CAFOD is the official Catholic aid agency for England and Wales

What CAFOD spends its money on

How much does CAFOD spend on administration and generating funds?

Here at CAFOD stewardship is one of our key values. This means that we take great care of the valuable resources entrusted to us by our supporters. With regard to costs, 74p in every pound donated goes directly to support our international emergency and development work; 13p is used for education and campaigning to tackle the global causes of poverty; a further 12p is invested to generate future income and just 1p is used for essential administration costs. This principle is practiced throughout our fundraising and the amount we spend on generating funds is one of the lowest in comparison to other major charities.

What does CAFOD spend money on?

CAFOD spends the money on long-term development projects and programmes, emergency responses to disasters, campaigning, public education and policy work, and administering the charity’s work.

Does the money reach the people for whom it is intended?

CAFOD channels money through partner organisations that are committed to managing their funds efficiently and openly, and to making sure that funds are spent well and for the purpose for which they were intended.

Monitoring and evaluating this work is as important to CAFOD and its partners as raising funds and implementing projects in the first place.

How does CAFOD decide which project or programme to fund?

CAFOD’s programmes prioritise areas of work such as food, health care, HIV and AIDS, water, livelihood, education, and social and economic rights. Depending on which country it is, some of these priorities will be more urgent than others.

CAFOD develops priorities in dialogue with existing partners and on the basis of an analysis of the needs in each country and the ways CAFOD could most effectively help.

When CAFOD takes on a new project or programme and partner, an assessment is made with the partner covering the following points:

  • do the project’s aims and objectives fit with CAFOD’s own?
  • are they, along with the project’s activities and proposed results, specific, measurable, achievable, relevant and have a deadline?
  • Will the project encourage participation of those it helps, and promote equality between men and women?
  • Does the partner have enough staff, skills and resources etc to achieve what it has set out to do?

If the answer to each of these is yes, and the relevant CAFOD committee approves the proposal, funding may be given.

Why does CAFOD spend a percentage of its funds on education, campaigning and public policy work?

CAFOD believes not only in alleviating the immediate effects of poverty, but in dealing with the root causes of poverty.

This means influencing those with the power to change things through well-reasoned and researched argument, and through public pressure.

To this end, CAFOD believes that money spent on campaigning, education and policy work is as vital as that spent on providing water, healthcare, and livelihoods in poor communities – in fact, one of CAFOD’s charitable objectives is education.

Does CAFOD only fund Catholic organisations?

No. CAFOD funds organisations that are Church-based or led by Catholics, and organisations that are secular or community-based.

CAFOD also works in partnership with organisations linked to Buddhist and Islamic faith.

All CAFOD's partners and programmes help people regardless of their religion, creed, or race.

Why doesn’t CAFOD work with poor people in the UK?

CAFOD’s mandate is to work overseas, not in the UK.

There is another official Catholic agency called “Caritas – Social Action”, which brings together all the diocesan and national Catholic agencies working in the field of social welfare and responding to poverty in the UK.

Along with CAFOD, Caritas – Social Action is also part of the Caritas International Federation.

How many people work for CAFOD?

As part of a global network, CAFOD employs more than 300 people in England & Wales, as well as offices in Bolivia, the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Ethiopia, Kenya, Mozambique, Nicaragua, Nigeria, Sierre Leone, Sudan and Zimbabwe.

We also have staff directly supporting partners in Burma, Chile, DRC, East Timor, Indonesia, Pakistan, the Philippines and Rwanda.


see also

If none of the above covers your enquiry, you can contact us directly

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Published on 22/12/2003, last updated on 28/07/2011
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