Commission criticises DfID unrestricted funding programme
17 May 2013
The Independent Commission for Aid Impact has called on the Department for International Development to...
Sorry for interrupting, but there is something we need to tell you...
We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website.
If you wish to restrict or block web browser cookies which are set on your device then you can do this through your browser settings, the Help function within your browser will tell you how.
David Cameron has given the strongest signal yet that the proposed tax relief cap on charitable donations will be dropped.
In a wide-ranging interview with the Daily Mail, published today, the Prime Minister claimed the issue would be “dealt with”.
He told the newspaper: “It will be dealt with. I’m not going to give a running commentary, but it will be dealt with,” he said.
Sir Stuart Etherington, chief executive of NCVO, said in response: "This is the most encouraging sign yet that the diverse chorus of disapproval against the cap is being heeded by the highest levels of government. We hope that the Prime Minister’s comments signal that this unloved policy is finally going to be put out of its misery."
Cameron's comments came just as Oxford Economics published research estimating that the cap would result in £500m of lost donations and that the multiplier effect of this would equate to between £1.3bn and £1.5bn in lost benefits to society.
It would also see up to 10,700 jobs lost in charities and as many as 18,800 jobs across charities and the wider UK economy, according to the research commissioned by Charities Aid Foundation.
You can read the summary findings here.
The proposed cap, which will limit reliefs on donations to a quarter of the donor’s income or £50,000, whichever is higher, is aimed at preventing wealthy citizens from reducing their tax bills by giving large sums to charity.
Tax relief cap and drinks reception on Giving Summit agenda
Where for art thou major donors?
Thomas lambasts 'lack of leadership' in Cabinet Office
Tax relief cap is needed to deter unscrupulous charities, says peer
Statistics Authority invites views on charity tax reliefs data
Tax cap rethink is next, predicts Tory MP
Government u-turns on charity tax relief cap
The sector’s victory: Charity tax relief cap u-turn
Hurd: sector must now move on from tax relief cap row
Giving Summit critical date for tax relief cap, says Philanthropy Review chair
Treasury: tax relief cap not driven by cost or deficit
17 May 2013
The Independent Commission for Aid Impact has called on the Department for International Development to...
16 May 2013
The National Lottery turned over just shy of £7bn last financial year, another record year for the operator...
16 May 2013
The government has rejected the Legal Services Board’s recommendation that will-writing should be regulated...
16 May 2013
While management in the charity sector has changed significantly in the past few decades, a reluctance...
15 May 2013
The union Unite and Intern Aware have called on charities to stop unpaid internships, saying it...
15 May 2013
As Roald Dahl's Marvellous Children's Charity seeks to expand its remit to provide support to any child...
17 May 2013
The voluntary sector should create a “data manifesto” that identifies who holds data about the sector...
16 May 2013
While management in the charity sector has changed significantly in the past few decades, a reluctance...
13 May 2013
Your CivilSociety rounds-up the most read stories from the previous week.