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Aussies Donating More Despite Uncertainty


13 May 2014 at 11:15 am
Lina Caneva
Australians are more generous now than in previous years, with an 8 per cent increase in donations in the year to February 2014, according to the latest Charitable Giving Index.

Lina Caneva | 13 May 2014 at 11:15 am


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Aussies Donating More Despite Uncertainty
13 May 2014 at 11:15 am

Australians are more generous now than in previous years, with an 8 per cent increase in donations in the year to February 2014, according to the latest Charitable Giving Index.

Donations have increased by 19 per cent since December 2010 despite uncertain economic conditions and anxiety about the cost of living.

The 8 per cent growth rate is a substantial improvement on the 3.3 per cent growth rate seen the previous year.

People in the nation’s capital gave the most where the average annual donation was $55 higher than the national average.

The NAB Charitable Giving Index shows that Weston and Ainslie in the ACT joined Maleny in Queensland as the most generous postcodes in Australia, giving 0.27 per cent of their annual income to charity.

Nationally, donations from the 65+ age group grew the most, increasing 10.8 per cent whilst donation from the 15 to 24 age group grew by 6.2 per cent.

NAB Chief Economist Alan Oster said: “The generosity of Australians should be applauded.

Australians are giving more to charity in spite of below trend economic growth, rising joblessness and elevated anxiety around the cost of living.

“This generosity isn’t a passing trend. This is the fourth NAB Charitable Giving Index we have released and each time, donations have increased.

“Typhoon Haiyan in the Philippines and the deepening refugee crisis in Syria have had a big impact on people’s giving preferences with Humanitarian Services attracting the most donations from all age groups.”

The Index points to the causes Australians are most passionate about are:

· Humanitarian Services charities (32.7 per cent of all donations);

· Medical Research & Services charities (11.5 per cent of all donations);

· Health & Disability charities (12.1 per cent of all donations);

· Community Service & Children/Family charities (11 per cent of all donations);

· Cancer charities (9.6 per cent of all donations);

· Animals & Environment (8.1 per cent of all donations).

Paula Benson, NAB General Manager Corporate Responsibility, said: “The Not for Profit  sector plays a vital role in helping to shape opportunities for our communities in Australia and overseas.

“In producing the NAB Charitable Giving Index we hope to support these efforts by providing invaluable insights to help the community sector succeed and prosper. Not only does the Index help our community partners and not for profit customers understand their own audiences and identify potential opportunities, it also allows them to focus on their core activities.”

NAB says the data is produced by Quantium and includes donations via credit card, direct debit, BPAY and EFTPOS. Direct transfers into charity bank accounts are not captured ( for example, bequests and cheque donations may not be captured). Nearly 600 charity brands are included in this analysis.

 

Lina Caneva  |  Editor  |  @ProBonoNews

Lina Caneva has been a journalist for more than 35 years. She was the editor of Pro Bono Australia News from when it was founded in 2000 until 2018.


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