International ‘volunteering league tables’: their value in understanding progress towards a ‘big society’

Institute for Volunteering Research Thinkpiece

Daniel Stevens March 2011

The ‘Giving Green Paper’ recently published by the Cabinet Office has used the UK’s relatively low standing in a world league table of giving time to argue that volunteering levels in the UK can and should increase. It states that: ‘[a]lthough the UK is a generous nation we could do so much more – for example, the UK ranks only 29th in the 2010 World Giving Index for ‘giving time’’.1 The statistic is repeated again when discussing ‘why we can achieve a culture change’2; it has been reported as one of the Green Paper’s headline findings3 and has been picked up in the media.4

Despite the attention given to it, and the weight of argument that rests upon it, the validity of this statistic has not been questioned. This is potentially dangerous. International league tables in general are to be treated with some caution, but this particular one is not only misleading but even quite perverse, and a very shaky basis for justifying a call for the nation to give more.

The international volunteering league table

The league table overleaf forms part of the Charities Aid Foundation’s World Giving Index5 which covered 153 countries and draws on data from Gallup’s World View survey. The index is based on three questions from that survey. The question for ‘giving time’ was whether the respondent had volunteered time to an organisation in the last month.6

The World Giving Index does not include separate tables for each of the three constituent questions, but based on an aggregate table we can construct the top 30 in this volunteering league. This is done overleaf but with an additional column – the country’s Freedom in the World 2011 ranking.7

While itself somewhat subjective, the Freedom in the World rating of countries into three broad categories gives some sense of the extent to which they ensure basic human freedoms.8 The rating covers 194 countries, of which 87 are free (45 per cent), 60 are partly free (31 per cent) and 47 not free (24 per cent).

Rank Country Percentage Freedom in the volunteering World status 1 61% Not free 2 52% Partly free 3 47% Partly free 4 45% Partly free 5 42% Not free 6 42% Partly free 7 41% Free 8 40% Not free 9 39% Not free 10 USA 39% Free 11 39% Free 12 39% Not free 13 38% Free 14 38% Partly free 15 38% Free 16 36% Partly free 17 35% Partly free 18 Ireland 35% Free 19 35% Free 20 34% Free 21 Guyana 33% Free 22 33% Partly free 23 Lao People's Democratic Republic 32% Not free 24 32% Not free 25 31% Free 26 31% Free 27 30% Partly free 28 30% Free 29 29% Free 30 29% Partly free

Four of the top ten in this international volunteering league table are considered ‘not free’ countries. Given that some of the world’s most reclusive and authoritarian countries are right at the top (such as Turkmenistan and Myanmar / Burma) we can speculate that, had it been included, North Korea might also appear near the top, making it a rogues gallery of some of the most oppressive dictatorships in the world.

The problem of comparing volunteering across borders

The point is that comparisons based on a basic question like ‘have you volunteered time to an organisation?’ are almost meaningless given the wide divergence of understandings of the concept of volunteering in different cultures and languages and varying extents to which government’s incentivise (or require!) it. In short, the survey may have been measuring quite different things in different countries and does not distinguish between volunteering as a result of a ‘nudge’ or ‘gun to the head’ style ‘push’.9 2

The potential for international comparisons of volunteering levels

This is not to say that such comparisons are always unhelpful. Comparing industrialised democracies with semi-feudal autocracies is evidently inappropriate, but comparing like with like, for example how volunteering rates vary across Europe, can be informative.

While in isolation the various surveys that address patterns of volunteering across Europe suffer from methodological limitations, taken together an interesting picture emerges. Jeremy Kendall’s (2010)10 aggregated table of formal volunteering (the term widely used in the UK for giving time through an organisation) across Europe presents a pattern in which levels of volunteering vary with some consistency. So and the Netherlands invariably come out near the top, and the UK leads a middling group of countries.

European International European Eurobarometer Values Social Social 2004 (includes Survey, Survey Survey, ‘participation’ 1999 Programme, 2002/3 1998 Sweden 33 49 35 50

High The Netherlands 32 51 29 49

Great Britain 36 37 23 33 14 58 19 36 21 33 28 42 22 - 23 38

Medium Ireland 15 33 16 41 (west) 8 29 26 35

Italy 17 24 5 23

Low 9 22 7 16

But given the diversity of activities that this includes, what is probably more revealing is when we look at the types of formal volunteering that take place in each country.11

The European Values Survey12 and a comparative study on civil society conducted by John Hopkins University13 both explore the types of organisations that involve volunteers. What this shows is that where volunteering is very high it can be because citizens are involved in delivering services (such as in the Netherlands) but can be because they are extensively engaged in ‘leisure’ types of volunteering – participating in cultural societies or sports clubs (such as in Sweden).14

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Conclusions

In short, while rates of volunteering are of some interest, probably more important for policy makers is the type of volunteering expected of its citizens. Is it to be service delivery, as in the case of ‘liberal’ or ‘welfare partnership’ models, or is it in more advocacy related or recreational activities (as in the social democratic model)?15

It is about which of these models is most appropriate for the UK that should be stimulating debate and action, rather than uncritical references to misleading international league tables.

References

1 Cabinet Office (2010) ‘Giving Green Paper’, London: HM Government, page 4 2 Ibid, page 20. 3 Private Equity Foundation (2010) ‘PEF contributes to Government’s Giving Green Paper’, Press release 29th December 2010, available at http://privateequityfoundation.org/press/press-releases/29-12-10-pef-contributes-to-governments-giving-green-paper 4 BBC (2010) ‘Ministers urge giving to charity at the cash machine’, BBC website 29 December 2010, available at http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-12085506 5 Charities Aid Foundation (2010) World Giving Index, available at http://www.cafonline.org/pdf/WorldGivingIndex28092010Print.pdf 6 Respondents were a representative sample of 500 to 2000 people in each country, ibid, page 2. 7 Freedom House (2010) ‘Combined Average Ratings – Independent Countries’, available at http://www.freedomhouse.org/template.cfm?page=546&year=2010 8 It measures freedom in the sense of ‘the opportunity to act spontaneously in a variety of fields outside the control of the government and other centers of potential domination-according to two broad categories: political rights and civil liberties’ and based on the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.’ Freedom House (2010) ‘Methodology’, located at http://www.freedomhouse.org/template.cfm?page=351&ana_page=363&year=2010 9 Angela Ellis Paine, Matthew Hill and Colin Rochester (2010) ‘‘A rose by any other name’ …Revisiting the question: ‘what exactly is volunteering?’’ Working paper series: Paper one. London: Institute for Volunteering Research 10 Jeremy Kendall (2010) ‘The value of volunteering in Europe in the noughties: What would Beveridge have throught?’ Slides of contribution to seminar organized by ESRC and the Third Sector European Network, accessed November 2010 at http://www.esrc.ac.uk/ESRCInfoCentre/Images/Dr%20Jeremy%20Kendall's%20Slides_tcm6-34550.pdf 11 Also important are issues of the quality of volunteering rather than the quantity, but these are not easily to capture in large international surveys. 12 http://www.europeanvaluesstudy.eu/ 13 See Lester M. Salamon, S. Wojciech Sokolowski, and Associates (2004) Global Civil Society: Dimensions of the Nonprofit Sector, Volume Two, Bloomfield CT: Kumarian Press, and also the forthcoming Volume Three due to be released in 2011 14 This will be discussed in more detail in a forthcoming IVR Working Paper 15 These are the models developed by Salamon et al – see footnote 13.

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