Anyway, the point is, just how much of your donation goes to the good cause...
All registered charities must prepare a Trustees’ Annual Report (TAR) and accounts and make copies available to the public. Charities only need to register with the Charity Commission when their annual income exceeds £5,000. All charities that have a income over £25,000 have to submit audited accounts and an annual report to the Charity Commission. They then publish the results online, here is Cancer Research UK's for example
http://www.charity-commission.gov.u...teredCharityNumber=1089464&SubsidiaryNumber=0
With them 69% of their expenditure goes on charitable activities and they have (in 2009) 152 employees earning over £60,000 (see page 35 in their annual report, also on the site).
You have to look at governance costs vs total income, a charity I volunteer for paid a professional fundraiser the better part of £200,000 over 3 years but it has paid off to the tune of £1,500,000 and the money is still coming in from her work.
I would be surprised if its a run of the mill job that earns £190,000 but to get the best people you have to pay up, even if 3rd sector pay is lower than public or private sector work.
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