cathy duff - csi in south africa 2012

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Trialogue Joburg director Cathy Duff presents the results of our recent research into corporate social investment, published in The CSI Handbook.

TRANSCRIPT

Corporate Social Investment

in South Africa

Making CSI Matter Conference

May 2012

1

Total CSI expenditure in 2010/11:

R6.2 billion

01234567

R b

illio

n

Nom Growth Real Growth

R2.5 billion allocated to

non-profits

‘Top 100’ companies account

for R4.1 billion of CSI spend

5

1.0 21

1.5 30

1.0 33

0.5 11

0%

20%

40%

60%

80%

100%

No. of companies R billion spent

< R10 mill

R10 - R25 mill

R25 - R50 mill

R50 - 100 mill

> R100 mill

Budget size

Education receives the

most support

Non-specific donations

Safety and security

Housing /living conditions

Sports development

Arts and culture

Enterprise development

Food security / agric

Environment

Health

Social /community dev.

Education

Share of spend % support

40 20 0 20 40 60 80

National projects and those in

Gauteng receive the most support

Northern Cape

North West

Mpumalanga

Limpopo

Free State

Eastern Cape

Western Cape

National

KwaZulu-Natal

Gauteng

% of respondents % of CSI spend

60 40 20 0 20 40 60 80

59% of surveyed NPOs had

increased income in 2010/11

0 - 10%

11 - 20%

31 - 40%

41 - 50%

51 - 60%

61 - 70%

81 - 90%

91 - 100%

Over 100%

Increased Decreased

60% 40% 20% 0% 20% 40% 60%

Corporates account for 18% of

NPO income

0% 5% 10% 15% 20%

Intermediary NGOs

Other

Private individuals

Self generated

Government

Foreign donors

Corporates

Trusts/foundations

% of NPO income

Positioning of CSI in development

CSI is a relatively small contributor

Government spending on social services (2011)

Social protection – R139bn

Education – R173bn

Health – R103 bn

Housing R102 bn

Foreign donors CSI

Other / private

+ R517 billion R6.2 billion

R? billion

2010/2011

+ R6.5 billion ODA + foundations ?

Partnerships and collaboration

Government, business and civil

society need to partner

Government

Corporate

Civil Society

Increasing number of

partnerships

0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%

Corporates in otherindustry sectors

Corporates in ownindustry sector

Local government

National / provincialgovernment departments

NGO service providers /community-based…

% of respondents

Formal contract withMOU

Loose affiliation

No involvementbeyond funding

N/A / Don't Know

Alignment

Strategic CSI implies a convergence of

interests between business and society

Soci

al B

en

efit

Economic Benefit Pure business

Pure philanthropy

Combined social and economic benefit

Ongoing learning

Corporate support for extended

development activities

% of respondents

Policy of not supporting

Currently supporting

80 60 40 20 0 20 40 60

Co-ordinating or linkage programmes

Developmental research

Advocacy programmes

Communication

Aspects of CSI communicated

0 20 40 60 80 100

Formal project impact assessment

Breakdown of CSI expenditure

Project objectives and inputs

Project performance and outputs

CSI focus areas

Description of CSI projects

% of respondents

Thank you

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