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2005
BELOW THE STATE AID ICEBERG:
CHARITY INC AND THE BUSINESS REVIEW WEEKLY
"History has a very important economic aspect. One
of the dangers of subsidizing religious institutions and granting them
financial privileges ( such as exemption from income tax, land and municipal
rates, sales and other taxes) is that such Institutions tend to become
extremely wealthy to aggrandize and to become States within a State. The
corrective has often been a more or less violent seizure of the assets of the
religious institutions, sometimes by the existing sovereign, as did Henry VIII
sometimes by revolutionary movements, which in many countries have had as one
of their main objects the suppression of religious institutions and the seizure
of their wealth.......Douglas J refers to this.....a government with mounting
tax problems cannot be expected to keep its hands off the wealth of a rich
church forever....it is not not unreasonable to prophesy that with reasonable
prudent management, the churches ought to be able to control the whole economy
of the nation within the predictable future." Justice
Murphy, Dissenting Judgment, DOGS CASE 1981 146 CLR at p. 625
"Without adequate supervision or transparency, the
not-for-profit sector is a ticking bomb." BRW March 24-30 p. 45.
The Business
Review Weekly March 24-30 2005, Vol 27 gave vent to some of the
rumblings predicted by Justice Murphy and Justice Douglas. This magazine
ran a large, well researched article by Adele Ferguson on the $70 billion
sacred cow of the Australian economy- Charities. The editor, Tony Featherstone
launched the article in his Editorial as follows:
" The problem is that charities,
especially those affiliated with religions, are a sacred cow that few are
willing to challenge. Too many votes are at stake for governments to rock the
boat, and links between big business and big charities are growing. The lack of
debate and information is so bad that nobody really knows how big the sector
is, how many genuine charities exist, how much they make, the size of their tax
breaks, and the breadth of their operations. " Yet the sector is worth at least $70
BILLION or up to 10% of the economy, and is the country's biggest employer. The
BRW note that $70 Billion is a conservative figure and it could be much higher
than this. DOGS note that the religious
organisations have built
their enormous wealth and economic empire on the foundations of State Aid to
their church schools - and the billions have escalated, untrammelled,
unaccounted for, and unabashed, from there.
DOGS suggest readers get hold of the
above article. But, for this Press Release, consider some of the following
findings of this extensive research.
GENERAL STATEMENTS 1. The
big five churches had revenue of more than $21.7 billion in 2004. They do not
have to file income tax returns, and unlike in most other countries, they do
not have to pay tax on commercial businesses or capital gains tax on the sale
of assets. 2. The
Roman Catholic Church, which turns over more than $15 billion a year, runs
schools, hospitals and aged-care facilities, but it also runs an insurance
company, a mortgage broking business, car parks, a winery and controls more
than $4 billion through the various super funds that it managed.
3.
The Seventh-day Adventists run the Sanitarium food business, and Hillsong
Church sells pop music, self-help books, television programs and even
mobile-phone tunes for $4 each.
4.
The churches are mega-businesses. Most churches own real estate in prime
locations worth many many billions, and if they sell it, they do not have to
pay capital gains tax.
5.
The Roman Catholic Church alone is thought to have more than $100 billion in
property and other assets in Australia.
6.
The sector is powerful - financially and politically. Some of the bigger
organisations have lobby groups more sophisticated than those of listed
companies. Most of the bigger organisations have offices in Canberra.
INSIDE THE ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH The above is the Heading in the BRW article.
Consider the following findings: 1. The Roman Catholic
Church is the wealthiest non-profit organisation in Australia. If it was a
corporation, it would be one of the 10 biggest in the country. Through its
network of schools, hospitals aged-care facilities, employment services and
other business ventures, it makes at least $15 billion in revenue a year. That
figure does not include the hundreds of millions of dollars donated by its
congregation on the collection plates of its 1500 parishes a year. Nor does it
2. The Roman
Catholic Church is the wealthiest non-profit organization in Australia. If it
was a corporation, it would be one of the 10 biggest in the country. Through
its network of schools, hospitals, aged-care facilities, employment services
and other business ventures, it makes at least $15 billion in revenue a year.
That figure does not include the hundreds of millions of dollars donated by its
congregation on the collection plates of its 1500 parishes a year. Nor does it
adequately measure the revenue that it makes from its welfare "businesses".
3.
The five biggest religious groups turned over $21.6 billion in 2004, with the
Roman Catholic Church making more revenue than the other four put together.
Through its vast empire of health and education the Church earned
i. at least $5.28 billion from its 1700 schools
ii. at least $5 billion from health, which
includes 65 hospitals and more than 485 aged-care homes and hostels
iii. at least $3.2 billion from
sinruance and property rentals
iv The church also has more than $4 billion in
superannuation funds under management that BRW could locate.
iv. The church operates and insurance company, a
multi-storey car park in Melbourne's CBD and a vineyard.
v. The church is the biggest employer in Australia -
employing 180,000 people. 4. What
makes the Roman Catholic Church unique is its size and structure. As one of the
biggest organizations in Australia, and the biggest employer (
180,000 people) its influence across education, health and welfare and politics
is enormous. The BRW claims it is "unassailable". The DOGS are prepared to take
the church on, so it is not unassailable. At its most triumphant , wealthy,
influential and bully priest best, it is at its weakest- as history illustrates
only too well.
RISE OF THE EVANGELICALS The BRW notes that attendance at Pentecostal "happy
clappers" churches has jumped by 27% in recent years. They are run as slcik
marketing enterprises and their founds, the pastors, exhibit all the traits of
a commercial marketing director or chief executive.
The only difference is - they do not pay tax and
most of their workers are volunteers, so they do not have to pay wages.
Consider the following "MONEY POT" Pentecostal revenue earners in 2004.
i. Hillsong
Church
$40 million
ii. Christian
City
$38 million
iii. Paradise
Community $ 5.3 million
iv. Cornerstone Community $ 3.8
million
AUSTRALIA'S TOP 200 CHARITIES:
The BRW lists the top 200 money earning charities.
The following are Educational "Charities"most of which are in the first hundred
wealthiest income earning charities in Australia
RANK
ORGANIZATION
AFFILIATION
GROSS REVENUE (4M)
1
Catholic Education NSW
Catholic
1836.8
2
Anglican Schools (National)
Anglican
1442.8
3
Catholic Education Victoria
Catholic
1369.4
10
Uniting Church Schools (National)
Uniting
545
12
Non-Denominational Schools
Christian
474.3
13
Catholic Education Western Australia
Catholic
472.1
18
Catholic Education South Australia
Catholic
367.3
25
Christian Schools
Christian
315.1
27
Lutheran Schools (National)
Lutheran
271.8
36
Catholic Education (ACT)
Catholic
133
38
Inter-Denominational Schools
Christian
128.6
44
Australian Catholic University
Catholic
108
45
Presbyterian Schools
Presbyterian
107.9
46
Jewish Schools
Jewish
105.2
48
Catholic Education Tasmania
Catholic
99.2
49
Muslim Schools
Muslim
94
51
Seventh Day Adventist Schools
SDA
88.5
68
Steiner Schools
Steiner
47.9
82
Assemblies of God Schools
Assem..of God
41.4
83
Pentecostal Schools
Pentecostal
41.2
89
Catholic Education NT
Catholic
38
98
Greek Orthodox Schools
Greek Orthodox
31.6
108
Brethren Schools
Brethren
27.8
DOGS wish to note that with this kind of gross income (excluding capital assets) taxpayers should be asking why these "charities" require ever growing billions of public money for their enterprises.
THE PURPLE ECONOMY
Over the years, governments have consistently failed to tackle the sector. Max Wallace, an academic at the Australian National University, who is an expert in the role of the church and the state, says that since winning the 1996 election, the Howard Government has bent over backwards to favour religion.
" They are reluctant to do anything that would lead to the regulation of any aspect of religious activity. Contrary to the assumption, there is no separation of state and church in Australia!"
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| Last Modified : Thursday, 24 August 2006 |