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Theory and research methodology for comparative research on philanthropy in Europe René Bekkers Center for Philanthropic Studies, VU University Amsterdam,

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Presentation on theme: "Theory and research methodology for comparative research on philanthropy in Europe René Bekkers Center for Philanthropic Studies, VU University Amsterdam,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Theory and research methodology for comparative research on philanthropy in Europe René Bekkers Center for Philanthropic Studies, VU University Amsterdam, the Netherlands R.Bekkers@vu.nl 16 June 2015 WU Wien 1

2 Research Questions Which is the most generous country in Europe and why? 1.How large are differences in philanthropy (incidence, amounts, causes) between nations in Europe? 2.How can these differences be explained? 16 June 2015 WU Wien 2

3 Philanthropy: private contributions to public goods SourceChannelDestination DonorOrganizationCause Money, timeServices Households, individuals, corporations Churches, charities, foundations Groups, Ideals 16 June 2015 WU Wien 3

4 16 June 2015WU Wien 4 Map available at http://www.targetmap.com/viewer.aspx?reportId=42492

5 Steps we need to take to answer these questions A.Identify potential data sources available B.Assess their reliability and validity C.Identify black holes and uncharted territories D.Repair problems with existing data E.Collect new data 16 June 2015 WU Wien 5

6 What can you hear today? 1.The take away. 2.Basic figures. 3.Excursion 1: theories. 4.“Methodology is destiny.” 5.Excursion 2: particular figures. 6.Implications for new and published research. 16 June 2015 WU Wien 6

7 1. The takeaway: we’re in big trouble. How many people report donations to various causes varies from one dataset to another. Even differences in giving within the same country vary from one dataset to another. Finally, differences between countries are explained by different variables in the two datasets. 16 June 2015 WU Wien 7

8 A. What we have… Lots of data on volunteering, but much less on charitable giving Several datasets on giving using ▫ Different definitions of philanthropy ▫ Different questionnaire modules to measure philanthropy ▫ Different survey methods 16 June 2015 WU Wien 8

9 16 June 2015 WU Wien 9 2. Basic figures

10 16 June 2015WU Wien 10

11 Prospects for Data Access Tax data: employ different legal definitions, thresholds make small donations invisible, privacy issues limit access Survey data on corporate philanthropy are difficult to gather; annual reports available only for larger corporations Foundations even more difficult to get access to Getting survey data on households is least problematic  let’s do this! 16 June 2015 WU Wien 11

12 3. Why may countries differ? A.Because of population composition differences: some countries are populated with more generous citizens. (Who gives?) B.Because of country differences: some countries make citizens living there more generous. (When do people give?) 16 June 2015 WU Wien 12

13 ‘Theories’: clusters of variables Political: ‘Worlds of Welfare Capitalism’, democracy, civic engagement, inequality Economic: ‘Crowding-out’, price of giving, wealth Cultural: religious traditions, social norms Legal: freedom for nonprofit organizations Psychological: trust, guilt, perceived need Communication: news consumption Thermoclimatic: adversity in weather 16 June 2015 WU Wien 13

14 16 June 2015WU Wien 14

15 Mechanisms driving philanthropy 1.Awareness of need 2.Being asked to give 3.Costs and benefits (material) 4.Altruism: how much others are giving 5.Reputation: social pressure and rewards 6.Psychological costs and rewards 7.Values 8.Efficacy 16 June 2015 WU Wien 15

16 B. Reliability and validity of surveys with questions on giving The European Social Survey 2002 (ESS) The Eurobarometer 62.2 (EB) The Gallup World Poll (GWP) The Giving in the Netherlands Panel Survey (GINPS) 16 June 2015 WU Wien 16

17 4. “Methodology is Destiny” The Gold Standard: the ‘Method + Area Module’ (e.g., GINPS) Incomplete coverage: ‘Area’ (ESS2002, EB 62.2) Severely limited: (Very) ‘Short’ Shorter questionnaires yield (strong) underestimates of giving volume, and bias parameter estimates Source: Bekkers, R., & Wiepking, P. (2006). ‘To Give or Not to Give…That’s the Question’. Nonprofit & Voluntary Sector Quarterly, 35 (3): 533‐540. 16 June 2015 WU Wien 17

18 European Social Survey 16 June 2015 WU Wien 18 E1-12 a) CARD 43 For each of the voluntary organisations I will now mention, please use this card to tell me whether any of these things apply to you now or in the last 12 months, and, if so, which. E1-12 b) Do you have personal friends within this organisation? a)CODE ALL THAT APPLY FOR EACH ORGANISATION b) NoneMemberPartici pated Donated money Volun- teered Personal friends? E1.…Firstly, a sports club or club for out- door activities? YesNoDKDK 01234128 E2… an organisation for cultural or hobby activities? 01234128

19 Donors per sector (%, ESS) NLUS a religious or church organization19 humanitarian aid, human rights, minorities, immigrants205 environmental protection, peace or animal rights235 science, education, or teachers and parents25 cultural or hobby activities43 sports club or club for outdoor activities84 social club, club for the young, the retired/ elderly, women34 political party25 trade union21 business, professional, or farmers’ organization12 consumer or automobile organization21 any other voluntary organization42 Donates money to at least one sector4529 16 June 2015WU Wien 19

20 Donors per sector in the Netherlands (%) ESSGINPS a religious or church organization1939 humanitarian aid, human rights, minorities, immigrants2021 environmental protection, (peace) or animal rights23(7) healthNA13 science, education, or teachers and parents22 cultural or hobby activities42 sports club or club for outdoor activities85 social club, club for the young, the retired/ elderly, women310 political party2NA trade union2NA business, professional, or farmers’ organization1NA consumer or automobile organization2NA any other voluntary organization44 Donates money to at least one sector4582 16 June 2015WU Wien 20

21 Donations to political parties in the ESS Direct Q Matrix No 88% Yes 12% No 97% 2947307 Yes 3% 1389 16 June 2015WU Wien 21 Cross tabulation of ESS direct question on political giving and marking ‘donated’ for ‘political party’ in the matrix question (US+NL)

22 Correlates of giving ESSGINPS Age 35-651.161.09 Age>651.59**0.64* Secondary education1.71**1.07 Tertiary education3.84**1.35 Big city0.970.56** Suburb0.840.80 Catholic1.25(*)2.18** Protestant2.02**2.27** Other Christian1.210.46 Other religion0.904.66 Church attendance (times per year)1.01**1.01 Generalized social trust1.19**1.33** Right wing political self-placement1.121.40* Volunteering3.15**1.55** 16 June 2015 WU Wien 22

23 Correlates of giving ESSGINPS Age 35-651.191.13 Age>651.82**0.80 Secondary education1.60**1.05 Tertiary education3.50**1.30 Big city0.890.55** Suburb0.79(*)0.75(*) Generalized social trust1.20**1.34** Right wing political self-placement1.25*1.50** Volunteered last year3.33**1.76** 16 June 2015 WU Wien 23 Coefficients in bold are significantly different from each other (p<.05)

24 Donors per sector in the Netherlands (%) EBGINPS a religious or church organization2939 humanitarian aid, human rights, minorities, immigrants4121 environmental protection, (peace) or animal rights40(7) Patients organization [and health]30[13] Education (arts, culture)132 Recreational organization [and sports]205 Leisure organization for the elderly3NA Rights for the elderly3NA political party5NA trade union4NA business, professional, or farmers’ organization1NA consumer or automobile organization2NA any other voluntary organization74 Donates money to at least one sector8182 16 June 2015 WU Wien 24

25 Correlates of giving EBGINPS Big city0.60*0.55** Suburb0.780.75(*) Age 35-652.41**1.13 Age>652.66**0.80 Secondary education1.85**1.05 Tertiary education1.561.30 Generalized social trust1.21*1.34** Right wing political self-placement0.871.50** Volunteered last year3.33***1.76** 16 June 2015 WU Wien 25 Coefficients in bold are significantly different from each other (p<.05) WU Wien

26 C. What we don’t know… How much is donated to charity? Corporate giving, foundation giving, bequest giving, lotteries How do countries differ in the composition of philanthropy? How do countries differ in the characteristics of donors? Where do all these country differences come from? 16 June 2015 WU Wien 26

27 4. Methodology is destiny #2 To disentangle population composition and country level components of variance, ‘multilevel models’ have become increasingly popular. The typical finding in multilevel analyses is that ‘contextual influences’ are fairly small, usually explaining only 5 to 10 percent of the variance. 16 June 2015 WU Wien 27

28 An illustration An example is the correlation of.77 between voter turnout and the proportion of blood donors in municipalities in the Netherlands (Bekkers & Veldhuizen, 2008). A subsequent multilevel analysis (Veldhuizen & Bekkers, 2011), however, showed that only 6.5% of the variance in blood donation at the individual level is due to the characteristics of the municipality; 93.5% of the variance was due to population composition. 16 June 2015 WU Wien 28

29 Why do countries differ? EBESS Individual level variablesYES Country level variablesNOYESNOYES Country level variance3.27%5.45%3.27%9.97% Secondary education1.321**1.305**1.4911.555** % Secondary education0.031**25.744* Generalized trust1.075 1.1091.120** Mean Generalized trust2.096**1.098 NS Observations16,279 32,905 Countries17 16 June 2015 29 WU Wien

30 5. Particular figures: pieces of the puzzle 16 June 2015 WU Wien 30 % of the population giving to charity Tax burden in % of GDP

31 31 ‘Crowding-out’ across the world (Gallup World Poll)

32 16 June 2015WU Wien 32 N = 111, r =.011 ‘Crowding-out’: excluding Europe

33 33

34 6. Implications New data are needed to answer questions on how much is donated by households across Europe. Replications are needed to see whether published results (including our own) are robust. 16 June 2015 WU Wien 34

35 16 June 2015WU Wien 35

36 16 June 2015WU Wien 36 The higher the proportion of non-religious citizens in a country, the more likely Catholics and protestants are to give to religious organizations

37 16 June 2015WU Wien 37 The higher the proportion of Catholics in a country, the more likely Protestants are to give to religious organizations

38 16 June 2015WU Wien 38

39 16 June 2015WU Wien 39 From my Blog, https://renebekkers.wordpress.com/2014/12/17/the-fishy-business-of-philanthropy/https://renebekkers.wordpress.com/2014/12/17/the-fishy-business-of-philanthropy/

40 16 June 2015WU Wien 40

41 Grams of food required to yield an additional €1 donation 16 June 2015 WU Wien 41

42 6. Implications 16 June 2015 WU Wien 42

43 16 June 2015WU Wien 43

44 N j > 20 16 June 2015 WU Wien 44

45 16 June 2015WU Wien 45

46 What now? Let’s start all over again. Do it better. And call it Giving Europe. 16 June 2015 WU Wien 46

47 E. Collect new data A clear definition of philanthropy. A validated, cross-nationally adequate instrument to measure philanthropy. One single method of data collection; online is the only feasible option. 16 June 2015 WU Wien 47

48 Definitions Should be operationalized. Definitions should identify a clearly delimited set of phenomena. Easy way out: ▫ Exclude memberships and fees. ▫ Exclude informal giving. ▫ Avoid the word ‘voluntary’. 16 June 2015 WU Wien 48

49 The questionnaire should identify Units of analysis: individuals, AND/OR households, OR foundations, OR corporations Channels: churches, charities, foundations, other nonprofit organizations Destinations: causes and services Resources: money, goods, labor 16 June 2015 WU Wien 49

50 16 June 2015WU Wien 50 This is where we are now

51 Thanks, says René Bekkers Center for Philanthropic Studies VU University Amsterdam r.bekkers@vu.nl Twitter: @renebekkers@renebekkers http://renebekkers.wordpress.com 16 June 2015 WU Wien 51

52 References Bekkers, R. (2015). The Analysis of Regional Differences in Philanthropy: Evidence from the European Social Survey, the Eurobarometer and the Giving in the Netherlands Panel Survey. Paper presented at the 5 th ESS Workshop, The Hague, May 22, 2015. https://renebekkers.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/15_05_22_ess_regional_differences.pdf https://renebekkers.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/15_05_22_ess_regional_differences.pdf Bekkers, R. (2015). ‘Regional Differences in Philanthropy’. In: Routledge Companion to Philanthropy, edited by J. Harrow, T. Jung & S. Phillips. Routledge. Wiepking, P., Bekkers, R. & Osili, U. (2015). Examining the association of religious context with giving to non-profit organizations. European Sociological Review, 30(5): 640-654. http://esr.oxfordjournals.org/content/30/5/640 http://esr.oxfordjournals.org/content/30/5/640 Bekkers, R. (2015). The “Crowding-out Effect”: What does the research tell us? Jewish Funders Network Conference, Tel Aviv, March 17, 2015. https://renebekkers.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/crowding_out_web.pptx https://renebekkers.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/crowding_out_web.pptx Bekkers, R. (2014). The Fishy Business of Philanthropy. December 17, 2014. https://renebekkers.wordpress.com/2014/12/17/the-fishy-business-of-philanthropy/ https://renebekkers.wordpress.com/2014/12/17/the-fishy-business-of-philanthropy/ Bekkers, R. & Wiepking, P. (2011). ‘A Literature Review of Empirical Studies of Philanthropy: Eight Mechanisms that Drive Charitable Giving’. Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly, 40(5): 924‐973. http://understandingphilanthropy.com http://understandingphilanthropy.com 16 June 2015 WU Wien 52


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