Sign up to boost charity giving
Legacies form the foundation of the UK’s best-known and best-loved charities. Indeed, without income from legacies, many charities would struggle to survive. It is a little-known fact that income from legacies represents 13% of all voluntary income. To the sector as a whole, legacies contribute nearly £2 billion per year (Legacy Foresight 2012). Yet, according to Smee and Ford’s study this year, this sum is generated by only 6% of the UK public.
While this demonstrates the fragility of legacy income, it also reveals its potential. If the rate of legacy giving rose by just 4%, it would create an additional £1 billion for good causes nationwide.
Remember A Charity, a consortium of over 140 charities working together, was created to realise this potential. The consortium aims to do what no single charity can do alone, i.e. to increase the number of charitable wills and to make legacy giving a social norm.
In reality, most people don’t realise that they can use their will to take care not just of their family, but of everything else that is important to them. Currently, 75% of the UK population supports charities in their lifetime, but only 6% of people do so by making a gift in a will. The good news is that research (TNS Social, 2008) has revealed that 35% of people would consider including a gift to charity, after providing for their family and friends, in their will.
As a professional adviser, you have an opportunity to play a key role in increasing the number of charitable wills. Research has also shown that those advisers who always make sure that their clients are aware that they can leave a gift to charity in their will, write a significantly greater number of charitable wills.
That’s why Remember A Charity has launched a Campaign Supporter scheme. It’s aimed at solicitors and professional will writers and is free to join. By signing up, firms will be endorsing the aims of Remember A Charity and, importantly, agree to ensure that their clients are aware of all their options for distributing their estate, including leaving a charitable legacy. In return, details of the adviser’s firm are listed on www.rememberacharity.org.uk
It is only by working together that we will be able to raise the profile of charitable legacies, and ultimately increase the number of charitable wills.
In this issue
- Jewel in the crown, or just red tape?
- In the public interest
- Sweeney: room for manoeuvre
- Lost in translation?
- EU Fundamental Rights Agency: the missing link?
- Reading for pleasure
- Opinion column: Stephen Gold
- Book reviews
- Profile
- President's column
- FM officially opens new MBH
- Feeling the squeeze
- Litigation: a numbers game
- Mythbusting! The in-house IT top ten
- Charities and the changing legal landscape
- Heir finding: the sensitive side
- Sign up to boost charity giving
- Law, but not as we know it
- All the permutations
- The truth, the whole truth...
- Shale gas: a complex process
- Expenses up to date?
- Scottish Solicitors' Discipline Tribunal
- Room at the top?
- Here comes the flood?
- SGM decision kills "sep rep"
- Outsourcing: the straight and narrow
- How not to win business: a guide for professionals
- Properly engaged?
- Ask Ash
- Sep rep: what now?
- From the Brussels office
- Law reform roundup