Corpus The total amount currently donated to the PM CARES fund has not been disclosed publicly. In September 2020, a statement was uploaded to the PM CARES website indicating that the total amount donated to the fund between 27 March 2020, when the fund was established, and 31 March 2020, was 30.76 billion. The statement does not disclose the names and identities of the donors. The statement indicates the receipts (in crore rupees) as: The
Times of India reported on 19 May 2020 that it had received an estimated amount of 1.4 billion (10,600 crore) within the first two months of its establishment but noted that the data on the total amount of donations received had not been disclosed by the Government of India and could potentially exceed this amount. Based on publicly available news reports of donations declared by various corporations and individuals, Times of India has suggested that 53% of this amount is from private sector corporations and employees, while 42% is from public sector undertakings and their employees in India, and the remaining 5% is from individuals. The fund enables
micro-donations. The minimum donation accepted for the Fund is . Several public-sector undertakings have pledged support to the Fund. In addition, several government officials have pledged support by donating part of their salaries, although concerns have been raised about circulars mandating or requiring such donations from government officials. Private sector corporations that have pledged support include
Larsen & Toubro,
Infosys Foundation, Private individuals who have pledged support to the PM CARES include actors
Akshay Kumar,
Deepika Padukone and
Ranveer Singh,
Shah Rukh Khan,
Foreign donations The Government of India announced that it would be setting aside a 15-year old policy of declining foreign aid in cases of disasters and calamities, in order to accept foreign donations to the PM CARES Fund. In January 2021, an RTI application was filed seeking information about whether the Fund had received donations from Pakistan and China, after Indian embassies for those countries solicited donations to the Fund on their social media handles. A response from the High Commissions in Pakistan and China admitted to soliciting donations but confirmed that they had not personally solicited donations, and nor had such donations had been received from those countries.
Transfer of funds from public sector undertakings, banks, and educational institutions In August 2020, petitions filed under the Right to Information Act 2005 by the
Indian Express to 32 public sector undertakings (PSUs) in India indicated that a total of 21050 million had been transferred to the PM CARES Fund, primarily from their
corporate social responsibility budget allocations for 2019-20 and 2020–21. A petition for the same information that was made to the Prime Minister's Office was denied, with the Government of India stating that the Fund was not a public authority and did not have to account for the funds under the Right to Information Act. In December 2020, the
Indian Express reported that a total of 101 public sector units had transferred from their corporate social responsibility funds, and a total of from staff salaries, to the PM CARES Fund. RTI applications filed directly to PSUs have also demonstrated that the transfer of finances to the PM CARES Fund were taken from staff salaries. Several public sector banks, including
State Bank of India,
Union Bank of India,
Central Bank of India, Bank of Maharashtra, and
Small Industries Development Bank of India, as well as public sector undertakings and regulators like
Life Insurance Corporation of India and
Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority, together contributed 2047.5 million to the PM CARES Fund.
Transfer of funds from the Indian military In March 2020, the Indian
Defence Ministry released a statement, indicating that it would encourage military personnel to donate one day's salary to the PM CARES Fund, and that their aim was to collect approximately from such donations. In 2020, the
Indian Express filed Right to Information petitions with all three branches of the Indian military - the Indian Army, Air Force, and Navy, seeking details of transfers made to the PM CARES Fund. The Indian Navy disclosed that it had transferred a sum of between April and October 2020 to the PM CARES Fund, “in respect of officers and sailors” and also a sum of "in respect of civilian personnel". The Navy declined to disclose details of contributions made to the PM CARES Fund under any other heads of accounts. The Indian Air Force indicated that a total of was transferred to the PM CARES Fund "by IAF personnel". The Indian Army did not reply to the petition, but had previously shared on social networking site Twitter, in May 2020 that "IndianArmy personnel have voluntarily contributed as one day salary for Apr 2020 towards Nation’s fight against COVID-19 pandemic to PMCARES fund.” In total, the military transferred to the PM CARES Fund. Similar proposals for mandatory or opt-out donations were subsequently withdrawn from three other hospitals based in Delhi following protests from doctors' associations: Safdarjung Hospital, Atal Bihari Vajpayee Institute of Medical Sciences (ABVIMS)-Ram Manohar Lohia (RML) Hospital, and Lady Hardinge Medical College and Hospital. On 17 April 2020, the Jharkhand High Court ordered six petitioners to deposit 35,000 each in the PM CARES Fund, and install the Government of India's COVID-19 surveillance and tracking mobile application,
Aarogya Setu, as conditions for granting him bail in a criminal case. In August 2020, the Punjab and Haryana High Court issued a similar order, requiring a deposit of 100,000 as costs into the PM CARES Fund. On 19 April 2020, the registry of the Supreme Court of India issued a notice informing its employees that all officers would be donating three days' salary to the Fund, and that non-gazetted officers, and group-C employees would be donating two and one day's salary respectively. The circular gave employees one day to opt out of donations, stating that failure to opt out would be considered as consent to donating. On 19 April 2020, the Revenue Department of the Finance Ministry issued a circular indicating that one day's salary per month, from April 2020 to March 2021, from each employee would be redirected to the fund unless employees who were "unwilling to donate" indicated their unwillingness in writing to their departments. Other government employees objected on the grounds that it constricted their ability to choose to donate to other relief funds, such as state's Chief Minister Relief Funds. Following public criticism, on 30 April 2020, the Revenue Department amended this circular, making the donation opt-in instead of opt-out, and asking employees to write in if they wished to donate a day's salary every month to the PM CARES Fund. On 20 April 2020, the Delhi University administration was criticised after funds collected for a donation specifically to the National Disaster Relief Fund were redirected to the Fund without disclosing this to donors. Delhi University officials stated that the funds were redirected on orders from the
Ministry of Human Resources Development of the Government of India. The Delhi University Teachers' Association wrote a letter of objection to the Delhi University administration, noting that the university had traditionally supported the NDRF or Chief Minister's Relief Fund either through local Staff Associations or through the Vice Chancellor's Relief Fund, and that the redirection of funds without disclosure constituted a betrayal of trust. == Spending and allocations ==