Sarah Ford | September 9, 2014
Company Leaders Must Lead by Example if They Want Employees to Give Back
By Ryan Scott
The annualÌýGiving USA FoundationÌýreport was recently released, and the numbers tell an interesting story about corporate giving.
Let me rephrase that. ÌýAnÌýalarmingÌý²õ³Ù´Ç°ù²â.
Here’s what you need to know:
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¾«¶«Ó°Òµns gave $335.17 billion to charity in 2013. ÌýWhich sounds good until youÌýread the fine printÌýand understand that we’re barely keeping up as a percentage of the GDP.
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Charitable contributions in the U.S. grew 4.4% in 2013 but still haven’t rebounded to peak levels achieved before the economic recession.
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Individuals donated $240.6 billion to charities, up 4% from 2012.
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At 72% of all giving, individual giving represents the largest portion and fastest growing area of giving.
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The increase in individual giving is leading the charge to create a fourth straight year of growth in total giving.
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Of four sources of giving that were assessed – individuals, foundations, bequests and corporations – every kind of giving rose in 2013ÌýexceptÌýfor corporate giving.
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Corporate giving fell by nearly 2%, to $17.9 billion.
The drop in corporate giving is troubling for all parties involved. ÌýNonprofits lean heavily on corporations for giving, and when numbers are down they must scramble for alternative sources of funding. ÌýAnd companies are playing with their own bottom lines when they skimp onÌýcorporate philanthropy. ÌýNow more than ever, employees are paying close attention to the philanthropic behavior of corporations and evaluating them accordingly.
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