This is part of a series on charities in Australia. Read the series here.
The Australian Catholic Bishops’ Conference supports the work of Australia’s most senior clergy, operating from an office in Canberra with more than 40 full-time staff. It is also a registered charity, and as such is eligible for a series of tax breaks on income, FBT and GST.
But different rules apply to the Catholic Bishops’ Conference compared to other charities. It does not need to declare its income or any of its financial details to the regulator or to the broader public. It is exempt from the governance standards the government enforces on other charities. And even if it did have to comply with those standards, the regulator — the Australian Charities and Not-for-profits Commission (ACNC) — could not remove any office holder, no matter what they had done.
It adds up to a near total immunity from accountability.
All this applies despite bodies like the Bishops’ Conference being subsidised by the taxpayer. How generous that subsidy is, we don’t know.
That’s life as a basic religious charity, a BRC. It’s been this way for 10 years, ever since the Labor government did a deal with the religious lobby in order to pass its legislation to establish the ACNC in 2012.
The Bishops’ Conference is not the only large, well-heeled organisation in receipt of such favours. The Anglican Investment and Development Fund, a creature of the Anglican Church, is also a BRC. So is the umbrella body for Australia’s Pentecostal churches, Australian Christian Churches (ACC). Hillsong, naturally, is in the BRC club too.
All up, 10 years on from the passing of the ACNC legislation, 17% of Australia’s 46,500 registered charities in Australia are BRCs. That equates to around 8000 charities operating in near total secrecy and largely beyond the reach of the charity regulator.
There has never been any sound policy basis for the BRC dispensation, in the view of charity and taxation law specialists.
Successive Coalition governments have refused to abolish the special arrangement and the secrecy has remained intact, despite evidence from the McClelland royal commission into child sex abuse that found that lack of transparency in church-run organisations was fundamental to their poor culture.
The Pell carve-out
The special deal for religious charities is a political scandal that flew under the radar for the life of the Coalition government.
It came about principally through the lobbying of the Catholic Archdiocese of Sydney, then under the control of Cardinal George Pell. Crikey understands that Pell’s powerful consigliere, Danny Casey, led the one-to-one lobbying effort in Canberra.
The church is exceptionally good at persuading politicians to its view. In 2012 it was ruthlessly effective.
Labor governed in a minority and didn’t control numbers in the Senate. Lining up with the Catholic Church, the opposition under Tony Abbott was against any form of regulation for charities, even though the case for a regulator had been well made over a series of inquiries. The opposition’s spokesman, Kevin Andrews, promised an Abbott government would abolish the ACNC altogether.
The first draft of the ACNC bill in 2012 had no special BRC carve-out. According to Professor Ann O’Connell of Melbourne University Law School, the BRC category only appeared in a later version of the bill as a result of lobbying by established religious entities.
“It would appear that the inclusion of the exemptions and the breadth of the exemptions were matters that were negotiated in private consultation with various churches,” wrote O’Connell, a tax specialist appointed to a working group that advised on tax concessions for the not-for-profit sector in 2012.
“The exemptions serve no logical purpose.”
From little things big things grow
Religious bodies made the case that under the constitution the government had no right to tread into religious territory. The religious interests that lobbied for the BRC exemption also argued it was all too hard for small, volunteer-run church organisations to comply with the reporting demands of the regulator.
Ultimately, while the traditional churches pushed the image of the struggling congregation up the road providing scones and tea to make ends meet, the laws that finally passed had no limit on size.
What’s it led to?
A detailed analysis of ACNC charities data from 2020 carried out by Dr Phil Saj, a senior visiting lecturer at University of Adelaide’s Adelaide Business School, has found that close to 300 charities with BRC status are classified as large and conduct enterprises including investment and development funds, property trusts and income-generating activities (such as funerals).
Saj’s examples include:
- The Anglican Investment and Development Fund
- According to its website the Anglican fund manages more than $10 million in assets, providing services similar to a bank or a building society. Last year it reported an operating surplus of $912,789
- Australian Christian Churches
- The ACC represents Australia’s Pentecostal churches. It runs a financial services company covering insurance, lending, investment and risk management to churches, schools and ministries. Its parent company reported total assets of more than $34 million and a liability for debentures issued of more than $33 million.
Saj also noted that the Australian Catholic Bishops’ Conference had issued a 2020 annual report — the first time it had done so — in which it published a single-line disclosure of $11 million in revenue for the preceding 12 months.
“The issue is whether or not the ACNC laws on BRCs are being applied in a way that meets not just the letter of the act, but the purported intention of legislators that small unincorporated religious communities with limited resources, and which are not engaged in significant economic activities, should not be unduly burdened with reporting requirements,” Saj said.
Will the Albanese government act?
As Scott Morrison’s secret ministries saga demonstrates, Australia is still learning about the profound impact of a decade of highly partisan government, when once independent bodies came to be treated as the political property of the Coalition.
But will Labor — now back in control of the agency it created — take on the powerful vested interests that have benefitted from a decade of special treatment?
For some reason, reading this article reminded me of a conversation I had with one of my best schoolmates on the front verandah of my then-home in 1962. We were both 14-year-olds in third form (that’s year 9 for anyone under about 50 years of age). We were discussing religion when my then-friend (unfortunately he is no longer with us) quipped that:
“Religion is nothing more than a money-making racket …….. In fact, …… I’m thinking of getting into it myself!!”
I still have a little chuckle to myself when I recall this incident. My friend was quite something of a raconteur (as well as being quite popular with the girls).
Very little has changed really since those days. The witch doctors and warlocks and other purveyors of witchcraft and sorcery that run these scams are still getting away with far too much.
Just take a look at the career of L. Ron Hubbard as he transformed his laughable pulp science-fiction scribblings into the basis of a huge, wealthy and powerful religious organisation to see a prime example.
The first time I ventured down Castlemaine St in Sydney, I saw old nutter Hubbard had set up shop next to the the Pope’s local digs, the Catholic Club. Birds of a feather. Is there anyone still on the never ending bridge to Xenu?
Good to see an article on this David.
The argument that the reason for the exemption, or at least a major reason, was that it was “too hard for small, volunteer-run church organisations to comply with the reporting demands of the regulator”, doesn’t really stack up. This is because there are thousands of such organisations that are not eligible for ‘basic religious charity’ (BRC) status merely because they are incorporated.
I advanced a different reason in 2015 (https://www.businessbythebook.com.au/basic-religious-charity-a-justified-exemption): they have their own laws and accountability measures.
By the way, I wonder if any of the big BRCs should have lost their status due to receiving more than $100K in government grants (one of the qualification requirements)?
Absolutely agree with the “too hard for small, volunteer-run…” criticism. As someone who both works and volunteers in the sector I know that there are a lot of organisations that are managing it despite this. The ACNC requirements for reporting are not onerous, particularly for smaller organisations. The reporting only becomes more formal when you get to larger organisations, and those are staffed and not volunteer-run. This argument does not stack up at all. I’m really glad to see this getting reported on at last – it has been a sore point with me for quite a while.
Thanks for reporting this. It looks like Labor, with agreement from the Coalition, lets the religious charities do what they will. They are free from any over-sight or regulatory supervision. They can operate in total secrecy. The government, regulators, tax office and the public is obliged to accept their word that all is in order and their activities are above board. And why not, what could possibly go wrong?
The model for this looks like the European early middle ages when churches governed their extensive property, ran their enterprises and exercised the jurisdiction of their laws more or less independently of the secular powers in various kingdoms, not so much as a state within the state, but as a state above the state.
They can make that argument. But then they should accept that the government will not make any special concession in legislation or give any money to any organisation that wishes to assert its religious independence.
I agree that religion is not a place for governments. Unlike the churches I also believe that governments should not be giving them any money. Or any benefits at all. They should not get tax free income and there should be no reporting concessions either. Big religion is a scam and should be treated as such. How many other businesses could get away with taking money on the basis of product delivery after death. SCAM written all over it.
‘…product delivery after death.’
It’s the perfect iron-clad business model with no chance of recourse.
I think that it is time we got the ACCC to investigate this time-honored scam!!
“will Labor — now back in control of the agency it created — take on the powerful vested interests that have benefitted from a decade of special treatment?” … ah, NO
Labor are gutless
Totally agree with you rob. (I only wish that I didn’t.)
If and when you are proved wrong I hope you have the guts to admit it.
magnet, I think that roberto is on extremely safe ground there.
I would like to be as sure of winning lotto next Saturday as I am that he is right. Labor has had decades of form when it comes to displaying craven gutlessness. You might need to remove those rose-colored shades mag (like I did some 40 or so years ago).
Not sure what colour your shades are but they must be dark indeed if you haven’t see what has been offered as a government for the last 9 years and yet it’s Labor that is gutless.Give us a break.
Yes, magnet, “of the top of my head”, the ALP has given us Plain Packaging Tobacco legislation, the (poorly funded) NDIS and the Royal Commission into Child Abuse. I will be the first to concede that all of these things were a move in the right direction.
However magnet, the ALP has done nothing to address major, systemic problems such as reversing its insane decision to adopt neo-liberalism, the under-funding of the state education and health systems, it continues to rely on immigration for a skilled workforce (a legacy of economic rationalism) and it dodges serious taxation reform. At the state level, we still have the logging of forests and the flourishing gambling industry.
If this is your idea of what a “Labor Party” is all about magnet, then you have totally lost me. Oh, and by the way magnet, I was a fully paid-up member (and for a while branch treasurer and I spent some time on selection panels) of the ALP. But once Hawke and Keating turned the party into another Liberal Party (on steroids), I resigned (some 40 years ago).
Gosh bet they were sorry to see you go.So because 40 years ago they made decisions (not gutless ones)at the time that you obviously in hindsight found unsupportable you agree and declare that this new Labor government only 5 months old is gutless.That is senseless.For me I just have high hopes that this is government is a good one in these difficult times.If that is bias then so be it.
magnet, I could not care less if ‘they’ (the ALP) were sorry or not to see me go. I agonized for quite a while over that decision. Now my only regret is that I did not cut my ties with them earlier.
I would also say too magnet. that my former local branch no longer exists. Obviously I was not the only one to become disillusioned with the ALP.
It was not only the decision (driven by the working class traitors Hawke and Keating) to adopt neo-liberalism) that prevents me from supporting ‘Labor’, it is the realization that they are nothing more than a quasi ‘left-wing’ Liberal Party. I am particularly ‘pissed off’ (to use the vernacular) with, inter alia, their latest decision to contemplate training Ukrainian soldiers. That is a conflict that we should keep well clear of.
I would also say that one reason I joined the ALP was that it had a socialist platform (in name only as it turned out). I remain a socialist. Why should I support a political party that blatantly supports the capitalist system?