BUSINESS

Premji again tops India philanthropy list

By BS Reporter
January 05, 2015 08:54 IST

There are 50 people who donated a minimum of Rs 10 crore (Rs 100 million) in this period but Premji gave away six times as much as the person who comes second on the list, Anil Agarwal of London-based Vedanta Resources, who gave away Rs 1,796 crore (Rs 17.96 billion).

Image: Wipro chief Azim Premji; Photograph: Reuters

Azim Premji, 69, chief of the Bengaluru-based multinational Wipro, donated as much as Rs 12,316 crore (Rs 123.16 billion) of his personal wealth in the period between April 2013 to October 2014.

There are 50 people who donated a minimum of Rs 10 crore (Rs 100 million) in this period but Premji gave away six times as much as the person who comes second on the list, Anil Agarwal of London-based Vedanta Resources, who gave away Rs 1,796 crore (Rs 17.96 billion).

The list has been compiled by the Shanghai-based The Hurun Research Institute, the second year it has done this ranking, of an ‘India philanthropy list’.

Image: Anil Agarwal; Photograph: Rediff Archives

Premji had topped the list a year before, too.

In the institute’s measure, issued three months earlier, of the ‘India rich list’, he was ranked at number four in personal wealth, with an own fortune of Rs 86,100 crore (Rs 861 billion).

His donation in the 2013-14 list was to the Azim Premji Foundation, which mainly gives to bodies engaged in education.

Education was, in fact, the most favoured cause for Indian philanthropists, accounting for four-fifths of the donations.

Image: Shiv Nadar. Photograph: Rediff Archives

Shiv Nadar, Ratan Tata, Mukesh Ambani and Nandan and Rohini Nilekani rank next on the list after Agarwal of Vedanta.

Hurun said it included cash and cash equivalents pledged, with legally binding commitments for the period in question.

It included donations made by companies in which an individual had a significant share, by applying the percentage the individual has of the company on the donations.

Image: Ratan Tata; Photograph: Reuters

“The list is a good representation of responsible entrepreneurship in India.

It’s interesting to note that many entrepreneurs in India consider religious donations as philanthropy.

In this context, we would have missed many more in India.” said Anas Rahman Junaid, publisher-at-large of Hurun Report India.

Image: RIL chairman Mukesh Ambani; Photograph: Reuters

Other nuggets from the list:

BS Reporter in New Delhi
Source:

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