Study Finds Volunteerism Remains Steady Among Recession-Strapped Americans
August 20, 2009 | Read Time: 3 minutes
The number of Americans who volunteer held steady last year, defying expectations that the rising unemployment and foreclosure rates could reduce the number of people who get involved in community affairs, according to a new report.
The report released last month by the Corporation for National and Community Service found that 26.4 percent of Americans, or 61.8 million people, volunteered through a nonprofit group last year. That figure was about a million more than in 2007.
Altogether, Americans donated about eight billion hours of service, worth an estimated $162-billion.
Charities, meanwhile, are in need of more volunteers as demand for their services rises.
In a survey by the Johns Hopkins University, supported by the Corporation for National and Community Service, 37 percent of charities reported relying on more volunteers between September and March than they had in the past.
Forty-eight percent, meanwhile, predict they will increase their use of volunteers this year.
While the number of people involved in organized volunteerism stayed relatively constant, many more people got involved in informal ways to give their time, the federal volunteer agency says.
The number of Americans who helped neighbors fix a problem rose by 31 percent, to 19.9 million.
“This report suggests that Americans are responding to the hardship around them by reaching out in service to others, giving their time when they cannot give their money,” said Michelle Obama, the first lady, in a press release. “It reminds us of the generosity of the American spirit, and challenges us to work harder to make service part of the daily life of America.”
8.2 Million Youths
The report, which was based on annual surveys of roughly 100,000 individuals collected by the U.S. Census Bureau and the Bureau of Labor Statistics, found that more young people were getting involved in service.
The number of Americans age 16 to 24 who volunteered increased from 7.8 million to 8.2 million.
Other findings from the survey:
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More than a third (35.9 percent) of Americans who volunteered last year did so through a religious organization.
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For the fourth year in a row, Utah had a higher volunteerism rate (43.5 percent) than other states. Nebraska and Minnesota rounded out the top three.
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More people volunteered in Minneapolis-St. Paul (38.4 percent) than in other large cities, followed by Portland, Ore., and Salt Lake City.
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Residents of midsize cities, particularly those in the Midwest, were more likely to volunteer than people in big cities.
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Volunteering was more widespread in Provo, Utah, than in any other midsize city, with 62.9 percent of residents volunteering.
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Women were more likely than men to volunteer, with working mothers volunteering at the highest rates. But men were more likely to participate in less-structured volunteering activities.
Findings from the survey are available on a Web site maintained by the federal agency for national service, at http://www.volunteeringinamerica.gov.
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HOW THE RECESSION HAS CHANGED CHARITIES’ USE OF VOLUNTEERS
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