Install

Get the latest updates as we post them — right on your browser

Today's paper. Last Updated: 05/24/2012

Middle Class Fueling Philanthropy

Prokhorov’s charity foundation, run by his sister Irina, has given away a mere $34 million in the past eight years.
Andrei Makhonin / Vedomosti

Prokhorov’s charity foundation, run by his sister Irina, has given away a mere $34 million in the past eight years.

The country’s rising middle class is fueling the growth of philanthropy among private individuals, participants at an annual Moscow conference said Thursday.

Aided by the Internet, the increasing numbers making charitable donations is just one knock-on effect of economic prosperity and burgeoning civil society.

The middle class “was only noticed when the protests began, but it was present before,” said Yelena Topoleva, director of the Agency for Social Information and a member of the Public Chamber.

Demonstrations in Moscow following alleged fraud during last year’s Duma elections are seen to have been driven by the country’s Internet-savvy middle class. Topoleva sported a white ribbon, the symbol of the protest movement.

But whatever the changes, the charity sector is still kept afloat by corporate social responsibility, or CSR. Business accounts for more than 70 percent of total donations in Russia compared with about 17 percent in developed countries, according to research by the Boston Consulting Group.

And there is still disagreement about how the sector should be structured, whether charitable causes should be “personified” and rely on wealthy and powerful individuals, or whether professional charities are the way forward.

When a cause is adopted by a rich and influential person, said Konstantin Malofeyev, founder of Marshal Capital and chairman of the board of the Saint Vasily the Great fund, it can channel huge resources and has a real chance of achieving its goals. He gave the example of presidential candidate and billionaire Mikhail Prokhorov, who takes financial responsibility for the biathlon in Russia.

Others disagreed, however. “To depend on the passions, fancies, hobbies or vices of rich people is less than responsible,” said Gleb Prozorov, a managing director at business daily Vedomosti, which organized the conference. “Charity is … a professional thing.”

The absolute quantity of donations is significantly smaller in Russia than in other countries. In 2010, local nongovernmental organizations received an income equal to about 0.9 percent of gross domestic product. That figure is 7.5 percent in the United States and 3.8 percent in France.   

Such heavy reliance on corporate donations imposes certain limitations on charities. Companies frequently look to leverage their core business when selecting philanthropic endeavors. One of the projects of mobile operator MTS, which has an annual CSR budget of about $7 million, is to pay the phone bills of cancer charity Podari Zhizn.

Other large companies focus on “social investment” — involving anything from extra support for employees to infrastructure projects — rather than addressing a particular problem or cause. Oil major Bashneft, for example, only does CSR in its home region of Bashkortostan.

Participants at the annual event said philanthropy has not yet fully emerged from the 2008 economic crisis — when businesses slashed overall budgets. Many companies currently focus on cost-saving forms of CSR, said Marina Mukhina, program director at the Charities Aid Foundation in Russia. This includes emphasizing activities in which employees volunteer their time for worthy causes.





This article has no comments.

Be the first to leave a comment


Discussion
The Moscow Times welcomes your comments and invites you to discuss topics with other readers. Your comment will be posted automatically to enable a live discussion. If you aren't familiar with our comments policy, you can read it here.

If you're a registered user, you can start typing your comment below. If not, take a moment to sign up. and then return to the article.

If your comment doesn't appear, contact us by using our web form.

Comments

Comments via Facebook



Also in Business

Green on Green: Shipping Threatens to Trouble Baltic Waters

A boom in infrastructure development at the head of the Gulf of Finland near St. Petersburg is causing stress to the environment and risk of ecological disaster.

Gazprom May Increase Investment Spending

Gazprom could again increase its investment program for this year, after recently announcing plans to raise investment spending by 8.5 percent to $27 billion.

Companies in Airline Sector Report Growth

Transaero may double dividends paid to shareholders for 2011 when the company's board of directors votes on increasing the payments to 44 kopecks per share at their June 23 meeting.

Bosch Plans to Expand Auto Plant in Saratov

Bosch is planning to localize more auto parts assembly lines in Russia following a profitable year during which the technology supplier saw its sales in the country jump 50 percent to almost 1 billion euros ($1.2 billion).

Source: Dergunova Tapped to Lead Property Agency

VTB board member Olga Dergunova will be appointed to head the Federal Property Management Agency, Vedomosti reported Wednesday, citing unnamed government sources.

Medicine Ads May Disappear, Defense Ministry May Pick Up Slack

Russians are no strangers to military rigor and physical pain — a cultural trait that the government seems keen to incorporate into its advertising strategy.



print


Comments

This article has no comments.

Be the first to leave a comment



Tags
charity


Most Read
MarketGid
 

Eleven Years Ago Today the Earth Moved

I wonder, did you feel it? When last weekend, on Friday and Saturday, the world changed a little?