Charities 'fear closure' due to cuts and donation fall
Hannah Terrey from CAF: "Many charities are now very worried"
One in six UK charities questioned for a survey say they fear they may have to close in 2013 due to public spending cuts and falling donations, the Charities Aid Foundation has said.
The poll of 252 senior charity workers also found just under half of their organisations have been forced to dip into reserves to stay afloat.
Over a third have said they may be forced to cut services or jobs.
The Cabinet Office said the charity sector "cannot be immune from cuts".
There are more than 160,000 charities in the UK.
Almost all of the 252 charities questioned for the CAF said generating more income was going to be their greatest challenge in the coming year.
Hannah Terrey from CAF said it was small and medium-sized charities, rather than large ones, which were feeling the pressure.
"Those [are the ones] that are in your local community doing vital things, providing social care, hospices, working with children and vulnerable young people - they may be the ones that are feeling the effects now."
The survey was completed online by charities of differing sizes by polling group Research Now.
“Start Quote
End Quote John Low Charities Aid FoundationMany organisations are having to dip into their reserves, cut vital frontline services and some are even concerned about whether they can survive in these toughest of times.”
- Some 40% of those questioned worry that they will be forced to close if the economic situation does not improve
- A quarter have already been forced to cut frontline services and staff
- About 80% believe that the economic situation is the greatest threat to UK charities
- Nearly three-quarters believe that charities are unable to fulfil their goals because of reductions in donations or government funding
The foundation is calling on the public to support charities through regular giving, regardless of how much time or money people can give.
Ms Terrie said said CAF and the National Council for Voluntary Organisations were urging charities to consider ways in which they can share resources and do things as efficiently as possible "to make the money that [they] do have... go as far as possible".
CAF is also lobbying the government to modernise and promote the Gift Aid scheme and payroll giving, so donations go further.
The Gift Aid scheme is for gifts of money by individuals who pay UK tax, and allows the charity to reclaim the basic rate tax on the donation.
John Low, chief executive of CAF, said tough economic times meant the public had less money to donate to charities.
He added: "This combined with significant public spending cuts and increased demand for charity services is having a shocking effect on many charities, calling into question their very viability.
"Many organisations are having to dip into their reserves, cut vital frontline services and some are even concerned about whether they can survive in these toughest of times.
"Charities of all sizes play an essential role in our society, providing social care and education as well as helping some of the most vulnerable people in our communities."
Investment helpA report last month found that donations to charity have fallen by 20% in real terms in the past year, with £1.7bn less being given.
The number of people donating also fell - as did the amounts they gave, from an average of £11 to £10 a month.
A Cabinet Office spokesman said "We know it is a very challenging environment for charities, especially for those previously dependent on taxpayer funding, but the sector cannot be immune from cuts."
The spokesman said the government was "committed to strengthening the sector through programmes such as the £10m Investment and Contract Readiness fund and the £65m Advice Services Transition Fund".
"We have introduced new ways for the sector to finance itself through Big Society Capital, capitalised with £600m, giving charities access to affordable loans and investment to grow, so they can do more," he added.
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Comment number 399.
Covcatgrp9th December 2012 - 16:38
as a smaller charity, I have to agree that some charities do seem to spend their money quite freely and I'm sure can find ways of cutting expenditure without cutting services. However, this is not true of all charities and once again I'm saddened by the number of charity bashers. Please do not let those charities effect your giving. give to local charities that will spend your donations wisely!
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Comment number 270.
Gerry9th December 2012 - 13:15
I know a number of people who volunteer their spare time to charities to help out with finance and IT, because that's their particular field of expertise. A lot of lesser known smaller charities operate 7 days a week - they just don't make a big song and dance about it. So help doesn't have to replace paid work.
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Comment number 186.
David H9th December 2012 - 12:14
I have worked for a few very large commercial global organisations, and also in the Charity sector. The Charity sectors still seem to operate with a cottage industry mentatlity, very well meaning but will not really embrace "Best Practice" when it come to operating model.
The answer is in front of them, "if" they worked together.
They could reduce costs, and improve the services.
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Comment number 182.
superal19669th December 2012 - 12:13
176. family guy
It is not sustainable, especially for larger charities, to be able to depend purely on volunteers.
Some people would be willing to volunteer for front line services, but you would struggle to find many people willing to volunteer in a finance or IT department.
People need to earn a living. Unfortunately voluntary work can not meet this need.
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Comment number 172.
Mark9th December 2012 - 12:05
We have seen a big increase in donations in 2012 - many donors have switched from the large 'corporate' charities. We are run entirely by our trustees and volunteers and have zero overheads - all of the services we need are provided free of charge by corporate and individual friends of the charity. We do not advertise, do not send out mailshots or begging emails and are opposed to chugging.
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Comments 5 of 10