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OUT OF THE WOODS YET?
Economist says recession over, church giving to increase
WASHINGTON (UMNS)—Don House has good news for the United
Methodist Church. An economist, not an evangelist, he believes the economy is
improving.
Everyone knows there is a connection between the state of the
economy and the dollars—or lack thereof —in Sunday’s collection plate. Few
people, with the exception of professional fund-raisers, are as aware of that
connection as House, a United Methodist and economic consultant from Bryan,
Texas.
Now a voting member of the church’s financial administrative
agency, House was a member of the United Methodist Funding Patterns Task Force
(2001- 04), which was charged with looking at how the denomination funds
church-wide ministries.
The task force’s study led the General Council on Finance
and Administration to recommend, and the General Conference to adopt, a new
formula for figuring the apportionments asked of each annual conference and,
through them, of each local church.
House sensed the need for apportionments to be more in tune
with the financial reality of the local churches and annual conferences, so he
suggested incorporating into the formula a factor that reflects the economic
health of the local church. The formula being phased in during this four-year
period, or quadrennium, uses local-church spending figures to achieve this.
As a member of GCFA’s General Funds Coordinating Committee,
House is participating in discussions that will lead to the 2005-08 budget
proposal that the finance agency will present to the church’s highest
legislative assembly next year. He recently told other members of the council he
believes the U. S. economy is no longer in recession.
“The numbers show we are out of the recession and in a
period of growth, but church records don’t yet show that, and they shouldn’t,”
House said at the committee’s May meeting.
Asked to explain what he meant, House told United Methodist
News Service, “We have now experienced five consecutive quarters of sustained
economic growth. This is strong evidence that we have ‘bottomed out’ and
that we are well on the road to economic recovery.”
The “sustained economic growth” House refers to is based
on figures produced by the U.S. Department of Commerce that show
inflation-adjusted increases in domestic productivity. A recession, on the other
hand, is a period when the gross domestic product figure decreases, showing that
output has fallen.
“Our apportionment payments are suffering from the impact of
the recent recession that began in early 2001,” he added. “The general press
has not yet reported an end to the recession. However, the facts speak for
themselves.”
House says he expects giving to increase and payment of
apportionments to grow as church members become aware that economic growth has
returned. Apportionment income at the end of May was down 7 percent—more than
$2 million—from last year’s comparable figure, to the consternation of
church officials. Giving to the World Service Fund, which supports most of the
church-wide ministries—from creating curriculum to mission outreach and
international advocacy—was down 7.7 percent.
“Improvements should be evident as early as the end of the
summer,” House predicted. “If the economy falls back into recession,
apportionments will adjust downward. If the economy continues to grow
unexpectedly through 2005, apportionments will adjust upward. Today, much of the
pressure of knowing exactly how the local churches will fare financially
throughout the quadrennium is gone.”
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