Sector Debates

The big questions shaping the UK charity sector. Balanced, evidence-based analysis of the arguments that matter most to charity leaders, trustees, funders, and policymakers.

Governance & Leadership

Should charity trustees be paid?

The tension between voluntary trusteeship as a foundation of public trust and the argument that unpaid boards exclude everyone who can't afford to give their time for free.

Governance & Leadership

Why are charity boards still so unrepresentative?

UK charity boards remain overwhelmingly white, retired, and wealthy. Why trustee diversity has barely shifted since 2017 and what the evidence says about fixing it.

Governance & Leadership

Founder syndrome: when does strong leadership become a governance failure?

When charismatic leaders become ungovernable. Kids Company, governance lessons, and what boards can do.

Governance & Leadership

How much should charity CEOs be paid?

Periodic tabloid outrage meets a sector that struggles to compete for talent. The unresolved question of what's fair.

Governance & Leadership

Why don't more charities merge or close when the mission is done?

Thousands of dormant charities sit on the register. The stigma around closures, the case for managed exits, and what the evidence says.

Governance & Leadership

Board vs. executive power: where does governance end and management begin?

Whether volunteer trustees meeting quarterly can realistically oversee complex, multi-million-pound organisations.

Funding & Funder Behaviour

Restricted vs unrestricted funding: the trust deficit in grantmaking

Funders earmarking every penny vs charities needing flexible core funding to actually function.

Funding & Funder Behaviour

Full cost recovery: why funders won't pay what services actually cost

UK charities cross-subsidise underfunded government contracts from voluntary income, hollowing out their own sustainability.

Funding & Funder Behaviour

Short-term funding cycles: why one-year grants fail long-term problems

One-year grants dominate UK charity funding, yet most social problems take years to address. The case for multi-year funding.

Funding & Funder Behaviour

Application burden: how much does the funding system waste?

Charities spend millions on bespoke grant applications that fail. The case for common application forms and shared data standards.

Funding & Funder Behaviour

Who holds the power in grantmaking — and should that change?

Most grantmakers acknowledge a power imbalance exists, but few cede real decision-making to communities.

Funding & Funder Behaviour

Are donor-advised funds a parking lot for philanthropy?

Donors claim tax relief immediately but disburse to charities later — or never. Whether DAFs help or hinder giving in the UK.

Funding & Funder Behaviour

Endowment spending vs perpetuity: should foundations spend down or exist forever?

The case for deploying capital now versus preserving endowments in perpetuity. Intergenerational equity and the 4-5% spending rule.

Funding & Funder Behaviour

Is big philanthropy generous giving or reputation laundering?

The ultra-wealthy give billions to charity. Does mega-philanthropy genuinely help, or does it launder reputations and entrench donor power?

Funding & Funder Behaviour

Donor anonymity vs. transparency: should we know where the money comes from?

The public benefit case for knowing who funds charities and think tanks — including foreign donations — vs. the right to give privately.

Funding & Funder Behaviour

Contract inflation adjustments: the invisible defunding of charities

Government contracts not uprated for inflation force charities to absorb real-terms cuts year on year.

Fundraising Practices

The overhead ratio myth: does 'how much goes to the cause' actually matter?

The public fixation on admin costs as a proxy for effectiveness, and why most sector leaders consider it deeply misleading.

Fundraising Practices

Commission-based fundraising: does paying per sign-up help or harm charities?

Commission-based fundraising divided the sector after the Olive Cooke scandal. Face-to-face and telephone fundraising remain controversial.

Fundraising Practices

Aggressive fundraising tactics: where is the line between persistence and pressure?

Data sharing, high-frequency asks, and pressure on vulnerable donors have driven major regulatory reform.

Fundraising Practices

Capping fundraising ratios: should there be a maximum cost per pound raised?

The public wants charities to spend less on fundraising. The sector says caps would punish charities that need to invest most.

Fundraising Practices

Charity shops and the high street: unfair advantage or community lifeline?

Commercial retailers argue business rates relief gives charity shops an unfair edge. The sector says charity retail serves a public benefit.

Reserves & Financial Management

How much should charities hold in reserve?

There is no mandated reserve level for UK charities, but public perception clashes with financial reality. Too much looks like hoarding; too little risks collapse.

Reserves & Financial Management

Should charities invest in fossil fuels, arms, and tobacco?

Charities hold billions in investments. The divest vs. engage debate asks whether excluding harmful industries or using shareholder power better serves charitable purposes.

Reserves & Financial Management

Commercial trading arms: when does a charity's subsidiary start to look like a business?

Many charities operate trading subsidiaries to generate income. As these grow, the line between charitable purpose and commercial enterprise blurs.

Service Delivery & the State

Payments by results and social impact bonds: do they focus minds or shift risk?

UK charities face financial risk under payment-by-results contracts and social impact bonds. Over 100 SIBs launched with mixed evidence.

Service Delivery & the State

Charities as public service subcontractors: who really pays when the state outsources?

UK charities deliver billions in public services but subsidise contracts from voluntary income. Mission drift, contract culture, and sustainability.

Service Delivery & the State

Competitive tendering: does forcing charities to compete drive down quality?

Competitive tendering pits charities against each other and private companies, driving down costs but also wages and quality.

Service Delivery & the State

The charity-state boundary: gap-fillers or system-changers?

Should charities plug gaps in state provision, or challenge the systems that create those gaps?

Political Activity & Advocacy

Should charities campaign politically?

The Lobbying Act, 'stick to your knitting', and the ongoing tension around charities engaging in political advocacy.

Political Activity & Advocacy

Should charities take sides in culture wars?

The National Trust, RNLI, and Stonewall have all faced backlash for engaging with divisive social issues.

Political Activity & Advocacy

Charities and elections: how far can the sector go during election periods?

The Lobbying Act restricts charity activity during elections. Critics say it silences legitimate advocacy.

Food & Poverty

The food bank paradox: essential service or sticking plaster?

Food banks have become a permanent feature of the UK welfare landscape. Are they now too embedded to challenge?

Food & Poverty

Corporate food surplus partnerships: green generosity or poverty management?

Supermarkets donating surplus food looks green and generous, but critics argue it institutionalises charity food systems while poverty goes unaddressed.

Food & Poverty

The normalisation of food charity in schools

Breakfast clubs, holiday hunger programmes, and food parcels are becoming routine. When does emergency provision become expected infrastructure?

Homelessness & Housing

Housing First vs the staircase model: what works for ending homelessness?

Should you give people a home unconditionally and then address other needs, or require them to be 'housing ready' first?

Homelessness & Housing

Temporary accommodation as permanent solution: safety net or national scandal?

Over 134,000 households and 172,000 children are stuck in temporary accommodation in England.

Homelessness & Housing

Hidden homelessness: do the numbers miss the real crisis?

Sofa surfing, overcrowding, and unsuitable temporary accommodation affect hundreds of thousands who never appear in official stats.

Homelessness & Housing

Are homelessness charities too focused on housing supply?

The sector centres housing shortages, but for many people homelessness is rooted in family breakdown, trauma, and poverty.

Homelessness & Housing

Deserving vs undeserving: who is 'really' homeless?

The persistent public distinction between 'genuine' homelessness and perceived self-responsibility shapes policy and charity messaging.

What Counts as a Charity?

The public benefit test: does it actually work?

The 2006 Charities Act required all charities to demonstrate public benefit but never defined it. The 2011 Upper Tribunal ruling set the bar low. Is the test fit for purpose?

What Counts as a Charity?

Should independent schools have charitable status?

Whether fee-charging institutions genuinely serve the public benefit, reignited by Labour's VAT on school fees.

What Counts as a Charity?

Think tanks as charities: should politically active organisations have charitable status?

Several influential UK think tanks are registered charities, raising questions about political advocacy and charitable tax reliefs.

What Counts as a Charity?

Religious organisations as charities: charitable purpose or public subsidy for faith?

Whether advancing religion should remain a charitable purpose. The tension between faith-based service and proselytising.

What Counts as a Charity?

Multi-academy trusts: charities or corporate empires?

Multi-academy trusts run over half of state schools as exempt charities. Their scale and executive pay raise questions about fit.

People & Workforce

The volunteering crisis: is the UK running out of volunteers?

Volunteering participation has dropped from 45% to 28% in a decade. What's driving the decline and what it means for the sector.

People & Workforce

Should charities be exempt from the employer NIC increase?

The Autumn Budget 2024 employer NIC increase costs the charity sector an estimated £1.4 billion with no exemption.

People & Workforce

DEI in the charity sector: how far has the reckoning on race and representation actually gone?

The UK charity sector acknowledges a racism and representation problem but progress has stalled. #CharitySoWhite, lived experience on boards, and whether funders should weight grants by leadership diversity.

People & Workforce

The charity pay discount: should charity workers accept below-market salaries?

Charity sector workers earn 7% less per hour than the wider economy, and the gap is widening.

People & Workforce

When does volunteering become exploitation?

Charity shops, youth programmes, and welfare schemes rely on unpaid labour. When does gaining experience become replacing paid jobs?

People & Workforce

Professionalisation vs voluntarism: has the charity sector lost its soul?

Complex public services require professional staff. But has professionalism crowded out the volunteer ethos charities were built on?

Should Charities Exist?

Cash first: should charities just give people money?

If the underlying issue is poverty, why design programmes around it rather than addressing it directly?

Should Charities Exist?

The non-profit industrial complex: have charities traded independence for state funding?

UK charities receive £18bn from government annually. Has dependency on state contracts cost the sector its ability to challenge power?

Should Charities Exist?

Should charities exist at all, or should the state do everything?

The most fundamental question: is charity a symptom of state failure, or a vital expression of pluralism and independence?

Impact & Measurement

Effective altruism vs. traditional charity: should we always fund what saves the most lives per pound?

Effective altruism argues donations should go where they do the most measurable good. Critics say this ignores relational, place-based work.

Impact & Measurement

Impact measurement burden: are we measuring ourselves to death?

Charities face a proliferation of funder-imposed reporting frameworks, spending disproportionate time proving impact rather than delivering it.

Impact & Measurement

Outcomes frameworks: one size fits none?

Whether standardised outcome measurement is possible or desirable across hugely diverse organisations.

Sector Structure & Economics

Small vs. large charities: does size determine who gets funded?

96% of UK charities have income under £1m but most funding flows to the largest. Do big charities crowd out small ones?

Sector Structure & Economics

Charity tax reliefs: do they help the sector or hold it back?

Gift Aid is worth £1.7bn a year but riddled with complexity. VAT irrecoverability costs charities £2bn. Are tax reliefs fit for purpose?

Sector Structure & Economics

London-centricity: does place-based funding reach the communities that need it most?

Charity funding is heavily concentrated in London and the South East. The regional funding gap and whether national charities undermine local organisations.

Sector Structure & Economics

Gift Aid reform: why is a broken system so hard to fix?

Gift Aid is overly complex, under-claimed, and disproportionately benefits large charities. No government has acted.

Sector Structure & Economics

Social investment and blended finance: can market logic fix the charity funding gap?

The UK social investment market has grown past £10bn, but most charities cannot take on debt. The gap between enthusiasm and reality.

Safeguarding & Accountability

Safeguarding after Oxfam: has the sector's reckoning gone far enough?

The Oxfam Haiti scandal transformed safeguarding in UK charities. Regulatory changes, serious incident reporting, and whether smaller charities can cope.

Safeguarding & Accountability

Accountability to beneficiaries vs. donors: who does a charity ultimately serve?

Only 4% of UK grantmakers say they are most accountable to beneficiaries. The structural tension between upward accountability to funders and downward accountability to the people charities serve.

Safeguarding & Accountability

The Charity Commission: regulator, enabler, or underfunded for both?

The Charity Commission oversees 170,000+ charities on a budget of ~£32m. Is it too heavy-handed, too light-touch, or simply under-resourced for the scale of the register?

Safeguarding & Accountability

Following the money: transparency in charity funding flows

When large charities sub-grant or pass funds through intermediaries, the trail can go cold. Growing concerns about opacity.

Technology & Data

AI in the charity sector: where should the human stay in the loop?

Charities are adopting AI rapidly, but algorithmic decision-making about vulnerable people and AI-written grant applications raise urgent ethical questions.

Technology & Data

Digital exclusion: are charities leaving their beneficiaries behind?

Charities moved services online rapidly during COVID, but 7.9 million UK adults lack basic digital skills. The people most in need of charity support are the least likely to access it digitally.

Technology & Data

Data ethics and sharing: can charities use beneficiary data responsibly?

Charities hold sensitive data on vulnerable people. Sharing improves services but raises questions about consent and power.

Technology & Data

Charities and social media: stay, leave, or hedge?

Almost three in ten charities have quit X. Platform instability is forcing organisations to reconsider their digital presence.

International Development

Should UK international NGOs shift power and money to locally-led organisations?

The decolonising development debate asks whether Northern NGOs should cede power and funding to Southern-led organisations or reform from within.

International Development

The overhead obsession in aid: is the '100% model' fundamentally dishonest?

Promising every penny goes to the field is compelling but misleading. The overhead obsession distorts how aid is delivered.

International Development

Aid effectiveness and dependency: does long-term aid help or hinder?

Does sustained development aid create dependency? The localisation agenda vs. the reality that funding still flows through Northern intermediaries.

International Development

Humanitarian aid vs. long-term development: does emergency response undermine structural change?

Whether emergency relief crowds out long-term development, and how charities should balance the two.

International Development

The UK aid cuts: was the reduction from 0.7% to 0.5% inevitable?

The government cut aid from 0.7% to 0.5% of GNI. Should development charities have fought harder?

Health

Who should pay for hospice care? The gap between NHS rhetoric and charitable reality

UK hospices provide essential end-of-life care but the NHS funds only around 30% of adult hospice costs. Charities subsidise a core health service.

Health

The hierarchy of illness: does the charity model distort how we fund disease?

Cancer charities raise billions while other conditions struggle. The model creates a hierarchy based on fundraising appeal, not clinical need.

Health

Should charities fund medical research — or is that the state's job?

Cancer Research UK, BHF, and Wellcome spend billions on research. Independent strength, or outsourced state responsibility?

Health

Health charities and pharmaceutical money: partnership or compromise?

Patient charities accept pharma sponsorship while campaigning on drug access. Does this compromise independence?

Children & Youth Work

Youth services decimation: should charities have filled the gap the state left behind?

Youth service budgets cut by 70% since 2010 and 760+ youth centres closed. Should charities have stepped in or refused on principle?

Children & Youth Work

Safeguarding vs trust: has child protection bureaucracy made genuine relationships harder?

DBS checks and risk assessments protect children, but critics argue they have bureaucratised care and made adults afraid to connect.

Children & Youth Work

Detached vs targeted youth work: open-access relationships or referral-only programmes?

Open-access youth work struggles to show measurable outcomes, so targeted programmes get funded. Is the sector losing what makes it distinctive?

Children & Youth Work

ACEs: useful framework or deterministic labelling?

Adverse Childhood Experiences have transformed how services understand trauma, but critics say the framework pathologises poverty.

Mental Health

Clinical vs. community approaches to mental health: should charities provide therapy or address the causes?

Should mental health charities provide clinical therapy or focus on community support and the social determinants that drive poor mental health?

Mental Health

The medicalisation of distress: are charities reinforcing a clinical model when the problem is poverty?

Mental health charities channel people toward diagnosis and treatment. But when the drivers are poverty and isolation, does a medical framing help?

Mental Health

Plugging the waiting list: essential lifeline or enabling chronic underinvestment?

Charities provide counselling because NHS waits exceed 18 months. Does filling the gap relieve the pressure needed to fix it?

Mental Health

Parity of esteem: everyone agrees mental health matters equally. The funding never follows.

Parity between mental and physical health has been law since 2012. Funding has never materialised. Are charities filling the gap complicit?

Social Care & Disability

Unpaid carers: supporting carers or subsidising state failure?

Charities supporting unpaid carers do vital work, but does that support mask the structural undervaluation of care?

Social Care & Disability

Personalisation and direct payments: empowerment or abandonment?

Direct payments give service users control over care budgets, but critics say they shift risk onto the most vulnerable people.

Social Care & Disability

Care as a market: does competitive tendering drive down quality and pay?

Commissioning care through competitive tendering drives down wages and fragments services. The race to the bottom in care.

Social Care & Disability

About us without us: should disability charities be led by disabled people?

Many large disability charities are run by non-disabled people. The disability rights movement says this is fundamentally illegitimate.

Environment & Animals

Climate activism and charity law: can environmental charities support direct action?

Environmental charities face a legal tightrope between advancing climate purposes and associating with direct action movements.

Environment & Animals

Should conservation charities take political positions on farming and planning?

The RSPB and National Trust increasingly engage with farming policy and planning reform. Should they stick to nature?

Environment & Animals

Animal welfare vs. animal rights: how far should charities go?

The spectrum from RSPCA welfare reform to abolitionist positions. Where charity law draws the line.

Environment & Animals

Rewilding: conservation imperative or elite environmentalism?

Conservation charities buying farmland for rewilding. Biodiversity emergency or displacement of rural communities?

Arts, Heritage & Education

Do arts charities serve primarily wealthy audiences?

Major arts charities receive public subsidy while audiences remain disproportionately affluent, white, and London-based.

Arts, Heritage & Education

Should museum charities return artefacts to their countries of origin?

UK museums hold millions of objects acquired during the colonial era. The legal and ethical arguments for repatriation are intensifying.