Back to resources

India’s Richest are Giving Away More

Strategic Philanthropy | Nov 15, 2020

The total amount of philanthropic donations made by the top 112 richest in the country, according to the recently released EdelGive Hurun India Philanthropy List, has increased by 175% to touch ₹12,050 crore in 2020. The list is being constantly improved and some feel it needs more computational fine-tuning. Yet, the bigger message is about more people giving away their wealth. Even the number of individuals who have donated more than ₹10 crore has increased from 37 to 78 this year.

Of the total of 112 individuals listed, there were only seven women and topping the women’s list was philanthropist Rohini Nilekani. Speaking to Fortune India, she says, “The list is important and their data is improving, but it still needs to improve and people need to be more transparent too.”

Philanthropy to her “is a journey, a voluntary and passion-driven activity”. What, then, is holding many back many others? There are multiple reasons according to her, including inadequate “absorptive capacity” or the paucity of enough number of organisations that one could give away funds to. At other times, “people may just be trying to learn the ropes of philanthropy, and it would take time before they can give more. To do it really well is not so simple,” she says.

Nilekani says while the richest in the world, like the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, with their bets on vaccines and other healthcare challenges, are giving away billions, in India there is nobody playing at that level yet, to have impact at scale.
“Nandan [Nilekani, her husband and co-founder of Infosys] and I are really trying in our own way to create an ecosystem of platforms so that many of us can work together to have much more impact, at scale and with some urgency. We call this Societal Platform Thinking, and invest a fair amount of our philanthropic capital on it.”

However, environmental issues get a fair share of her philanthropic budget though there are other portfolios, which all add up to what she gives away. “I hope to double that budget this year, because of the pandemic and other challenges. Let’s see how that goes.” Nandan Nilekani is separately listed for his donations. There are several Indian business leaders and their families, a virtual who’s who of Indian business, on the list.

Fortune India

PDF

 

More like this

Strategic Philanthropy

Interview: What Shall We Do With All This Money?

This is an edited version of Rohini Nilekani’s interview with Jayesh A Parekh, from a chapter in his book, What Shall We Do With All This Money? – Inspiring perspectives on Wealth As someone who grew up in a normal, middle-class family, my parents instilled in us values about wealth that prioritised giving rather than […]
Dec 6, 2019 | Interview

Strategic Philanthropy

Making a difference

In the non-profit sector, we are often asked questions about outlays and outcomes. Funding agencies, government, the media and our partners demand to know what exactly we have achieved. Gone are the days when you could claim to wipe the brows of the sick, feed the hungry and shelter the homeless. These are ‘band-aid’ solutions. […]
Mar 20, 2006 | Article

Strategic Philanthropy

Learning the Art of Giving

For Rohini Nilekani, making the money was the easy part. The Bangalore-based wife of Infosys CEO Nandan Nilekani, Rohini owns 1.67% of the Indian outsourcing company, and her personal fortune soared to about $300 million along with the meteoric rise of its stock. She calls her windfall “a quite frightening amount of money.” And as […]
Sep 4, 2006 | Article

Others  |  Strategic Philanthropy

India's Uber Rich: How they Should Behave.

This is an edited version of Rohini Nilekani’s conversation with Vikram Singh Mehta at the 2016 Times Lit Fest in Delhi. When my family happened to get rich a few years ago, I had to grapple with the question of what to do with this wealth. As someone who was a journalist, and who grew […]
Dec 23, 2016 | Conversation