Tax breaks introduced in Gordon Brown’s recent Budget are predicted to boost charitable giving by £400m over the next year

August 21, 2010 No Comments

Tax breaks introduced in Gordon Brown’s recent Budget are predicted to boost charitable giving by £400m over the next year. Tax breaks introduced in Gordon Brown’s recent Budget are predicted to boost charitable giving by £400m over the next year.
From April 6, the Government will add 28p to every £1 a taxpayer gives to charity. Give directly from your gross pay, through your employer’s payroll, and the Government will add an extra 10 per cent for the next three years.The changes make the UK one of the most liberal tax environments for charitable giving in the world, and will raise tax-effective giving from £1.6bn to £2bn a year.These sums make the millions raised for charity each year through donation or affinity credit cards look like small beer, but the organisations that benefit will tell you every little bit helps.Affinity cards are either Visa or MasterCards and work in much the same way. They are issued by major banks, such as Bank of Scotland, Co-operative Bank, Halifax and HSBC. The difference from their ordinary cards is that they are jointly issued with a charity or other organisation, and instead of offering loyalty points or Air Miles, a small percentage of your spending is diverted to their coffers.The donation may be small, typically 25p for every £100 you spend with the card, but with millions of users around the country the sums can soon add up.

A one-off payment, typically £10, is also given to the organisation when you first take out a card.Estimates suggest there are at least 1,400 card schemes in the UK accounting for more than 10 per cent of all credit cards issued.Bank of Scotland, which issues affinity cards for almost 600 groups, says the scheme has raised more than £16m for members since its launch in 1990. This year the Bank expects to pay £3m to participating affinity groups.”Affinity cards are growing in popularity,” according to Chris James, manager of the Bank of Scotland affinity card division. “People like them because they believe they are doing some good by diverting their spending to charities.”But charities are not the only organisations to benefit. Schools, university alumni, trade unions, political parties and professional bodies also issue affinity cards, as do the Star Trek and Elvisly Yours fan clubs Football clubs have also seized the opportunity. Bank of Scotland counts Arsenal, Aston Villa, Derby County, Glasgow Rangers and Leeds United among its affinity card members.

Lincoln City also get a look in.Mr James says people take out cards for three reasons. “They get a sense of belonging to the organisation and are happy to help it financially, they get competitive interest rates, and carry a card with an attractive picture or design.”The Greenpeace card has a picture of the Rainbow Warrior, while the World Wildlife Fund offers the choice of a giant panda or Siberian tiger.Sums raised by individual charities can be sizeable. The RSPB has earned £3m from its 100,000 cardholders since 1989, the National Trust £2m from 65,000 cardholders since 1990, the RSPCA £1.5m from 96,000 cardholders since 1993 and the World Wildlife Fund £1.2m from 60,000 cardholders since 1997. The Labour Party has also done well, raising £1m.The most successful fundraising card is the Halifax Visa Charity Card, which has raised £12m from 230,000 cardholders since 1988 with the money going to help three charities, Imperial Cancer Research, British Heart Foundation and Mencap.Jonathan Moakes, associate director of Affinity Solutions, says the cards present a win-win situation. “The bank gets more customers, the charity earns extra income and the customer has the satisfaction of helping an organisation at no cost to themselves.”So how do interest rates compare with normal credit cards? The affinity card members claim you get competitive rates, but you rarely get the best deal on the market.Co-operative Bank cards, issued to Amnesty International, Greenpeace, Help the Aged and Oxfam among others, charge 19.8% APR on purchases. HSBC cards, which include Carecard, National Trust and Shelter, charge 18 per cent, while Bank of Scotland cards charge 19.9 per cent.By comparison the Egg Visa card charges 9.9 per cent APR on purchases.Some affinity cards offer reduced rates for a limited introductory period.

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