The rich give less to charity than the poor, making David Cameron’s Tory mission to roll back the frontiers of the state are deeply, deeply regressive.
At the heart of the so-called “progressive Conservative” case is that the state has ‘crowded out’ society. In other words, that with the introduction of the welfare state, the general population expected government to deal with poverty, and so people stop giving as much and volunteering dropped off.
David Cameron’s vision is of a less active state, which is funded by taxes, and more active charities, funded by donations.
In a 2007 speech, he said:
“The third sector disproves the fundamentalists of the state – those who believe that the only possible co-operation is compulsory collectivism…
“Our motivation is not simply an arid desire to roll back the frontiers of the state. It is a mission richer and more rewarding than that: to roll forward the frontiers of society.”
This could work if we could expect everyone to fullfil their responsibilities, and for example, the rich gave more to charity to the poor, as would only seem fair. Unfortunately they do not.
As the Third Sector Daily reported yesterday:
People earning less than £32,000 give on average more than one per cent of their income to charity, whereas those on more than £52,000 typically give only 0.8 per cent, according to research by the Charities Aid Foundation (CAF) and the National Council for Voluntary Organisations (NCVO).
Initial findings from the report UK Giving 2011, which will be published before the end of the year, were released at an event in the House of Lords yesterday. The figures came from a representative survey of more than 3,000 UK adults carried out in June and October 2010 and February 2011.
Speaking at the event, John Low, chief executive of CAF, called for people to give at least 1.5 per cent of their income to charity every year, with the percentage rising for the wealthier.
The third sector grew under Labour, with government ministers understanding the symbiotic relationship between state and society. Meanwhile, in Cameron’s Big Society, where state and society are seen to be in competition, cut-price welfare for the very poor is paid for by the donations of the middle-income to poor.
See also:
• How Cameron’s coalition is choking the Big Society – Daniel Elton, November 2nd 2011
• Citizens UK: “The Big Society is flawed if people have to work two jobs” – Peter Carrol, October 21st 2011
• Fears government reforms could create a “big divide” not a ‘Big Society’ – Kamaljeet Gill, July 29th 2011
• Cameron’s ‘Big Society’ set to leave a disastrous legacy for public services – Sam McLean, July 28th 2011
• As Cameron talks up the Big Society, it’s crashing down – Dominic Browne, June 6th 2011
13 Responses to “Memo to Cameron: The rich give less to charity”
chantal chegrinec
RT @leftfootfwd: Memo to Cameron: The rich give less to charity http://t.co/Bm3s19Js
Earnest
Less as a proportion of their income, yes. Less? No.
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