The Boyertown Area Times

Penna. residents among the most generous

- By Dave Lemery Watchdog.org

When it comes to the two main ways to support charity — either giving money or donating one’s time — Pennsylvan­ia residents have largely gone the route of volunteeri­ng directly, according to a new report.

In fact, the trend of volunteeri­sm is so strong in Pennsylvan­ia, according to financial analysis firm WalletHub, that the state is the 11th most-charitable of all U.S. states despite being only 41st in share of income donated.

WalletHub collected data from many different categories from sources such as the U.S. Census Bureau and Gallup to compile its report, 2018’s Most Charitable States.

“Not everyone is equally self-

less,” WalletHub’s Adam McCann wrote. “In the spirit of inspiring altruism, WalletHub determined the most charitable of the 50 states by comparing them across 18 key indicators of charitable behavior. Our data set ranges from volunteer rate to share of income donated to share of sheltered homeless.”

The top state in WalletHub’s rankings was Minnesota, while coming in 50th was Nevada. Pennsylvan­ia was part of a pattern of Northeast states generally doing well, as neighbors New York (third overall), Maryland (fourth) and Ohio (13th) were in the same general vicinity. Further down were New Jersey (18th), Delaware (24th) and West Virginia (35th).

There were a number of subcategor­ies where Pennsylvan­ia scored highly, including:

• 10th in volunteer retention rate.

• 11th in “share of residents who do favors for their neighbors.”

• 11th in “amount of money that people would lend their neighbors in need.”

• 10th in “share of population fundraisin­g or selling items to raise money.”

• 12th in “share of population donating time,” at 44 percent.

• 15th in “share of sheltered homeless,” at 87.3 percent.

While the “share of income donated” measure was in the bottom 10 in the nation at 1.08 percent, that was somewhat offset by Pennsylvan­ia’s 16th place ranking in volunteer rate, at 29.7 percent.

WalletHub reached out to Jennifer Siebenthal­er, associate dean for undergradu­ate affairs at the University of Kentucky’s Gatton College of Business and Economics, to talk about the changing trends in charitable giving. According to Siebenthal­er, traditiona­lly effective fundraisin­g tactics might not be working as well as they used to.

“Younger donors give in different ways, in response to different calls to action, and with different expectatio­ns than generation­s of the past,” she said. “Charities are cognizant of the changes in the newer generation­s of donors, but many are currently reliant on generation­s that respond to the traditiona­l support letter and calls for monthly giving.”

Siebenthal­er warned, though, that as charities try out new tactics to try to attract a new generation of donors, it’s important not to alienate the baby boomers who still provide the majority of charitable giving.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States