chart-main-title chart-axis-header Median Contribution
Median Giving by Household Income $30,000-$39 $40,000-$49 $50,000-$74 $75,000-$99 < $20,000 $20,000-$29,999 ,999 ,999 ,999 ,999 $50 $100 $200 $450 $490 $760
$100,000149,999 > $150,000 $891 $1,767
chart-main-title chart-axis-header Local nonprofits Statewide nonprofits National nonprofits International nonprofits
Breakout of Giving by Scope of Services Percent of Giving 64.1% 12.1% 12.8% 11.0%
Percent of Households that Volunteer by Income $20,000-$2 $30,000-$3 $40,000-$4 $50,000-$7 $75,000-$9 $100,000chart-axis-header < $20,000 9,999 9,999 9,999 4,999 9,999 149,999 > $150,000 Percent of Households 20.7% 10.9% 24.6% 51.3% 40.2% 41.6% 47.5% 45.2%
chart-main-title
Summary of Arizona Giving and Volunteering 2008 Percentage of households that gave to a charitable organization Average annual household contribution (donors only) Average percentage of household income contributed to nonprofits (donors only) Percentage of Arizonans who volunteered Average time donated per week (volunteers only)
77.3% $1,609 2.8% 33.3% 4 hours
Category At or through congregation To serve children or youth To serve other people in need To serve seniors To serve people in poor health To promote social change For other purposes For any formal charitable organization
Causes for Which We Volunteer Percent of Arizonans who Volunteer Average time per week* Median time per week* 19.1% 2 hours, 4 minutes 52 minutes 19.0% 1 hour, 37 minutes 41 minutes 12.5% 52 minutes 14 minutes 11.3% 1 hour, 18 minutes 28 minutes 7.3% 1 hour, 16 minutes 35 minutes 5.9% 1 hour 10 minutes 8.0% 2 hours, 47 minutes 1 hour, 9 minutes 33.3%
4 hours
1 hour, 48 minutes
Volunteers by Demographic Characteristics Percent who volunteer Average time per week* Sex Male Female Level of Education < High School High School Graduate Some College College Degree + Race White, non-Hispanic Hispanic Non-White, non-Hispanic
Median time per week*
34.1% 32.6%
3 hours, 49 minutes 4 hours, 9 minutes
1 hour, 23 minutes 1 hour, 59 minutes
11.5% 19.1% 37.4% 51.7%
1 hour, 32 minutes 4 hours, 19 minutes 3 hours, 8 minutes 4 hours, 58 minutes
55 minutes 2 hours, 4 minutes 1 hour, 23 minutes 1 hour, 51 minutes
36.3% 4 hours, 29 minutes 28.9% 2 hours, 33 minutes Too few cases to reliably calculate
2 hours, 5 minutes 1 hour, 23 minutes
Motivation for Charitable Giving Belief that giving can help achieve change or bring about a desired impact Identification with a certain cause Feeling that those who have more should help those with less Helping individuals meet their material needs Religious beliefs Belief that charities can provide public services better than government or private businesses can Tax benefits Being asked by a friend or associate Being asked by your employer
54.0% 51.2% 49.3% 44.2% 43.5% 33.2% 18.4% 14.6% 2.9%
Organization Type Religious Purposes or Spiritual Development Basic Necessities Youth or Family Combination of Purposes Education Health Environment Neighborhood Arts, Culture, and Ethnic Awareness International Other Purposes
Causes to Which We Give Percent of Households Giving Median Contribution 42.1% 35.4% 27.9% 27.4% 25.9% 21.4% 15.7% 12.7% 8.5% 8.0% 15.2%
Average Contribution $500 $100 $100 $200 $100 $70 $50 $50 $100 $120 $124
$1,772 $230 $244 $359 $263 $160 $82 $155 $408 $403 $236
LastUpdate SourceLine SourceURL Dataset Description
03/15/09 ASU Lodestar Center for Philanthropy & Nonprofit Innovation http://lodestar.asu.edu/research/arizona-giving-and-volunteering-report These data were collected in the summer of 2009 as part of Morrison Institute's Arizona Indicators Panel study. This survey asked Arizonans about their household's charitable giving and their individual volunteering during all of 2008. This wave of the Arizona Indicators Panel study was organized by the ASU Lodestar Center for Philanthropy and Nonprofit Innovation for its periodic reporting on giving and volunteering in Arizona. Their report is due out this spring.
Technical Notes Of the approximately 1,000 Arizonans on the Arizona Indicators Panel, 687 responded to the giving and volunteering survey online. Household representatives come from all Arizona counties, and 27 chose to complete the survey in Spanish. Economically disadvantaged respondents may receive the benefit of computer hardware and internet access necessary for participation in the panel, which facilitates their involvement in the study. The final data are weighted to account for under-representations of several major demographic characteristics, such as the sex, age, and race of respondent. Volunteering numbers differ between sources. The Corporation for National and Community Service reports Arizona estimates from the Current Population Survey, collected by the US Bureau of Labor Statistics. For 2008, the Current Population Survey places the Arizona volunteering rate at 25 percent. For 2008, the Arizona Indicators Panel survey places the Arizona volunteering rate at 33 percent. When directly compared, both survey methods have strengths and weaknesses. The true volunteering rate likely falls in between these two estimates. Notes on Visual#1
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In general, higher charitable contributions come from households with higher incomes. The typical donor household with less than $20,000 in income gave $50 in 2008, although larger donors in this category bring the average (mean) up to $236. On the other hand, the typical donor household with over $150,000 in income gave $1,767. The average for this group grows to $2,926. At 64 percent, a large majority of giving goes to local organization. This squares with the fact that most individual charitable giving goes to churches and other faith organizations, most of which are local. Surprisingly, giving to national and international causes is as popular as giving to causes that focus on Arizona. Study respondents estimate that nearly a quarter of their giving goes to causes outside of Arizona. Households with higher incomes tended to give much more to charitable organizations than lower income families. However, while higher income families have a lot more money, they have the same number of hours in the day as low income families. As a result, the graph of volunteering (yes/no) by household income results in an unclear relationship. People from the lowest income families have a lower likeihood of volunteering, perhaps because they are more likely to be recipients of services than volunteer providers. Once household income reaches $50,000 a year, the likelihood of volunteering hovers in the neighborhood of 45 percent, regardless of how wealthy the family becomes. Volunteering through one’s congregation or volunteering for programs that serve children or youth far outpace other volunteer efforts. Out of the 4 hours that Arizona volunteers average per week, more than half of it is spent in support of their faith community. One in three Arizonans (33.3 percent) volunteered in 2008. This is slightly lower than the estimate in our last report of 38.6 percent. Changes in the study may affect the estimates, but a decline would be in line with national studies that have documented declines in volunteering in the wake of recession. The likelihood of volunteering is tied to educational attainment: people with higher levels of education tend to be more likely to volunteer than people with less education. However, people who have finished high school but did not go (or have not gone) to college spend more time volunteering. We know from other research what the main reasons are for making a charitable contribution. We put a list of these reasons before our survey respondents, asking whether each motive was a major, minor, or no motivation at all for giving. When we asked this question in 2007, religious beliefs was the most popular ‘major motivator.’ In this study, religious belief slips to fifth place and is replaced at the top by a new item not included in our previous study: the belief that giving can make a difference. In line with the conventional wisdom, giving to religious purposes (mostly weekly contributions to churches) tops the lists. More Arizona households give to religious purpose organizations than any other charitable cause, and both the median and average contributions to churches is substantially higher than any other category.