Donate £10k to charity when you buy a house?
Discussion
Builder comes up with idea to pass £10k of purchasers money onto charity
https://www.hertsad.co.uk/property/why-should-i-bu...
https://www.hertsad.co.uk/property/why-should-i-bu...
saaby93 said:
Wouldnt most buyers prefer the £10k discount?
I would have thought so, but at £950k, the £10k represents a discount of 1.05%.Still, £10k is £10k, and I would rather have it knocked off the price rather than given to a charity of the developers choice. I appreciate this may mark me out as selfish.
Sophisticated Sarah said:
I’m starting a charity before people realise what a scam they are 
I'm fairly sure they have been regarded as a scam for years, yet they still seem to continue.
The figures are easy to find, and it may not shock people to discover that many of the big name charities spend as much as 74% of their income on their own salaries, offices, expenses, and advertising etc.
Figures published by the charity commission also show that smaller charities and local charities spend almost all their income on the things they intended to support or fund, but, the 'big' charities with income over £100m are massively inefficient, and often spend more on themselves than they give to the causes they support.
Lord Marylebone said:
saaby93 said:
Wouldnt most buyers prefer the £10k discount?
I would have thought so, but at £950k, the £10k represents a discount of 1.05%.Still, £10k is £10k, and I would rather have it knocked off the price rather than given to a charity of the developers choice. I appreciate this may mark me out as selfish.
Lord Marylebone said:
Sophisticated Sarah said:
I’m starting a charity before people realise what a scam they are 
I'm fairly sure they have been regarded as a scam for years, yet they still seem to continue.
The figures are easy to find, and it may not shock people to discover that many of the big name charities spend as much as 74% of their income on their own salaries, offices, expenses, and advertising etc.
Figures published by the charity commission also show that smaller charities and local charities spend almost all their income on the things they intended to support or fund, but, the 'big' charities with income over £100m are massively inefficient, and often spend more on themselves than they give to the causes they support.
When comparing the percentages of how much of funds raised goes to the cause, its important to consider the scale: both in the cost of organisation, the total funds raised and used for the cause. 25% of £100m is a whole lot more than 95% of 100k, and provides a whole lot more benefit.
Lord Marylebone said:
Sophisticated Sarah said:
I’m starting a charity before people realise what a scam they are 
I'm fairly sure they have been regarded as a scam for years, yet they still seem to continue.
The figures are easy to find, and it may not shock people to discover that many of the big name charities spend as much as 74% of their income on their own salaries, offices, expenses, and advertising etc.
Figures published by the charity commission also show that smaller charities and local charities spend almost all their income on the things they intended to support or fund, but, the 'big' charities with income over £100m are massively inefficient, and often spend more on themselves than they give to the causes they support.
Secondly, yes, small local charities are more “efficient”, but that does not make them better. Small local charities are run completely by volunteers in their spare time. Mrs Smith and the local Vicar might be able to find raise to fix the church roof, but they won’t be able to manage much research in to cancer therapies.
320d is all you need said:
Lord Marylebone said:
saaby93 said:
Wouldnt most buyers prefer the £10k discount?
I would have thought so, but at £950k, the £10k represents a discount of 1.05%.Still, £10k is £10k, and I would rather have it knocked off the price rather than given to a charity of the developers choice. I appreciate this may mark me out as selfish.
Still, I'd take a £10k discount even if it is £800k.
For the builder, assuming £200k profit, that's 5%. I'd happily donate 5% of my profits to a charity if it got me free advertising (well, it's not free but imagine only having to pay for advertising if the advert sold!) and improved sales.
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