For those of the Christian faith, Christmas is the raison
d'être for their religion, the fulfilling of God’s promise to send His Son to
Earth more than 2,000 years ago. Christmas now is celebrated around the world by
both Christians and non-Christians through the tradition of gift-giving. In America, we not only exchange
gifts, but also freely give of our time and money to help those less fortunate
or who are in trouble during this time of the year.
In every community there are organizations that provide
tangible benefits to the public and help others in need through volunteering
for service projects and monetary and other contributions. Civic clubs and
religious organizations raise and give thousands of dollars in assistance every
year for medical care, food pantries, weatherization and home heating in the
winter, building and repairing homes for less fortunate people and families, student
tutoring and scholarships, animal welfare and spay/neuter programs, arts and
cultural programs, assisting disabled persons, assisting police and fire
fighters to purchase needed equipment, among other forms of aid.
Americans are regarded as the most generous people in the
world. We give unselfishly to religious and civic organizations that support
our charitable interests to help people both at home and across the globe.
In 2010 Americans donated more than $290 billion to their
favorite causes, and four out of every five dollars donated came from individuals
and bequests. The breakdown of charitable giving is: individuals, $211.8
billion; foundations, $41 billion; bequests, $22.8 billion; and corporations, $15.3
billion.
Americans donated $23.7 billion in corporate stock; $7.6
billion in clothing, and land valued at $4 billion. Leading the list of
recipients of this generosity by a wide margin were churches and religious
organizations at $100.6 billion, followed by educational entities, $41.7
billion; foundations, $33 billion; human services, $26.5 billion; organizations benefiting public and societal needs, $24.2 billion; health organizations,
$22.8 billion; international affairs, $15.8 billion; arts, culture and
humanities, $13.3 billion; and environmental issues and animal welfare, $6.7
billion.
And when disaster strikes anywhere in the world, we respond.
We stepped up when the tsunami struck Japan,
when an earthquake rocked Haiti.
At here at home when Hurricane Katrina struck the Gulf Coast
in 2006, more than $4 billion was raised to assist victims. We are still giving
to victims since super storm Sandy
struck in October.
However, as generous as the American people are, the
economic crisis has significantly affected charitable giving, which remains $12
billion less today than when the recession began in 2008, and is predicted not
to improve anytime soon. That is a real problem for the country: The nonprofit
sector generates nearly 6 percent of U.S. gross domestic product, and
pays $668 billion in wages and benefits to its 13.5 million employees.
The fiscal cliff further threatens charitable giving, as
lawmakers on Capitol Hill consider capping or eliminating deductions, and a
change to the charitable deduction could severely damage non-profits and the
charitable work that generates enormous goodwill locally and globally.
A 2009 study by the Center on Philanthropy showed that the
proposal to raise the marginal tax rate to 39.6 percent on those earning
$250,000 or more and cap the charitable tax deduction at 28 percent would
precipitate a 2.1 percent decline in giving, which works out to a $5 billion
decrease.
However, a proposal by the Bipartisan Policy
Center’s Debt Reduction
Task Force would be far worse. It proposes to eliminate the charitable
deduction altogether and replace it with a credit like the one used in the United Kingdom.
Applying this practice to the U.S.
level of charitable giving would cost $260 billion, devastating charities
across America.
The Charitable Giving Coalition urged both President Obama
and House Speaker John Boehner to protect the charitable tax deduction as they
deal with the fiscal cliff facing America. The charitable deduction
encourages individuals to give to those in need, and to give more than they
would otherwise give by allowing them to offset some of their tax obligation
with charitable contributions. Data suggests that every dollar a donor claims
in tax relief for charitable donations produces three dollars of public
benefit.
The significance of the charitable work of American
non-profits is one thing that sets us apart from less charitable nations. It is
a reflection of the generous heart of America, and the charitable tax
deduction helps to fuel that generosity. That is why it must be protected. If
we fail to stop this thoughtless process, Americans will be substantially
hampered in their financial support of people in need, and we will all be the
worse for it.
To the extent that government continues replacing the work
of charitable organizations with taxpayer funded government programs, or
impedes the charitable impulses of the American people with short-sighted tax
policies, those of us who give to charity lose the ability to decide which
projects and causes receive our financial support.
And as the failure to control profligate government spending
continues to be ignored in favor of political considerations, the likelihood increases
that charitable deductions will be targeted to help raise revenue to feed the
government’s spending addiction.
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