登陆注册
29382200000012

第12章 Eye on China(11)

“Charitable organizations seldom respond to donors’ requests for information about financial reports … so few donors have a clear understanding of what their money is used for and what effects it brings about,” said Deng Guosheng, an associate professor at Tsinghua University’s school of public policy and management.

The situation has resulted in serious problems when it comes to supervising grassroots charities and non-governmental organizations (NGOs), and threatens to undermine the growing charitable spirit among the Chinese, he said.

Following the 2008 earthquake in Sichuan province, the nation raised record amounts of money to help survivors. Those records have since been broken following the disaster in Qinghai province in April. So amazing was the response that media analysts suggest the disaster triggered an explosion in compassion, which has continued to spread throughout the country.

The amounts being donated have also steadily increased year on year over the last decade, official figures show.t?

China received 107 billion yuan in donations from home and abroad in 2008,more than three times the amount in 2007, according to the Blue Book on Charity Donation Development in China (2003-07), an independent report sponsored by China Philanthropy Times. For the first time, the money given by individuals on the mainland surpassed donations from corporations - 54 billion yuan (7.9 billion) given by individuals, compared to 34 billion yuan by corporations.

However, in a recent survey of people who donated to the Sichuan relief efforts, Deng found that less than 5 percent of the 1,684 who responded know exactly how the money is being spent, while more than 60 percent had little or no idea. (Authorities have published financial accounts during the ongoing reconstruction of Sichuan.)

The trend is also typical among people who give regularly to many Chinese charities,said the professor, who added that although the public is growing more aware of how they work, the overall disclosure of information is far from sufficient.

Trust is fundamental to how most charities are run in other nations but “getting all charities in China to be 100-percent transparent has proved virtually impossible”, said Deng, who also works in the university’s NGO Research Center.

About 410,000 charitable organizations were registered to operate by the end of 2008,while another 760,000 were running but still waiting for official documentation, said a report in the Blue Book of Philanthropy 2009, an independent academic evaluation of China’s charity sector.

Very few publish any kind of annual progress or spending reports, and donors rarely think to ask for them, say analysts.

“A lack of professional management, transparency and trust are major problems facing the charity sector in China,” said Yang Tuan, a professor at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences’ institute of sociology, who co-authored the Blue Book of Philanthropy 2009. “The fact that there is no charity association is the biggest problem, though. There is simply no co-operation that allows these groups to confront and overcome common obstacles, as well as provide mutual supervision.”

Fund-raising problems

China’s first and, as yet, only regulations for charitable NGOs were implemented in 2004 and apply just to the administration of foundations. A draft of the new Charity Law,which is expected to contain stricter legislation over fund management, was submitted to the State Council in 2009.

Under the current rules, NGOs have to be affiliated with a government departmentbefore they can register with the Ministry of Civil Affairs.

Finding one is no easy task, however, and there are some 250,000 grassroots groupsthat are instead being run illegally with business licenses, the Blue Book of Philanthropy 2009 says.

“Also, only foundations that are affiliated with a government department or have ties with an authority enjoy the luxury of being allowed to raise money in public,” said Deng.

“Grassroots organizations always suffer a chronic shortage in donations.”

Of the 943 foundations registered in China that can legally raise funds in public, 83are government-owned NGOs (otherwise known as GONGOs), said the professor.

Collecting money from the public without the proper authority is illegal and can lead to serious consequences for charity organizers, and the groups will automatically be shutdown.

“This is a concern for many of my friends who work for grassroots NGOs,” said Guang Pu, the 30-year-old director of One Heart, a legally registered non-profit orphanage in Xiamen, Fujian province, that publishes monthly financial reports for donors. “The rules effectively stop a lot of grassroots charities from raising awareness of their cause and soliciting public donations.”

The lack of clear governance has led to conflicts between charity organizers anddonors.

Sun Village, one of China’s first charities for children of convicts in Beijing, has been well supported for many years, including by several multinational companies.

However, complaints in recent years by donors over its opaque spending habits have cast doubts over its reputation.

The village director, Zhang Shuqin, denied the claims and feels she was unfairly criticized in press. She blamed the charity’s difficulties on the fact that it lost its affiliation with the government in 2003.

When Sun Village lost its link to the local authority, “I begged more than 10other departments to help us”, said Zhang, who launched Beijing Sun Village Children Education Consultancy in 2003. As none agreed, she opted to register the organization as abusiness with the capital’s administration for industry and commerce - make it illegal for the village to raise funds publicly.

同类推荐
  • 环境与人类心理

    环境与人类心理

    随着社会的发展和进步,对环境的关注从来没有像今天这样广泛。这为普及和发展有关环境的学科提供了一个广阔的社会背景。环境心理学作为心理学的一个分支学科,研究人与环境的相互作用和相互关系,探讨非常广泛的问题,譬如:大气环境包括温度、湿度、风甚至空气中的离子浓度如何影响我们?家居和办公环境的建筑特征怎样影响行为?是否可以合理设计建筑,使其更有效地促进亲社会行为?如何阻止环境灾难和技术灾难的发生并减少其对人类行为的影响?如何促使人们采取一些回收行为来保护环境?等等。
  • 人才战争

    人才战争

    这是是欧洲流失的人才,让美国率先成功爆炸了原子弹和氢弹,把人造卫星送上天,实现了宇航员登陆月球;是中国和印度流失的人才,缔造了美国的世界高科技中心——硅谷。人才对于一个国家的重要性,胜过石油,胜过金融街,胜过核武器……
  • 教师的28个怎么办-教师如何培养学生学习新策略

    教师的28个怎么办-教师如何培养学生学习新策略

    以前,我们认为托尔曼的学习理论研究,既有行为主义的外壳,又有格式塔心理学的内涵,所以将其称为“折衷的学习理论”。
  • 教师公文包-师德休养

    教师公文包-师德休养

    本书分新世纪的教师形象,漫谈师德建设,师德建设的内容,教师心理素质四部分,对中小学教师的职业道德建设进行了探讨。
  • 中华歇后语鉴赏

    中华歇后语鉴赏

    本书搜集整理了近1200条歇后语,从出处、注释、语义、故事等方面加以介绍。
热门推荐
  • 最终夜

    最终夜

    索宾同人,现代
  • 初次谕见

    初次谕见

    “草莓好吃吗?”“嗯,还行。你尝尝吗?”
  • 书荒大神

    书荒大神

    “天道茫茫,有九千九百九十九丈,始于混沌,没入九霄,望无止境。不知几何,一旦上下位面开阖,拓开玄幻之疆土,日复一日而绵延千万里,浩浩汤汤,如天外天,不知所穷。玄、幻者,谓之众域之名;如四维空间,忘乎年岁。千百年来,日月生辉,天地通灵气,乾坤容有万物。能人借气精修,后者追前者步,悟玄道,入仙途,寻天机,以求遨游无穷苍宇……”这是最古老的典籍中记载的一个神奇的玄幻世界。故事也将从这里开始——
  • 极道皇后别逃了

    极道皇后别逃了

    他狠狠地将她压在身下,强行占有了她。云雨过后,却将她扔到侍卫堆里,仍凭那群如狼似虎的男人百般凌辱。体无完肤的她被赐予一瓶鹤顶红,扔出皇宫。侥幸活命,她满头白发,成为整个王朝闻风丧胆的黑道老大。五年之后,她利用另一个身份进宫报复,禽兽皇帝,等着受死吧!
  • 网游之裂土

    网游之裂土

    一个英(diao)雄(si),到底要如何拯救地球,站在人生的颠峰?必须经历小怪的狂殴,高富帅的打脸,最后被团灭,跟反派大BOSS过上幸福快乐的生活,经历爱与痛的边缘,面对强大的敌人,只有相信挖掘机的力量,单挑,城战,世界BOSS。萝莉,御姐,欧巴大叔。要啥有啥!其实是个励志的故事,以上乱入。
  • 万计诱花开

    万计诱花开

    她从另一个世界而来,带着深藏的惶恐,紧锁心门。他缚心成茧,因为意外逝去的妻子、孩子。他如何诱她花开?她如何平他心伤?
  • 巽,风的声音

    巽,风的声音

    [花雨授权]哎!该来的还是会来!人家都已经这么努力地维持好自己的形象了,但一出丑却总会撞到他。怎么会这幺巧呢?!怎么不会这么巧呢!自对她惊鸿一瞥之后,他便认定……
  • EXO之12月的星空

    EXO之12月的星空

    当EXO遇上fx的团宠妖孽小萝莉时,会发生什么呢?''言洛!你是我的!别想逃!''''洛洛,我给你买一辈子的奶茶,好不好?''''小洛,你不是说让我教你吉他吗?教课时间一辈子。''……
  • 愤世邪神

    愤世邪神

    屡次作为炮灰,看一个散修怎么在风云变幻中生存
  • 停下脚步的爱情

    停下脚步的爱情

    痴心一片的竹子妖,为了爱情,牺牲了光明前程,只为陪伴在爱人的左右。却遇到一群竹子跟她作对!还有一个修炼成精多管闲事的珠子!哼!不过就是一丢丢的困难!竹子妖是不会放弃的!爱情对于现代的我们而言,太容易得到了。但是看到这只妖艰苦的求爱路程,你会不会对身边的爱人更好一点儿?会不会愿意对身旁的人做出一生一世一双人的承诺呢?我想会是个好答案!相信我!最合适你的人就在你身边哦!一对打酱油的竹子珠子,却意外的相爱了。他们又是如何续写属于他们的美好呢?