
News Release
Office of News and Information
Johns Hopkins University
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Phone: (410) 516-7160 | Fax (410) 516-5251
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April 15, 2003
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
MEDIA CONTACT: Mimi Bilzor
(410) 516-8541
[email protected]
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Data Released on Worldwide
Nonprofit Sector
Johns Hopkins-led effort tracks 35
countries
The world's nonprofit sector engages nearly 40 million
people and has annual expenditures of $1.3 trillion, larger
than the gross domestic product of all but the six largest
countries, according to a new report released today by The
Johns Hopkins University.
These findings are based on a study of the nonprofit,
or civil society sector, conducted by 150 researchers in 35
countries around the world.
"The data we are releasing today make clear that the
nonprofit sector is a potent presence not only in the
developed countries of Europe and North America, but also in
the developing countries of Africa, the Middle East and
South Asia," said Lester M. Salamon, director of the Johns
Hopkins study and of the Johns Hopkins
Center for Civil Society Studies.
Salamon released the latest findings of the
Comparative Nonprofit Sector Project
(CNP) at a briefing in Washington at the Johns Hopkins
School of Advanced
International Studies. These findings extend the
project's coverage to 13 countries in Africa, the Middle
East and South Asia in addition to countries in Europe,
Asia, Latin America, and North America. Among the
findings:
The nonprofit sector
represents 5 percent of the gross domestic product (GDP) of
the countries studied.
If this sector in just
the 35 countries studied were a nation, it would rank as the
seventh largest economy in the world, ahead of Italy,
Brazil, Russia, Spain and Canada.
The nonprofit sector in
these countries employs the equivalent of 39.5 million
full-time workers, making it a major employer. (This
includes 21.8 million paid staff and 12.6 million full-time
equivalent volunteers.)
The number of people
employed in this sector amounts to 46 percent of public
sector employment in these countries and 10 times the
employment in the utilities and textile industries.
All told, more than 190
million people serve as volunteers in the nonprofit sector
in the countries studied.
The nonprofit workforce -
- both paid and volunteer -- is proportionately larger in
developed countries than in developing ones. Significant
civil society sectors are present, however, in many
developing countries as well, especially those in Africa.
The scale of civil
society in developing countries remains constrained by
limited financial support. Only 22 percent of nonprofit
sector revenue comes from government in these countries,
which contrasts sharply with the developed countries.
The United States does
not have the largest nonprofit sector; in fact, nonprofit
organizations in at least three of the countries studied
engage proportionally more nonprofit workers than do U.S.
nonprofits.
The nonprofit sector includes hospitals, universities,
homeless shelters, soup kitchens, environmental groups,
NGOs, sports associations, museums and many other
organizations.
For further information on the report, please contact
Mimi Bilzor at 410-516-8541. Copies of the full report are
available to reporters, upon request.
Johns Hopkins University news releases can be found on the
World Wide Web at
http://www.jhu.edu/news_info/news/
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of science and medical news releases is available at the
same address.
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