ROANOKE TIMES Copyright (c) 1995, Roanoke Times DATE: Thursday, December 21, 1995 TAG: 9512210060 SECTION: EDITORIAL PAGE: A-15 EDITION: METRO SOURCE: ROBERT O. BOTHWELL
ONCE AGAIN, charity stands as the proposed replacement for safety-net programs and the nation's rapidly eroding commitment to modest redistribution of income through the federal tax code. Private charities throughout the country are saying they can't fill the funding gap that will be left if Congress implements its drastic, seven-year plan to eliminate the deficit.
And yet, House Speaker Newt Gingrich keeps saying, ``Yes, they can.'' What is ironic, if not symbolic, is that Gingrich doesn't put his money where his mouth is.
Every fall, the government conducts the Combined Federal Campaign among its employees to raise contributions for tens of thousands of charities nationwide. The regular governmental units initiated their campaigns this September, as usual, and the Senate has already completed its campaign. The House of Representatives, led by Speaker Gingrich, however, has yet to start its charity drive.
Under the budget plan passed by Congress and sent to the White House in late November, federal spending just for grants to state and local governments, as well as Medicare, would be reduced by $622 billion between 1995 and 2002, compared to funding levels under current law, according to the Center for Budget Priorities and Families USA Foundation.
Nonprofit charities are active in helping government carry out many of these programs, such as education, community development, housing, job training, social services, Medicaid, child nutrition, foster care and adoption, and disaster assistance. Looking at what charitable giving must do to make up for these losses gives one a migraine headache.
Over the past seven years, charitable giving grew from $98 billion in 1988 to an estimated $137 billion this year, a 39 percent increase. Similar growth over the next seven years would produce roughly $190 billion in 2002, the year the federal budget is supposed to be balanced. The cumulative growth over those seven years amounts to $170 billion, little more than a quarter of the $622 billion in federal budget cuts discussed above.
And we haven't even considered reductions in food stamps, and some other direct federal spending programs, which don't get funneled through state and local governments.
Put another way, to make up for the proposed congressional cuts, charities would have to expand their contributions from $137 billion in 1995 to $759 billion in 2002, a 454 percent increase in just seven years.
This would be equal to annual increases of 65 percent, an utterly outrageous proposition. The biggest yearly increase registered over the past 30 years was 14.7 percent in 1986. The average is 7.8 percent.
Some might expect private and community foundations and corporations to take up the slack. But this is even more of an impossibility. These entities gave out a grand total of only $16 billion in 1994. They, too, only grew 40 percent between 1987 and 1994, the most recent period for which data are available. Even with a bullish stock market expanding their giving capacities, we couldn't expect them to grant but an additional $25 billion to $40 billion over the next seven years.
In the '80s, Ronald Reagan popularized the notion of ``public-private partnerships.'' For the past 30 years, we have had just that - a partnership between government and charities in providing vital services for our citizens.
The charities are running hard to keep up with their end of the partnership. To prevent a catastrophe, the government must keep up its end as well.
But apparently, Gingrich and his radical conservatives don't even believe in Reagan's ``partnership theory.'' And, they probably don't really expect charities to fill the gap in federal program cuts. They simply want to cut the budget and use whatever fig leaf they can find to cover their exposed parts.
Robert O. Bothwell, president of the National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy, wrote this for the Los Angeles Daily News.
- New York Times News Service
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