Search

Site map

Sections:
Front Page

Gifts & Grants

Fund Raising

Managing Nonprofit Groups

Technology

Philanthropy Today

Jobs

Features:
Guide to Grants

The Nonprofit Handbook

Facts & Figures

Events

Deadlines

The Chronicle in Print:
Current Issue

Back Issues

Sponsored Information
Products & Services:
Directory of Services

Guide to Managing Nonprofits

Continuing-Education Guide

Fund-Raising Services Guide

Technology Guide

Customer Service:
About The Chronicle

How to Contact Us

How to Subscribe

How to Register

Manage Your Account

How to Advertise

Press Inquiries

Feedback

Privacy Policy

User Agreement

Help

The Chronicle of Philanthropy

December 29, 2006

83% of Americans Donated to Charity in the Past Year, Poll Finds

By Suzanne Perry

Eighty-three percent of American adults say they have contributed to a charity during the past 12 months, although their average donations fell to $1,220 from $1,352 in 2005, according to a new Wall Street Journal Online/Harris Interactive Personal Finance Poll.

Donors were most likely to give to religious charities (35 percent), followed by groups that seek to curb hunger (34 percent) and organizations that deal with health issues (31 percent). They were much less likely to contribute to disaster-relief charities in 2006 (27 percent) than in 2005 (49 percent) — a decline the pollsters attributed to the shift of attention away from Hurricane Katrina victims.

"In 2005, this was the No. 1 crisis facing the nation and the media exposure given to Hurricane Katrina and subsequent relief efforts had a major impact on the public's support to related charities," Natalie Jobity, vice president of financial services research for Harris Interactive, said in a statement.

The share of donors jumped the most from 2005 to 2006 for groups helping people with health problems (from 22 percent to 31 percent), the homeless (19 percent to 26 percent) and the hungry (28 percent to 35 percent).

The online poll, which surveyed 2,939 people in early December, was conducted for The Wall Street Journal Online by Harris Interactive, a market research company. Of those who donated to charity in the past year, the poll found:

  • Seventy-six percent give to charity because "it's the right thing to do," with only a trickle of people citing employer encouragement (6 percent), news-media attention (2 percent), or pressure at fund-raising events (2 percent). Only 15 percent are motivated by tax write-offs, although the percentage rises to 26 percent of those earning more than $75,000 a year.

  • Forty-four percent planned to made a donation specifically for the holiday season on behalf of themselves or their family, while 9 percent said they would do do in someone else's name.

  • Only a small minority of those who contributed to charity during the past year have ever donated using nontraditional means such as a donor-advised fund (8 percent), a bequest (4 percent), or a gift of stock (3 percent).

    A report on the poll is available on Harris Interactive Web site



    Easy-to-print version

    E-mail this article

    Subscribe

    To discuss this item with other readers, go to http://philanthropy.com/forums/. You may also send a private message to comment@philanthropy.com.
    Copyright © 2007 The Chronicle of Philanthropy