Treasure Trail: Private Philanthropy in India Proves No Match for Religious Giving

In a speech at the recent Indian Philanthropy Forum in Mumbai, Bain India partner Arpan Sheth said that, in the last year, his firm has observed a shift in attitudes toward giving.

Published in 2009, the first Bain India Philanthropy Report was rather critical of Indian attitudes to giving. Findings from the recently released 2011 report take a more positive note: “Private charity contributions in India now make up 0.3% to 0.4% of GDP, up from about 0.2% in 2006,” according to Sheth. More importantly, India leads other developed nations, such as Brazil and China, in charitable giving — although Indian efforts still lag behind the private philanthropy sectors in the U.S. and the U.K.

Sheth’s update was well received in Mumbai. But stealing his thunder was the Sree Ananda Padmanabhaswamy temple in the southern state of Kerala. Coincidentally, around the same time as the conference, the Supreme Court ordered an assessment of the items stored in its cellars. Initial estimates put the value of the treasure found there at more than US$20 billion. (According to the Bain report, Indian private contributions to charity were valued at US$5 billion to $6 billion in 2010.) This could go up further as a seven-member team of investigators moves deeper into the temple’s secret subterranean vaults. Among the items found so far are golden crowns, 37 pounds of gold coins dating back to the East India Company period, an 18-foot golden necklace weighing more than five pounds, gold ropes, sacks full of diamonds, diamond-studded antique jewelry and golden vessels.

The wealth of the Padmanabhaswamy temple does not come from individual donations; it was part of the treasury of the royal family of Travancore. The head of the royal family — Uthradom Thirunal Marthanda Varma — is also the manager of the temple trust. The morning newspaper Indian Express quotes an unnamed member of the royal family as saying that some of the cellars have not been opened for 150 years.

The treasure hunt has not been limited to Kerala. When Indian guru and spiritual figure (also referred to as a “godman”) Sathya Sai Baba died on April 24, he left behind billions of dollars in assets, now controlled by his charitable trust. Kolkata-based daily The Telegraph estimated the trust’s net worth at between US$9 billion and US$33 billion. After the Baba expired, an inspection of his personal chamber led to the discovery of 215 pounds of gold, 675 pounds of silver and US$2.9 million in cash (rupees). It took 20 people 36 hours to count the cash. Meanwhile, in Delhi, another godman — yoga guru Baba Ramdev — has declared his assets at US$2.5 million.

In India, “temple towns” can be big business — but does that make the money donated by those on pilgrimages any less entitled to being considered philanthropy? As a recent India Knowledge@Wharton story noted, the big problem is that this money is largely unaccounted for. Even the religious institutes that run them are not rigorous about keeping donation records.

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  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_QMY4UOQTLYZOUQTTA6KQFY363M Ananth

    I do not know on what basis the writer estimates that the value of the assets of the Satya Sai Trust is 9 Billion to 33 Billion dollars.I teach Finance to MBA students.We tell them that the value of any asset is the present value of future cash flow.I understand that the Sathya Sai Trust has no income out of these assets because the education and healthcare is totally free.Therefore the present and future income is zero.Therefore the present value is zero? 
    It is totally misleading–and mischievous -to value the real estate that a charitable trust holds for public good and declare the value as so many billion dollars.
    I thought Wharton Professors and students knew better finance!

    Prof Anantha Raman

  • lalit advani

    The analysis is not properly done. More charity has been done by the Sathya Sai Trust than any other trust in India. Thousands of free heart surgeries & similar operations carried out. However the focus of the media is on the present value of these healthcare institutions. We expect better from Wharton. 

  • Anonymous

    Faith in God that has built “Temple Towns’ is being called ‘big business’. I wonder what reactions would emerge if the same remarks were made referring to the holy See.
    Religion and Spirituality are two very different things. Religion is what others define for you, Spirituality is what you define for yourself. ‘Treasure hunts’ are for zealots in search of the’ holy grail’ or the ‘elixir of youth’ – Religious enthusiasts. Not people who spend their entire lives in service of humanity – people who follow their spirit.
    Sociology points out that private philanthropy is a term invented for a purpose – publicity.
    In oriental cultures, the true philanthropist never craves attention.
    To treat ones faith in the power beyond as a business statistic is not only incorrect but insulting.
    One wonders if Wharton oblige us with a similar ‘analysis’ on institutions from other ‘religions’  and ‘treasure trails’ too? Would the other ‘religions’ be calm in their responses?
    It is a foolish man who misconstrues forbearance as weakness.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_HIZLASTAQOBVXGSUAJBVNZWHT4 Gowri

    It is always easy to sit at one’s desk and write articles with flowery words. Before commenting on the so called wealth of the trust, it would be good to come over to Prasanthinilayam to discover the working of the institutions -  the university and the hospitals – providing education and health care of highest quality totally free of cost, and experience the divine love. 

  • Anonymous

    Sri Sathya Sai Baba propagated the Message of Love, not merely through words, but by His compassionate and universal acts of service. He is the greatest example of what one can achieve when the objective is selfless, noble and all-encompassing. The concept of spiritual service, as taught by Him, was to serve all with the awareness that the Divine in one serves the Divine in the other. There is no distinction, no duality. All feelings of mine and thine are mere illusions and Sri Sathya Sai Baba made us realize this.

    Millions of recipients of His grace and Love have resolved to follow His Teachings and that is the greatest hope for humanity.

  • Anonymous

    Sri Sathya Sai Baba propagated the Message of Love, not merely through words, but by His compassionate and universal acts of service. He is the greatest example of what one can achieve when the objective is selfless, noble and all-encompassing. The concept of spiritual service, as taught by Him, was to serve all with the awareness that the Divine in one serves the Divine in the other. There is no distinction, no duality. All feelings of mine and thine are mere illusions and Sri Sathya Sai Baba made us realize this.

    Millions of recipients of His grace and Love have resolved to follow His Teachings and that is the greatest hope for humanity.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_A3AIH52BBKWZZ4EMNWZ5KG54LE INDRANI

    I am happy that Sri Sathya Sai Baba’s name is on the top whenever people make reference to philanthropical work. People only assessing His educational institutes and the super hospitals in Puttaparthy and Bangalore run total free of any charge. But there are ample other social awareness programs initiated by Baba to benefit the poorest of the poor; like Gram seva, Dinoddharana school (education for destitute children), Vidya vahini project, regular Narayan seva, building houses with household materials for the poor villagers in Orissa and other places, sending food clothes medicines to Tsunami effected areas and so on. Once a devotee asked Swami to publish all His Grace in the news papers. With His Divine smile He replied “When a mother feeds her child, does she calls the press to photograph or publish in the news paper?