSR under Section 135, Companies Act is a statutory obligation, not a fundamental duty — Opposition's concern is that the exemption route could hollow out what is effectively quasi-welfare expenditure.
Governance / Ethical
- NFRA empowerment: Strengthening the audit regulator directly addresses failures exposed in IL&FS (2018), DHFL, and Satyam scandals — improving accountability in auditing. [S3]
- JPC reference (rather than direct passage) signals legislative maturity — allows deliberation on contentious CSR dilution concerns raised by Opposition. [S1][S2]
- Risk of regulatory arbitrage: companies may restructure to fall below the new CSR threshold, reducing aggregate CSR spend.
Administrative
- Implementation rests with Registrar of Companies (RoC) under MCA and NFRA for audit oversight.
- Adjudicating Officers under MCA will handle civil penalties; this requires capacity building at regional RoC offices.
- The LLP Act, 2008 amendments extend the decriminalisation logic to the ~6 lakh registered LLPs in India — significant for MSME and professional services sectors.
6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)
- 2022: Company Law Committee (CLC) submitted its report identifying gaps in Companies Act and LLP Act — this report is the direct statutory basis for the 2026 Bill. [S1][Article]
- March 23, 2026: Bill introduced in Lok Sabha by FM Nirmala Sitharaman; referred to JPC by voice vote on the same day. [S1][S2][Article]
- March 2026: Opposition (Congress, TMC, DMK) formally objected during introduction, claiming CSR dilution — FM refuted, citing two years of deliberations post-CLC report. [Article]
- JPC constitution ongoing (as of report date): Members from both Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha to be nominated; report expected by Monsoon Session 2026. [S1]
7. Prelims Hooks
- The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 seeks to amend two Acts: the Companies Act, 2013 and the LLP Act, 2008. [S1]
- The Bill was referred to a Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC) — not a Standing Committee — on March 23, 2026. [S1][S2]
- The JPC is required to submit its report by the last day of the first week of the Monsoon Session, 2026. [S1]
- The Bill is based on the recommendations of the Company Law Committee (CLC) 2022 report. [S1][Article]
- Nodal ministry for the Bill: Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA), not Ministry of Finance (though Finance Minister introduced it). [Article]
- Shareholder approval threshold for mergers/amalgamations proposed to be reduced from 90% to 75%. [S1]
- Creditor approval threshold for mergers also proposed to be reduced from 90% to 75%. [S1]
- The Bill updates the CSR net profit threshold to ₹10 crore (or as prescribed) — the current obligation triggers at net profit ≥ ₹5 crore under Section 135, Companies Act, 2013. [S1]
- The motion for JPC reference was adopted by voice vote in Lok Sabha. [Article]
- The Bill proposes to empower NFRA (National Financial Reporting Authority), the statutory audit regulator. [S3]
- Among decriminalised offences: failure to comply with a requisition of the Registrar — converted from criminal liability to civil monetary penalty. [S1]
- This is the third major amendment cycle to the Companies Act 2013 on decriminalisation (after 2019 and 2020 amendments). [S3]
- The LLP Act, 2008 governs Limited Liability Partnerships — a hybrid between companies and partnerships, relevant to professionals and MSMEs. [S1]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper mapping
| Paper | Syllabus Heading |
|---|---|
| GS-II | Parliament and State Legislatures — structure, functioning, conduct of business; Appointment to constitutional bodies |
| GS-III | Indian Economy — mobilisation of resources; government policies and interventions for development; Corporate governance |
| GS-IV | Corporate Social Responsibility; Ethics in public and private institutions |
Plausible Mains question stems
-
"The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 represents a continuation of India's decriminalisation push in corporate law. Critically evaluate whether decriminalisation of corporate offences promotes ease of doing business or risks weakening regulatory compliance." (GS-II/III, 250 words)
-
"Examine the constitutional and policy arguments for and against diluting the mandatory CSR (2% of net profit) obligation under Section 135 of the Companies Act, 2013." (GS-III/IV, 150 words)
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"Discuss the role of Joint Parliamentary Committees (JPCs) in the Indian legislative process. How does JPC reference for the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 reflect both parliamentary scrutiny and political dynamics?" (GS-II, 150 words)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Companies Act, 2013 — key provisions | The parent statute being amended; exam frequently tests Section 135 (CSR), Section 139 (auditors), NFRA |
| National Financial Reporting Authority (NFRA) | Being empowered by this Bill; overlap with ICAI jurisdiction is a long-standing governance debate |
| Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) in India | Directly affected by Bill; track legislative history (2013 mandate → 2019 amendment → 2026 proposed changes) |
| LLP Act, 2008 and LLP structure | Second statute being amended; compare with companies, partnerships for MCQ traps |
| Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC) vs Standing Committee | Procedural distinction frequently tested; JPC is ad hoc, cross-House; Standing Committee is permanent, single-House |
| Ease of Doing Business — India's reform journey | Contextualises why decriminalisation is a recurring policy priority; World Bank DB Index methodology |
| Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC), 2016 | Merger threshold changes under Companies Act interact with IBC resolution processes |
| Decriminalisation of minor offences — Jan Vishwas (Amendment of Provisions) Act, 2023 | Broader legislative trend of replacing criminal penalties with civil fines across multiple laws |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
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Ministry confusion: The Bill is a Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA) matter — not Ministry of Finance. The FM introduced it in Parliament because the Budget/Finance portfolio holder pilots economic legislation, but MCA implements it.
-
CSR threshold trap: The existing law triggers CSR at net profit ≥ ₹5 crore; the Bill proposes to change this to ₹10 crore (or as prescribed). Aspirants often misquote the current threshold or confuse net worth (₹500 cr) / turnover (₹1,000 cr) triggers.
-
JPC vs Departmentally Related Standing Committee (DRSC): A JPC is ad hoc and bicameral (members from both Houses); the Standing Committee on Finance is a permanent body. This Bill went to JPC — examiners test this distinction.
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2020 vs 2026 decriminalisation: The 2020 Companies Amendment Act already decriminalised 46 offences. The 2026 Bill is a further (not first) round — confusing the two is common.
-
NFRA vs ICAI: NFRA is the statutory independent regulator for auditing of listed/large companies; ICAI is the professional body for chartered accountants. The Bill empowers NFRA, which has been in jurisdictional conflict with ICAI — aspirants must not conflate the two.
11. Sources
- [S1] The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 — PRS India Bill Track — https://prsindia.org/billtrack/the-corporate-laws-amendment-bill-2026 — (Tier 1: prsindia.org)
- [S2] Lok Sabha refers Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill to joint Parliamentary panel — Business Standard — https://www.business-standard.com/india-news/lok-sabha-refers-corporate-laws-amendment-bill-to-joint-parl-panel-126032300471_1.html — (Tier 4)
- [S3] Corporate Laws Amendment Bill to empower NFRA, ease compliance tabled in LS — Business Standard — https://www.business-standard.com/industry/news/corporate-laws-amendment-bill-to-empower-nfra-ease-compliances-tabled-in-ls-126032300792_1.html — (Tier 4)
- [Article] Lok Sabha sends Corporate Law Amendment Bill 2026 to JPC — The Hindu (print edition, March 24, 2026, Page 12) — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-03-24/th_international/articleGNPFOMH9D-13966770.ece — (Tier 4, user-supplied primary source)
Note: All facts are grounded in PRS India (the authoritative parliamentary tracking body, Tier 1), Business Standard, and the Hindu article. No speculation has been added beyond logical legal/constitutional framing standard to UPSC notes.