School of Social Science, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, QLD, Australia.
ARC Centre of Excellence for Children and Families Over the Life Course, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, QLD, Australia.
PLoS One. 2023 Jul 12;18(7):e0287533. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0287533. eCollection 2023.
Charities play an increasingly important role in helping people experiencing poverty. However, institutionalized charity shifts the burden of poverty reduction away from the state and exposes recipients to stress and stigma. In this paper, we examine whether the need for institutionalized charity can be offset through enhanced state support. As in other countries, the Australian government responded to the COVID-19 pandemic by substantially increasing the level of income support to citizens through several temporary payments. We draw on this natural experiment and time-series data from the two largest charity organizations in Queensland, Australia to examine how these payments altered the demand for institutionalized charity. We model these data using difference-in-difference regression models to approximate causal effects. By exploiting the timing and varying amounts of the payments, our analyses yield evidence that more generous income support reduces reliance on charity. Halving the demand for charity requires raising pre-pandemic income-support by AUD$42/day, with supplements of approximately AUD$18/day yielding the greatest return on investment.
慈善机构在帮助贫困人口方面发挥着越来越重要的作用。然而,制度化的慈善事业将减贫的负担从国家转移走,并使接受者承受压力和耻辱。在本文中,我们研究了通过增强国家支持是否可以抵消对制度化慈善事业的需求。与其他国家一样,澳大利亚政府通过几笔临时付款大幅增加了对公民的收入支持水平,以应对 COVID-19 大流行。我们利用这一自然实验和澳大利亚昆士兰州两个最大的慈善组织的时间序列数据,研究了这些付款如何改变了对制度化慈善事业的需求。我们使用差异中的差异回归模型对这些数据进行建模,以近似因果效应。通过利用付款的时间和不同金额,我们的分析结果表明,更慷慨的收入支持减少了对慈善事业的依赖。要使慈善需求减半,需要将大流行前的收入支持提高 42 澳元/天,而补贴约 18 澳元/天则会带来最大的投资回报。