Gender inclusivity is a distant dream in India Inc.’s board rooms. Between April 2018 and December 2023, ₹ 27 crore has been collected as fines from companies for not appointing at least one woman director to their boards. Data from the Ministry of Corporate Affairs show that 507 of such companies have been penalised in that period. Close to 90 per cent of them, 452 companies, are listed entities.
This was revealed by Finance and Corporate Affairs Minister Nirmala Sitharaman in Parliament while responding to a question by CPIM MP S Venkatesan. As per the second provision to section 149(1) of the Companies Act, 2013, every listed company and every unlisted public company having paid-up share capital of ₹100 crore or more or having turnover of ₹300 crore or more must appoint at least one woman director on its Board.
FY22 saw the most penalisations of companies for not appointing a woman director - 114. The number was, however, 54 in FY23 and 56 in FY24, until December 2023.
When it comes to non-listed entities, 81 of them have been penalised between FY16 and December 2023. Cumulatively, they paid a fine of ₹1.41 lakh.
Low proportion
Despite the Act being implemented more than a decade ago, various datasets show that men continue to dominate the boardrooms of Indian companies. A study by Excellence Enablers noted that as of March 2022, 18 per cent of the total directors and 25 per cent of independent directors were women.
“As of March 2022, only 48.6 per cent of NIFTY 500 companies had two or more women directors,” said Mayank Arora, Director, Nangia Andersen India. “It is important for listed companies to appoint women directors as it directly impacts the company’s ESG score, which is a determinant of governance norms of the company,” he added.
Saundarya Rajesh, Founder and President, Avtar Group, said that the government penalising companies for not appointing women directors itself is a strong message sent out, adding that compliant companies can be provided with benefits for doing so. While she agreed that the number of women experienced and qualified for directorial positions was restricted to just a handful of industries such as IT and banking, she added, “With concerted effort, we can create a talent pool of such women who can be deployed in different industries in the next couple of years.”