Friday, February 29, 2008

Chinese School - Charity funds need better management

Opinion / You Nuo

Charity funds need better management
By You Nuo (China Daily)
Updated: 2006-04-03 05:17

The Chinese press frequently points to the scanty resources for charity
programmes as an embarrassment to this country, given there are still so
many people who have difficulty just obtaining the basic means for
survival.

Some national lawmakers complained to the press, in their annual session
last month, that China's charity is only one-7,320th of the United
States, in terms of the financial contribution collected from each person.

Whether the figure is accurate is not the point, as it was given by a
Buddhist monk who did his own research on the Internet and not from the
National Bureau of Statistics.

Charity is scanty indeed, judging from the charity activities one can see
on the streets in some of the most affluent cities on the Chinese
mainland. In Hong Kong, in contrast, everyone has to prepare some coins
and small notes every Friday morning for the volunteer school kids
collecting charity funds in subway stations and main streets.

As the press has pointed out, the reason for the embarrassment is not
hard to understand China still does not have an appropriate law to
encourage charity.

In response to the complaints from lawmakers and political advisors, Li
Liguo, vice-minister of civil affairs, openly pledged that in two years
China will have a draft charity law. But it should be pointed out that
between now and then, plenty of things can be done other than just
waiting. One thing is to make the existing charity funds grow, and the
other is to make their management system healthier.

It would be simplistic to imagine that once the law is available, charity
will experience a big leap forward. With the law, inevitably more
donations will come from big corporations. But charity finance will not
necessarily be trusted and reputable.

Charity is not just a money matter. Having a charity industry that
betrays the public trust will be an even greater embarrassment to China.

Internationally, it is reported that less than half, sometimes only 20
per cent, of some African aid programmes reach local people.

The more public donations there are, the more vulnerable they will be
more vulnerable to those who, unable to feel any sense of moral
responsibility, treat them just as easy money. Management, especially an
anti-corruption mechanism, is of pivotal importance to charity's healthy
development.

Without decent and transparent management, charity funds, especially
large ones supposedly from government backgrounds, can easily become a
hotbed of embezzlement and cause more problems than they solve.

The press has already reported cases of misappropriating aid funds, for
example by local village chiefs and headmasters for banquets and other
after-hour leisure activities.

It would be a good thing if the national auditing authorities can take
some pre-emptive moves by setting up a standard practice, such as a set
of regulations, for mainland charity organizations ranging from
qualifications of managers to financial practice.

In fact, there are already early signs, in fact, of existing charities
wasting their money in unnecessary ways. Last week, on one of Beijing's
typical cold windy days in early spring, I saw a Chinese-language
reporter whom I had met on several assignments emerge from a national
charity programme press conference carrying a long, silk-covered box.
"Look what a stupid gift they gave out," he said, opening up the box and
showing me a jumbo-size Chinese paper fan, quite elegantly made except
for the timing. "Still don't get enough wind?" he joked.

And the brochure was even more of a waste as the programme must have
printed thousands of copies. With top quality paper and a hard cover of
an ugly, pompous design in metal-effect print, it was in fact just a
small book containing some basic information (but not financial
information) about the programme.

It was a charity organization, one with the background of a government of
a developing nation where poverty is still widespread. Why must it try to
give itself an image similar to a multinational banking organization, or
a rich man's secret club?

Email: younuo@chinadaily.com.cn

(China Daily 04/03/2006 page4)

Hot Talks

� China's Serious Environment Problem

� Learning chinese using qq

� Why we need schooling?

� Poll: Do you support the new chopsticks tax?

� President's List of Do's and Don'ts for China

Most Commented/Read Stories in 48 Hours

Learn Chinese, Free Chinese Lesson, Learning Materials, Mandarin audio lessons, Chinese writing lessons, Chinese vocabulary lists, About chinese characters, News in Chinese, Go to China, Travel to China, Study in China, Teach in China, Dictionaries, Learn Chinese Painting, Your name in Chinese, Chinese calligraphy, Chinese songs, Chinese proverbs, Chinese poetry, Chinese tattoo, Beijing 2008 Olympics, Mandarin Phrasebook, Chinese editor, Pinyin editor, China Travel, Travel to Beijing, Travel to Tibet

No comments: