India's Private Philanthropy Set to Soar 9-11% Annually Through 2030

Private philanthropy in India is projected to grow at a 9-11% compound annual rate through FY30, driven significantly by family giving. Despite overall social sector funding doubling and heading toward Rs 50 lakh crore, a structural funding shortfall is expected to widen to Rs 18 lakh crore. Public spending still dominates, accounting for about 95% of total funding, particularly in healthcare. To bridge the gap, private philanthropy would need to grow over 25% annually, requiring scaled contributions from family, retail, and corporate sources.

Key Points: India's Philanthropy Growth: Funding Gap & Social Sector Trends

  • Private philanthropy reached ~Rs 1.43L cr in FY25
  • Social sector funding to hit Rs 50L cr by FY30
  • Rs 18L cr structural funding gap projected
  • Family giving drives 42% of private philanthropy
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Private philanthropy to rise 9-11 pc through FY30; Social sector funding to nearly double

Private philanthropy in India to grow 9-11% CAGR, but a Rs 18 lakh crore funding gap persists. Family giving leads the surge. Analysis by Bain & Dasra.

"The real question is not whether capital is available, rather if it's structured to solve at scale. - Bhavini Malhotra, Bain & Company"

New Delhi, Feb 26

Private philanthropy in India is estimated to have reached Rs 1.43 lakh crore in FY25 and could grow at a 9-11 per cent compound annual growth rate through FY30, driven largely by family giving, a report said on Thursday.

The report from Bain & Company and Dasra said that the momentum is led by family giving among ultra‑high‑net‑worth, high‑net‑worth, and affluent families, driven by rising wealth, increasing formalisation, and episodic mega‑donations.

India's social sector funding has doubled to about Rs 27 lakh crore in FY25 and is projected to reach Rs 50 lakh crore by FY30, the report said. A structural funding shortfall of roughly Rs 16 lakh crore in FY25 is projected to widen to about Rs 18 lakh crore by FY30 underscoring the persistent mismatch between India's development ambitions and the capital available, the report further said.

Public spending still accounts for around 95 per cent of total funding, especially in healthcare as policy momentum builds toward the 2.5 per cent of GDP target.

To bridge the gap, private philanthropy must grow at over 25 per cent annually, assuming public spending trajectories remain unchanged, with scaled contributions from family philanthropy, retail giving, and corporate social responsibility (CSR), the firms said.

"The real question is not whether capital is available, rather if it's structured to solve at scale. India's social sector has seen impressive funding growth as the report highlights, but the widening gap signals a deeper design challenge," said Bhavini Malhotra, Partner, Bain & Company.

The report highlighted that philanthropy by Indian families account for about 42 per cent of private giving. CSR funding is expected to grow at 8-10 per cent supported by GDP expansion, rising compliance, and a widening corporate base crossing statutory contribution threshold.

However, CSR funding remains concentrated in wealthier states, underscoring the need to redirect capital to underfunded regions, the report noted.

"The institutionalisation of family wealth is accelerating, with the number of family offices increasing sevenfold from around 45 in 2018 to more than 300 in 2024," it added.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
The report mentions a Rs 18 lakh crore shortfall by 2030. That's a staggering number. While private giving is growing, the scale of India's development challenges is immense. Public spending is still 95% of the pie—the government needs to step up its efficiency and transparency to make every rupee count.
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Priya S
The part about CSR being concentrated in wealthier states is so true. Companies need to look beyond their headquarters and metro cities. There's so much need in states like Bihar, Odisha, and the North-East. Philanthropy should be about equity, not just visibility.
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Rohit P
Family offices increasing sevenfold! That's the real story. As more wealth gets created, it's good to see the new generation thinking about legacy and impact, not just luxury. Hope they focus on sustainable projects—education, healthcare, climate resilience—not just one-off donations.
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Karthik V
With respect, the article highlights growth, but the "deep design challenge" quote is crucial. We've all seen funds get stuck in administrative overhead or poorly planned projects. We need smarter philanthropy, not just more money. Accountability and measurable outcomes are key.
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Meera T
It's promising, but let's not forget retail giving. If every middle-class family could give even a small amount regularly through trusted platforms, the collective impact would be huge. We need to build that culture of consistent, small-scale philanthropy across the board. 🙏

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