T
Tony_the_mad
Guest
As a general rule, government charity has less FRAUD, WASTE and ABUSE than most private or even religious charities. As far as I know statistics bear this out by a wide margin. Government executives almost always make significantly less money than their private or even in many case religious counter parts. Government overhead is as a general very low. Government also has more power to prevent fraud, both internally and externally as well. Fraud is endemic in many private charities for instance. The same is true for waste, mostly because the government does not need to advertise. The greatest single waste in charities is advertising, period.No Cricket, it is not naive at all…it is very reasonable to expect the Church to be the most effective manager of charity distribution.
Any religious organization (and some private charities) are spared the overhead of executive salaries and labor since most all work is done by volunteers. A religious organization can be selective in their service or giving. They can also react quickly rather than wait for a bureaucracy to stall things in order to justify their existence.
A government, on the other hand cannot be selective. It must be broad and that opens up the greatest argument against government distributing charitable goods and services…FRAUD, WASTE and ABUSE. That is rampant in any government welfare program.
I really don’t see any need for the Church to change anything regarding her management of charitable funds…but if you have any suggestions I would love to hear them.
Any objective measure, of fraud, waste, and abuse simply does not fit your stereotype. The government definitely has all three but you are selectively ignoring the very real and on average worse fraud, waste, and abuse that the private and religious charities have.
I have already dealt with my opinion of the strengths and weaknesses of both government and religious charities, above. Further you can find ways that I think that our Church can improve its charity. (Mainly by increasing the amount being donated and the reach of the Church into areas that most need our help.)