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The origins of World Charity day and some reflections on it

By Matthew Turnour - posted Tuesday, 6 September 2016


September 5, 2016 was World Charity day. It is a good time to stop and remember how the day came about. It is an opportunity to reflect on examples provided to us by nations, businesses and individual.

We have the day to encourage charity. The United Nations chose the anniversary of the death of Mother Teresa to celebrate charity with the first year of celebration being 2013. Australia was a co-sponsor of the resolution which invites not just member states but all:

organizations, as well as civil society, including non-governmental organizations and individuals, to commemorate the Day in an appropriate manner, by encouraging charity, including through education and public awareness-raising activities.

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Although seeds of the idea are evident in China earlier, Hungary led the process toward the recognition of World Charity Day in 2011. Hungary did more than just set aside a day to encourage charity. Perhaps its most famous action to encourage charity (and the development of the NGO sector generally) was its percentage tax. In 1996, Hungary introduced what have become known as 'Percentage Laws', which allow taxpayers to allocate a percentage of their income tax to specific not-for-profit organizations. By 2004, the idea had also been adopted in Slovakia, Lithuania, Poland and Romania.

The most recent nation to recognise 5 September as a national charity day is China. It embedded the date in charity legislation passed on 16 March 2016. Again the legislation was part of a broader strategy to encourage philanthropy with one of the more remarkable aspects being the enactment of the legal infrastructure to enable the emergence of charitable trusts.

The call for a national charity day in China seems have begun as a grass roots movement in Shandong province in 2006. The newspaper, China Dailyof 19 May 2007reported that 'Statistics show that private donations [in 2006] amounted to a mere 1.7 billion yuan ($221 million), that is, a per capita donation of just over 1 yuan'. Keen to do something about this citizens began the movement that has culminated in not just the recognition of the day, but broader legislation to support the emergence and growth of the charity sector. The China Daily of 31 March 2016 reported that giving grew steadily over the period to 104.2 billion yuan in 2014 which is 0.16% of GDP.

In Australia it is easy to become discouraged about evidence of decline in our civic engagement. It is important to remember that there remain many encouraging factors. The available data suggests that 87% of Australians made some form of contribution to charity in 2014 and 78% of Australians support at least one charity regularly. That year we gave nearly $7 billion in donations and bequests'. Around 2 million of us volunteered. These are not just statistics. They translate into real life stories.

Caring for their neighbours here and overseas in the spirit of Mother Teresa, whom I note was canonised on Sunday September 4, a manufacturer of solar lighting in southern Queensland made his product available at cost to anyone who would buy the product as a gift for villagers in the Solomon Islands. Over 180 units, enough to light a whole village, were purchased and donated. A land developer is in negotiations with a charity to provide not just land for a newly emerging development but also at least one community development officer. One woman gave money to a refugee woman she knows who is struggling to feed her family. These are just snippets of stories that have touched me over the last few weeks.

We can be inspired by the individuals around us to work privately and through businesses to do more for one another. We can also think as a nation whether, like China, we should embed in our laws charity recognition one day each year. As we approach tax reform we can ask should we, like Hungary, be doing more to encourage philanthropy through tax? International charity day is an opportunity to pause and reflect on these examples of individuals, businesses and nations.

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This article was first published in Pro Bono News.



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About the Author

Matthew Turnour is the senior partner in Neumann and Turnour Lawyers and his PhD thesis looked at law and the charitable sector.

Creative Commons LicenseThis work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.

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