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2021-03-31-accounts

Company Registration No: 6273538 Charity Registration No: 1143510

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

(COMPANY LIMITED BY GUARANTEE) For the year ended 31 March 2021

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

CONTENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

Page
Legal and administrative information 1 - 2
Directors’ report 3 - 16
Independent Auditors' report 17 - 19
Statement of financial activities 20
Balance sheet 21
Cash Flow Statement 22
Notes to the financial statements 23 - 42
Appendices 43 - 53

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

LEGAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE INFORMATION For the year ended 31 March 2021

Name:

Women in Informal Employment: Globalizing and Organizing (WIEGO) Limited

Charity Registration No: Company Registration No: Principal and Registered Address

1143510

6273538

521 Royal Exchange Manchester M2 7EN United Kingdom

Telephone: Website:

0161 819 1200 www.wiego.org

Names of Current Directors

The Directors of WIEGO, which is a charitable company, are its trustees for the purposes of charity law. Throughout this report the Directors are collectively referred to as the Board.

Mirai Chatterjee (Chair) Debra Davis (Treasurer) Barbro Budin Lin Lim Lean William (Biff) Steel Gabriela Calandria Luciana Fukimoto Itikawa Uma Rani Elizabeth yin Ngor Tang Patrick Sibusiso Ndlovu

Chief Executive Officer (known as International Co-ordinator)

Sally Roever

Company Secretary

Jacqui Fendall

Bankers

Santander UK Bank plc Manchester Business Centre 298 Deansgate Manchester M3 4HH

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

LEGAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE INFORMATION For the year ended 31 March 2021

Auditors

Crowe U.K. LLP The Lexicon Mount Street Manchester M2 5NT

Solicitors Bates Wells and Braithwaite 2 – 6 Cannon Street London EC4M 6YH Programme Team Sally Roever International Co-ordinator Jane Barrett Programme Director, Organization & Representation Marlese von Broembsen Programme Director, Law Rhonda Douglas Programme Strategy Advisor Laura Alfers Programme Director, Social Protection Mike Rogan Interim Programme Director, Urban Policies Francoise Carré Programme Director, Statistics

Operations Team Sally Roever International Co-ordinator Jacqui Fendall Financial Controller/ Company Secretary Rhonda Douglas Programme Strategy Advisor Mike Bird Operations Director Megan Landeros Research and Administrative Assistant to the International Co-ordinator Carol Clayman Executive Assistant to International Coordinator

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT

For the year ended 31 March 2021

The Board of Directors of Women in Informal Employment: Globalizing and Organizing (WIEGO) Ltd presents the Directors’ Annual Report for the year end 31st March 2021.

1. STRUCTURE, GOVERNANCE AND MANAGEMENT

WIEGO’s structure, governance and management are illustrated by the organogram in Appendix 1.

Structure

WIEGO is a charity registered in England and Wales (No. 1143510) and is constituted as a company registered in England and Wales and limited by guarantee (No. 6273538). The Directors, officers and advisors of the organisation during 2020-21 are listed on page 1 and 2. The company was established under a Memorandum of Association which established the objects and powers of the company and is governed under our Articles of Association. Revised governing documents of WIEGO conforming to the Companies Act 2006 and the decisions of the Global Assembly in April 2010 were accepted by the Board and lodged with Companies House in July 2011. In the event of the company being wound up members are not required to contribute an amount exceeding £1.

All WIEGO funds are received and managed by the Operations Office of WIEGO in Manchester, UK. Until June of 2020 WIEGO paid Harvard University for the costs related to the WIEGO Senior Advisor who is located at the Harvard Kennedy School.

The WIEGO accounts at Harvard University are audited each year as part of the annual financial audit of Harvard University. Income within those accounts is recognised in the accounts of WIEGO in the UK and these are audited each year by an external auditor.

As at the end of the financial year, more than fourteen institutional funders provided financial support for WIEGO including a two year $5 million USD grant from the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation and a three year grant from Sida. WIEGO also received grants from the Open Society Foundations, Ford Foundation, UK FCDO, Echidna Giving/Schwab Charitable, IDRC, Comic Relief, Cities Alliance, FES, International Labour Organisation, UN Women, USAID and Wellspring Philanthropy.

Governance

WIEGO is governed by a 10-person Board of Directors. The Directors are the Members of the Company and also the trustees of WIEGO as a registered charity. The Board ensures that WIEGO’s activities carry into effect the Charity’s object. Its work includes setting the strategic direction; scrutinising performance, quality and finances; and agreeing the financial strategy and operational budgets. The Board meets at least three times a year either physically, by teleconference, or by electronic means. In the current year, given the circumstances of the pandemic, there was one video conference meeting of the Board and two teleconference meetings.

WIEGO’s Board of Directors is comprised of three representatives of membership-based organizations of informal workers (one of whom serves as the Chair); two representatives each from the other two constituencies of WIEGO (researchers and development professionals); and three other persons coopted by the Board as needed to carry out the functions of the Board.

The Board was re-constituted during the four-yearly General Assembly that was held in Johannesburg in November 2018. Four of the previous Board of Directors were nominated and elected by the membership of the wider WIEGO network at this General Assembly and three new Directors were appointed. Three other members were co-opted by the Board thereafter. The Board has representation from Africa, Latin America and Asia as well as Europe and North America. A full term for any Director is four years and Directors may be re-elected or re-appointed to serve for a further term in any given office. The Board represents all WIEGO members between General Assemblies in accordance with WIEGO’s Articles of Association.

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DIRECTORS REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2021

The International Coordinator speaks regularly with the Chair of the Board, the Treasurer and other Directors to ensure that they are all kept fully informed. Delegated decisions made at other levels of WIEGO are regularly reported to the Board and its Committees to ensure Directors have full information to fulfil their roles. The Board is supported in its work by the Management Committee, the Finance Committee and other ad hoc committees and working groups as required. The Human Resources Sub Committee of the Management Committee considers and makes recommendations regarding human resource issues. Committee reports are a standing agenda item for the Board of Directors meetings.

The Management Committee consists of five members including four Directors and the International Coordinator. The Management Committee is chiefly responsible for overseeing the programmes and policies of WIEGO. The core programmes of WIEGO (Social Protection, Organisation and Representation, Urban Policies, Statistics and Law) are each led by a Programme Director. Reports are received from the Programme Directors of these programme areas by the International Coordinator and the Management Committee, together with reports from the Company Secretary, Programme Strategy Advisor, Regional Advisors, the Research Coordinator and the Operations Director.

The Finance Committee reports to the Board of Directors and consists of six members, comprising three Directors, the International Coordinator, the Financial Controller/Company Secretary and the Operations Director. It convenes at least four times a year to consider reports from, among others the Treasurer, the International Coordinator, the Financial Controller (who also serves as Company Secretary) and external auditors. The Finance Committee is responsible for reviewing and monitoring all aspects relating to the preparation and production of the annual financial statements of WIEGO. Specifically, in terms of annual statutory accounts, this includes consideration of accounting policies, levels of disclosure, risk management policies, compliance with applicable corporate governance requirements, and reviewing any relevant matters relating to annual financial statements raised by the external auditors as a result of audit work. The Finance Committee recommends the audited financial statements to the Board of Directors for approval. It makes recommendations regarding the appointment of the external auditors and approves their remuneration and terms of engagement. It reviews the performance and reports the results of external auditors’ work annually to the Board.

Since our incorporation, WIEGO has undergone considerable change and expansion. This change and expansion has required an extensive updating of our management and operations processes and procedures. As this organisational development has progressed, WIEGO has ensured that our governance arrangements are appropriate, effective and evolving to changed circumstances by having Directors who bring a wealth of organisational, research and professional experience to WIEGO. Because of this, the Operations Manual is regularly updated.

The Directors are assisted by WIEGO’s International Coordinator, the Programme Directors, the Programme Strategy Advisor, the Operations Director, the Financial Controller / Company Secretary. Board Members are kept informed about major issues affecting WIEGO. All Directors are aware of their legal and financial responsibility to run the company effectively and to act in its best interests.

All WIEGO Directors are also aware of their responsibility for WIEGO’s strategic direction and their responsibility to fulfil WIEGO’s objectives through assessing the organisation’s performance, ensuring the correct policies are in place and that WIEGO’s activities reflect the needs of our beneficiaries. Reflecting this responsibility, the WIEGO Board and Team monitor the implementation of the current 5 year strategic plan, which was set out in 2018.

The Directors also have access to professional advice and guidance from external advisors, including WIEGO’s external auditors, Crowe U.K. LLP, Co-operatives UK and its solicitors, Bates Wells & Braithwaite LLP.

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DIRECTORS REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2021

Recruitment and Appointment

The WIEGO General Assembly in 2018 elected seven Board members from the three constituencies of members. A Nominating Committee solicits nominations from the WIEGO Membership and then proposes a slate of nominees to the Board and the General Assembly for their approval. The Nominating Committee consists of five persons, two appointed by the Board and one person elected by each constituency of the membership at the time of each quadrennial General Assembly. Elections are usually agreed by consensus but if that is not possible then by a simple majority of votes cast. In preparing the slate of nominees for the Board, from among those nominated by the membership, the Nominating Committee is guided by the principle of achieving reasonable balance on the Board as a whole and ensuring representation from each of the three membership constituencies. The Nominating Committee also takes into account the range of skills and experience required for the Board to exercise its responsibilities and to conduct its business in an efficient and effective manner to the benefit of WIEGO and its beneficiaries.

Last year the Board Chair who was elected in 2018, Renana Jhabvala, stepped down from the Board and was replaced on the Board by Mirai Chatterjee after an election process among the members of the Constituency of Institutional Members of WIEGO. Dr Chatterjee, was endorsed as Chair by the Board at its meeting on the 13[th] November 2019.

The Board also has powers to co-opt to fill vacancies. It co-opted Debra Davis, a chartered accountant with international experience as a Director and Treasurer at the time of General Assembly in 2018. Two further Directors were co-opted by the Board at its meeting on the 9[th] May 2019.

Each has a commitment to WIEGO’s aims and their appointment ends at the next General Assembly, to be held in the financial year 2022/23. They may be re-appointed.

Induction and training

In line with National Council for Voluntary Organisations (NCVO) guidelines, all Directors were inducted into the work of WIEGO and the legal roles and responsibilities of Directors, through briefings by the International Coordinator, the Company Secretary, the Board Chair and the Programme Directors.

Management

The Board has delegated day-to-day leadership and management of WIEGO’s affairs and the implementing of agreed policies and strategies to the International Coordinator, Sally Roever. She is assisted by a team of Programme Directors, the Programme Strategy Advisor, a Research Coordinator and an Operations Team who operate within an approved scheme of delegation (see Appendix 1). The former International Coordinator, Marty Chen, has stayed on as Senior Advisor to WIEGO and continues to support the organisation especially in the areas of research and fundraising.

The development of the organisation since 2007 has required the extension and updating of operational procedures. This is a continuing process requiring revision of the Operations Manual on occasion through 2020/21.

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DIRECTORS REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2021

Equality and Diversity

In its Articles of Association, WIEGO is committed to opposing discrimination in matters of gender, race, faith, age, sexual orientation, or disability, and to operate within an equal opportunities framework. This commitment is currently applied to the delivery of WIEGO’s programme, our employment practices and for the organisation of our membership. During the 2020/21 financial year we established a Diversity, Equity and Inclusion working group, chaired by the International Coordinator, to take a thorough look at how WIEGO can work more effectively to confront and overcome the biases and power imbalances that are present within WIEGO as much as in any other institution.

Staff Involvement

WIEGO seeks to engage all employees, key contractors and members in our activities and achievements. A number of teams have been set up to improve working together and ensure delivery of results. These include the Operations Team, the Programme Team, the Communications Team, the Fundraising Team and others. There are a number of routine communication methods, notably frequent and regular emails, an intranet, skyping, teleconferences, and periodic physical meetings. All teams are kept up-to-date by the International Coordinator and via the WIEGO intranet with the activities and developments, such as Directors’ decisions after each cycle of Board and Committee meetings.

There is normally a physical meeting of the WIEGO Team each year, the Team Retreat, but owing to an organisational decision not to hold international meetings in view of the pandemic, this was cancelled in the current year. We are planning a “virtual” Team Retreat in the 2021/22 financial year because of the continuing restrictions on international travel in order to ensure we do not lose the opportunity to have all voices and perspectives present in one meeting. With a diverse and geographically dispersed team, it has been important to hold face-to-face meetings in order to establish a team spirit and provide an opportunity to share ideas and challenges and our plan is to recreate this as closely as possible.

Risk Management and Internal Controls

Review of the Risk Register is delegated to both the Management Committee and the Finance Committee to support the Board in assessing and prioritising risks and risk-mitigating strategies across WIEGO. Relevant sections of the Risk Register were reviewed by the Finance and Management Committees according to their terms of reference. The Committees monitored the major risks to which WIEGO is exposed, recommended steps to mitigate risks, and oversaw the implementation of effective risk management. The two Committees report once a year to the Board on the Risk Register and the risk management strategy. The Risk Register was amended by the Finance and Management Committees in June and in November of 2020.

The Finance and Management Committees identify the operational, financial and reputational risks WIEGO faces, prioritising them in terms of potential impact and likelihood of occurrence and proposing means of mitigating the risks. With the continuing development of the risk management strategy, the Board is assured that:

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DIRECTORS REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2021

The Covid pandemic has led us to consider new risks relating to the physical and mental health of the WIEGO Team and we have put in place protocols to manage these, including strict controls on face-toface working where this is possible to undertake at all, and frequent Team meetings. We have also taken steps to manage the increased risk of cyber-crime. Foreign exchange risk is also a key risk as we receive funds in USD, GBP and SEK. Currency matching and the continuing review of the impact of exchange rate fluctuations are in place. We are not facing any increased risk of failing to raise funds for WIEGO’s work and in fact many of our donors have contributed additional funds to enable us to respond to the pandemic and its impact on informal workers.

The Board recognises that, to achieve the objectives of WIEGO, the nature of our work requires acceptance of some risks which are outside our control and cannot therefore be eliminated or fully managed. Where this happens, there is active and clear monitoring of such risk. The Board is satisfied that systems are in place to monitor, manage and mitigate WIEGO’s exposure to major risks.

Internal Financial Control

The Financial Controller’s work is framed largely by WIEGO’s regulations, policies, operations manual and risk assessments. The Directors created an Operations Manual when WIEGO was incorporated to ensure the adequacy of WIEGO’s internal controls. It has been updated during the year and is reviewed regularly. Audit recommendations are systematically followed up and monitoring reports are received by the Finance Committee. The Accounting Software system used by WIEGO (Xero) provides access to financial information by budget holders and others across the globe.

The Treasurer reviews the work and ensures, through the Finance Committee and the Operations Team, that the Board and the Management Committee have confidence that:

The key procedures which the Directors have established with a view to providing effective internal control are as follows:

Key Management Personnel

The Key Management Personnel consists of Sally Roever, International Coordinator and Mike Bird, the Operations Director. Sally Roever is employed by WIEGO and in the course of the current financial year she moved from Rome, Italy to Church Falls in Virginia, USA. Her salary is determined by the Board.

Mike Bird is employed by WIEGO in the UK, where remuneration is set according to market rates and reviewed periodically by a Management Committee.

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DIRECTORS REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2021

2. OBJECTIVES, AIMS AND PUBLIC BENEFIT

Women in Informal Employment: Globalizing and Organizing (WIEGO) is a global research-policy network that seeks to improve the status of the working poor, especially women, in the informal economy. By doing so, our aim is to ensure in the long term the well-being of the working poor and the reduction of poverty.

The objects of the charity are set out in paragraphs 3 and 4 of WIEGO’s Articles of Association as follows:

The Company's objects are to relieve poverty: in particular, the poverty of the working poor in the informal economy caused by low earnings, high risks, and adverse working environments and conditions associated with the informal economy worldwide (including non-standard or unprotected employment for formal firms);

In carrying out its objects, the Company shall promote equality of opportunity and oppose any form of discrimination on grounds of race, ethnic origin, gender, sexual orientation, age, disability or religion.

In order to achieve our objects, WIEGO seeks to increase the Visibility, Validity and Voice of the working poor in informal employment:

The individuals and institutions in the WIEGO network are drawn from three broad constituencies: membership-based organizations (MBOs) of informal workers; individuals undertaking research and statistical work with regard to informal employment, and development practitioners in agencies of various types (non-governmental, governmental, and inter-governmental).

Together with our allies in the international movement of informal workers, WIEGO seeks:

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DIRECTORS REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2021

Since its founding, the WIEGO network has developed several distinct features that enable us to influence mainstream perceptions, policies and institutions. First, WIEGO focuses on the concrete reality of the working poor, especially women, in the informal economy and seeks to integrate an evidenced based understanding of this concrete reality into mainstream development thinking, policies and institutions.

Second, WIEGO builds effective alliances between our three constituencies and draws on the distinct expertise of each constituency in our work:

Third, WIEGO has developed programme initiatives and technical expertise on a range of issues that address the expressed needs and concerns of informal workers. Finally, and importantly, WIEGO builds networks and partnerships by providing technical support to and working closely with membershipbased organisations of informal workers. A more detailed account of WIEGO’s activities, achievements and performance during 2020/21 is provided in a separate Appendix 2.

Grant making

Our grant making policy is to work with associations within WIEGO’s wider network who share WIEGO’s objectives and are well placed to deliver effective projects. Grants are recognised in the financial statements when they are approved or when there is a legal constructive obligation.

Public Benefit

In preparing this report, the Directors confirm that they have complied with the duty in section 17 of the 2011 Charities Act. To the best of their ability, they took into account and consistently applied the Charity Commission’s guidance on public benefit, as set out in its publications “Charities and Public Benefit: the Charity Commission’s general guidance on public benefit” and “The Prevention or Relief of Poverty for Public Benefit”.

The Charity’s object is set out in our Articles of Association as revised on 19[th] July 2011 and the Directors’ current interpretation of these is set out in this report, while the report as a whole covers WIEGO’s activities and achievements throughout the world pursuant to this object.

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DIRECTORS REPORT

For the year ended 31 March 2021

3. ACHIEVEMENTS AND PERFORMANCE

A detailed account of WIEGO’s activities, achievements and performance during 2020/21 is provided as Appendix 2. WIEGO publishes an Annual Report each year for general distribution. Appendix 2 is an abridged version of that Annual Report.

Evidence of Impact

For a detailed report on impact achieved during 2020/21 please see Appendix 2.

Communications, Membership Support and Outreach

WIEGO aims to expand its network – partners, members and allies – to strengthen the collaborative activities under this network, and to extend our reach and impact. As of March 2021, WIEGO had 208 members: 36 Institutional Members and 172 Individual Members in some 45 countries.

WIEGO has strengthened membership support and outreach to provide help in building organisational capacity of the Institutional Members (all democratic, member-based organisations of informal workers) and in developing improved two-way communication with them. In the current financial year this included creating a new post of Network Liaison Officer to coordinate and deepen this work.

WIEGO maintained our strong communications capacity during 2020/21 to help meet our goals of producing user-friendly publications and improving how we disseminate information, with an increasing focus on supporting our messaging through social media. We undertook an external review of the communications function in the current year and this led to a restructuring of the Communications Team.

We have continued to respond to the need for information on the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic and what informal workers can do to keep safe, with new pages on the WIEGO website and health education messages disseminated via social media in 14 languages.

External Factors Affecting Achievement - Covid-19

Due to the international nature of our work and also our link with partners in countries across the globe, WIEGO recognises there are a number of factors which could affect achievement of our aims and objectives. Significant external factors affecting WIEGO's work and achievements included:

Economic, Policy, and Political Environment: faced by the Working Poor in the Informal Economy

While all these factors are beyond WIEGO’s control, we are able to seek the advice of international partners and experts and consult with the Board and WIEGO’s membership on how best WIEGO can play its role in support of the global movement of informal workers.

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DIRECTORS REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2021

Conclusion

From our inception in 1997, WIEGO has been an organisation prepared to undertake policy research and advocacy on behalf of informal workers to increase their Voice, Visibility and Validity and thereby help to increase the well-being and relieve the poverty of the working poor, especially women. This has remained unchanged through 2020/21. WIEGO’s mission, vision and purpose have remained essentially unchanged but the breadth and depth of our activities, the size and capacity of our team, and the effectiveness of our operations and governance systems have remained robust.

4. FINANCIAL REVIEW

The financial statements have been prepared in accordance with the accounting policies set out in Note 1 to the financial statements and comply with the requirements of the Statement of Recommended Practice for Accounting and Reporting by Charities, the Charities Acts, and the Companies Acts.

The financial strategy for the year was developed to build on our strategy and achievements from the previous year, which were designed to ensure the sustainability and future viability of WIEGO. We reviewed the resources expended in relation to activities implemented and results achieved. We have also factored in when current grants will end, in order to carefully monitor expenditure and activities to ensure maximum benefit and minimal disruption for members and partners as we try to raise funds for our future work. During the fiscal year ending 31 March 2021, our total incoming resources were $11,549,881 (as compared to $5,437,133 in the previous year). We continue to experience peaks and troughs in our income due to the regulation on income recognition.

Our total expenditure was $7,205,517 (as compared with $7,008,713 in the previous year).

The overall aim of the financial strategy is to ensure that resources are used efficiently to contribute to meeting programme and project targets and achieve WIEGO’s priorities. In order to achieve our objectives, the maximum levels of resources possible are channelled to the direct benefit of programmes and to deliver necessary quality improvements in research, policy advocacy and capacity building, while maintaining prudent financial management controls over resources of WIEGO as a whole. Budgetary and financial control continues to be reviewed in order to reduce the risks of under or overspending and to mitigate the effect of a drop in income in any one financial year. This is underpinned by the building of reserves.

Going Concern

The indications at the time of writing are that WIEGO is well-placed to weather the storm of the Covid19 pandemic and the policies that have been put in place to combat it. Since the start of the pandemic all of our major donors have been in touch to offer their support in the form of additional funding and/or extensions to grant periods and the possibility to redirect funds as necessary in order to meet new and unexpected needs as they arise.

The financial outlook for WIEGO is secure with two- and three-year extensions to unrestricted grant funding signed with the Hewlett Foundation and Sida respectively at the end of the 2019/20 financial year. The respective grants agreed are for US$4 million, since increased by a further US$1 million, and the equivalent of $8.4 million. We have also secured additional funding from the Open Society Foundations, the Ford Foundation, the International Development Research Centre of Canada and Wellspring Philanthropy during the 2020/21 financial year in a mix of unrestricted and targeted Covid19 response grants, which all have contract periods extending into the 2022/23 financial year.

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DIRECTORS REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2021

From an organisational point of view WIEGO is also well-placed to continue its work. Almost all of the WIEGO Team already worked from home before the pandemic and the Manchester office has been able to adapt to remote working relatively easily because our banking, financial management and payment systems are all on-line. During the pandemic we have set up systems to ensure that we are taking care of the health and well-being of the Team. We set up weekly meetings of the Manchester office team plus town hall meetings for the whole Team and liaison meetings with the leaders of the networks of informal workers that are our members. These meetings are now held monthly and continue to enable effective management and communication.

The external website and the internal intranet both have dedicated Covid-19 pages that provide effective information management for our Team and wider network.

The Operations Team has added new risks to the WIEGO risk register to cover our understanding of the potential risks to the WIEGO work programme and the health and well-being risks to the Team and this has recently been reviewed by the Finance and Management Committees of the Board. In the meantime, we have demonstrated that the work of WIEGO can continue, albeit through different kinds of activities and delivery mechanisms given the current circumstances. The view of the Directors and the WIEGO management is that the measures described above provide an effective strategy to reduce the risks to the Team.

The charity has contractual funding to cover the essential costs of running the organisation up to 31 March 2023 and beyond. On this basis, forecast budgets for the year ending 31 March 2023 have been prepared. The directors consider that the charity is a going concern and the financial statements have been prepared accordingly (Financial Statements Note 1.3).

Reserves Policy

WIEGO has built reserves to meet any adverse contingencies. The Board of Directors created reserves to:

During 2020/21 as shown in the Financial Statements, designated reserves were maintained to counter any cash flow issues and to maintain WIEGO’s core activities in the event of fundraising problems. WIEGO has reserves to make long-term commitments to projects, and to protect our work against the effects of financial fluctuations and other uncertainty. The Board of Directors seeks to have reserves at a level at which core programmes can be maintained for a 3-month period.

At present, this requires reserves of approximately $510k. The current reserves are adequate although the necessary level of reserves is subject to regular review. We also have $240k set aside for the General Assembly which is a meeting of our members, and a crucial part of our governance structure. This takes place every four years and we are building funds towards meeting the cost of the next General Assembly in November 2022.

The free reserves of $500k carried forward into the new financial year are to fund budgeted costs of the core programmes over the next financial year. These reserves will be carried forward into the new financial year and will be used to fund the budgeted costs of the core programmes over the next financial year.

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DIRECTORS REPORT

For the year ended 31 March 2021

Investment Policy and Objectives

WIEGO’s treasury management policy objective is to optimise returns consistent with our cash flow requirements and the overriding need to protect the capital value of WIEGO’s funds. WIEGO funds are invested only with UK Clearing Banks. Treasury management is carried out within the context of WIEGO’s statutory background and our Memorandum and Articles of Association.

Liquidity is generally preferred over investment. Cash balances are placed in time deposits when appropriate. The board has not established formal targets for return on investment.

In order to minimise foreign exchange losses due to currency exchange rate fluctuations, our policy is to hold funds in the currency in which they are received and to expend them in the same currency wherever possible.

Principal Funding Sources

During 2020/21 WIEGO received our principal funding from the following funders:

William and Flora Hewlett Foundation Swedish International Development Agency (Sida) Open Society Foundations IDRC Ford Foundation Comic Relief UK FCDO (formerly DFID) Wellspring Philanthropic Fund UN Women Cities Alliance FES International Labour Organisation

There are no outstanding liens against WIEGO.

WIEGO does not undertake any commercial or trading activities.

In note 12 to the Statement of Financial Activities, a declaration on related parties has been made.

Fundraising

The charity had no fundraising activities requiring disclosure under S162A of the Charities Act 2011.

5. PLANS FOR FUTURE PERIODS Membership

WIEGO is committed to building sector-specific networks or federations of democratic, member-based organisations of informal workers (MBOs). MBOs can become institutional members of WIEGO and form one of three constituencies of membership. Individuals can become members of WIEGO as part of the researchers/statisticians constituency or the development practitioners constituency. The challenges to WIEGO with regard to our relationships with members are various, including how to:

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DIRECTORS REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2021

Programmes and functions

WIEGO has five core programmes of work together with global projects and special initiatives. Across these strands of work cut four functions: research, policy advocacy, communication and capacity building. As part of the strategic review that gave rise to the current five-year strategic plan, work plans for the coming period identify the following challenges:

Allies and Target Audiences

The natural allies and target audiences for WIEGO’s work differ across the domains of our core programmes as highlighted in Appendix 2. Identifying key allies and audiences is difficult in most domains of WIEGO’s work as there are often a large number and range of actors with different perspectives. In many contexts, specific organisations can be both allies and target audiences. The major challenge is identifying and mapping organisations and individuals relevant to each programme area and then building co-operation with the key organisations and individuals.

Transitions

WIEGO has successfully addressed many challenges in the past five years. Strong financial and operational systems have been devised and implemented. These are managed by the WIEGO Office in Manchester, UK, which comprises an Operations Director, Company Secretary/Financial Controller, two Senior Finance Officers, three Finance Officers (one of whom has been on maternity leave for part of the year), an Events and Logistics Manager, an HR Officer and an Administrative Assistant. As the external audit showed, good operational and financial systems are in place.

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DIRECTORS REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2021

6. STATEMENT OF DIRECTORS’ RESPONSIBILITIES FOR FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

The Directors are responsible for preparing the Directors' Report and the financial statements in accordance with applicable law and regulations.

Company law requires the Directors to prepare financial statements for each financial year in accordance with United Kingdom Generally Accepted Accounting Practice (United Kingdom Accounting Standards) and applicable law.

Under company law the Directors must not approve the financial statements unless they are satisfied that they give a true and fair view of the state of affairs of the charitable company and of our net incoming resources for that period. In preparing these financial statements, the Directors are required to:

The Directors are responsible for keeping adequate accounting records that are sufficient to show and explain the charitable company's transactions and disclose with reasonable accuracy at any time the financial position of the charitable company and enable them to ensure that the financial statements comply with the Companies Act 2006. They are also responsible for safeguarding the assets of the company and hence for taking reasonable steps for the prevention and detection of fraud and other irregularities.

The Directors ensure that there are appropriate financial and management controls in place sufficient to safeguard charitable funds and that these funds are used only in accordance with the conditions under which they have been made available. In addition, the Directors are responsible for ensuring the economic, efficient and effective management of WIEGO’s resources so that the benefits that should be derived from the application of charitable funds are not put at risk

The Directors confirm that, so far as they are aware, the WIEGO auditors were able to examine all relevant audit information. They have taken all the steps that they ought to have taken as Directors in order to make them aware of any relevant audit information and to establish that WIEGO’s auditors may examine that information.

Political donations

WIEGO made no political donations and had no such expenditure.

Financial Risk Management

WIEGO’s treasury management policy objective is to optimise returns consistent with our cash flow requirements and the overriding need to protect the capital value of WIEGO’s funds. WIEGO funds are invested only with UK Clearing Banks. Treasury management is carried out within the context of WIEGO’s statutory background and our Memorandum and Articles of Association.

The financial risk management and policies are conservative. Hedge accounting is not used and the exposure of the company to price risk, credit risk, liquidity risk and cash flow risk is low.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT

For the year ended 31 March 2021

Number of employees

The average number of persons employed by the company in each week during the financial year has been 8.

Auditors

Crowe U.K. LLP continues as the auditor of WIEGO following a competitive tender during 2018.

The organisation completed a competitive tender exercise this year for the period 2018/2022. Crowe were re-appointed.

This report, which incorporates the Directors’ Report, was approved by the Board of Directors on 30 November 2021 and signed on its behalf, by:

]tvÖâ| YxÇwtÄÄ

Jacqui Fendall Company Secretary

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

INDEPENDENT AUDITORS’ REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2021

Opinion

We have audited the financial statements of Women in Informal Employment: Globalizing and Organizing (WIEGO) Limited (‘the charitable company’) for the year ended 31 March 2021 which comprise the Statement of Financial Activities, the Balance Sheet, the Cash Flow Statement and notes to the financial statements, including significant accounting policies. The financial reporting framework that has been applied in their preparation is applicable law and United Kingdom Accounting Standards, including Financial Reporting Standard 102 The Financial Reporting Standard applicable in the UK and Republic of Ireland (United Kingdom Generally Accepted Accounting Practice).

In our opinion the financial statements:

Basis for opinion

We conducted our audit in accordance with International Standards on Auditing (UK) (ISAs (UK)) and applicable law. Our responsibilities under those standards are further described in the Auditor’s responsibilities for the audit of the financial statements section of our report. We are independent of the charitable company in accordance with the ethical requirements that are relevant to our audit of the financial statements in the UK, including the FRC’s Ethical Standard, and we have fulfilled our other ethical responsibilities in accordance with these requirements. We believe that the audit evidence we have obtained is sufficient and appropriate to provide a basis for our opinion.

Conclusions relating to going concern

In auditing the financial statements, we have concluded that the trustees' use of the going concern basis of accounting in the preparation of the financial statements is appropriate.

Based on the work we have performed, we have not identified any material uncertainties relating to events or conditions that, individually or collectively, may cast significant doubt on the charitable company's ability to continue as a going concern for a period of at least twelve months from when the financial statements are authorised for issue.

Our responsibilities and the responsibilities of the trustees with respect to going concern are described in the relevant sections of this report.

Other information

The trustees are responsible for the other information contained within the annual report. The other information comprises the information included in the annual report, other than the financial statements and our auditor’s report thereon. Our opinion on the financial statements does not cover the other information and, except to the extent otherwise explicitly stated in our report, we do not express any form of assurance conclusion thereon.

Our responsibility is to read the other information and, in doing so, consider whether the other information is materially inconsistent with the financial statements or our knowledge obtained in the audit or otherwise appears to be materially misstated. If we identify such material inconsistencies or apparent material misstatements, we are required to determine whether this gives rise to a material misstatement in the financial statements themselves. If, based on the work we have performed, we conclude that there is a material misstatement of this other information, we are required to report that fact.

We have nothing to report in this regard.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

INDEPENDENT AUDITORS’ REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2021

Opinions on other matters prescribed by the Companies Act 2006

In our opinion based on the work undertaken in the course of our audit

Matters on which we are required to report by exception

In light of the knowledge and understanding of the charitable company and their environment obtained in the course of the audit, we have not identified material misstatements in the strategic report or the directors’ report included within the trustees’ report.

We have nothing to report in respect of the following matters in relation to which the Companies Act 2006 requires us to report to you if, in our opinion:

Responsibilities of directors

As explained more fully in the directors’ responsibilities statement set out on page 15, the directors (who are also the directors of the charitable company for the purposes of company law) are responsible for the preparation of the financial statements and for being satisfied that they give a true and fair view, and for such internal control as the directors determine is necessary to enable the preparation of financial statements that are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error.

In preparing the financial statements, the directors are responsible for assessing the charitable company’s ability to continue as a going concern, disclosing, as applicable, matters related to going concern and using the going concern basis of accounting unless the trustees either intend to liquidate the charitable company or to cease operations, or have no realistic alternative but to do so.

Auditor’s responsibilities for the audit of the financial statements

Our objectives are to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements as a whole are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error, and to issue an auditor’s report that includes our opinion. Reasonable assurance is a high level of assurance, but is not a guarantee that an audit conducted in accordance with ISAs (UK) will always detect a material misstatement when it exists. Misstatements can arise from fraud or error and are considered material if, individually or in the aggregate, they could reasonably be expected to influence the economic decisions of users taken on the basis of these financial statements.

Details of the extent to which the audit was considered capable of detecting irregularities, including fraud and non-compliance with laws and regulations are set out below.

A further description of our responsibilities for the audit of the financial statements is located on the Financial Reporting Council’s website at: www.frc.org.uk/auditorsresponsibilities. This description forms part of our auditor’s report.

Extent to which the audit was considered capable of detecting irregularities, including fraud

Irregularities, including fraud, are instances of non-compliance with laws and regulations. We identified and assessed the risks of material misstatement of the financial statements from irregularities, whether due to fraud or error, and discussed these between our audit team members. We then designed and performed audit procedures responsive to those risks, including obtaining audit evidence sufficient and appropriate to provide a basis for our opinion.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

INDEPENDENT AUDITORS’ REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2021

We obtained an understanding of the legal and regulatory frameworks within which the charitable company operates, focusing on those laws and regulations that have a direct effect on the determination of material amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. The laws and regulations we considered in this context were the Companies Act 2006, the Charities Act 2011 together with the Charities SORP (FRS 102). We assessed the required compliance with these laws and regulations as part of our audit procedures on the related financial statement items.

In addition, we considered provisions of other laws and regulations that do not have a direct effect on the financial statements but compliance with which might be fundamental to the charitable company’s ability to operate or to avoid a material penalty. We also considered the opportunities and incentives that may exist within the charitable company for fraud. The laws and regulations we considered in this context for the UK operations were those contained within the Charities Act.

Auditing standards limit the required audit procedures to identify non-compliance with these laws and regulations to enquiry of the Trustees and other management and inspection of regulatory and legal correspondence, if any.

We identified the greatest risk of material impact on the financial statements from irregularities, including fraud, to be within the timing of recognition of income and the override of controls by management. Our audit procedures to respond to these risks included enquiries of management about their own identification and assessment of the risks of irregularities, sample testing on the posting of journals, reviewing accounting estimates for biases, reviewing regulatory correspondence with the Charity Commission and reading minutes of meetings of those charged with governance.

Owing to the inherent limitations of an audit, there is an unavoidable risk that we may not have detected some material misstatements in the financial statements, even though we have properly planned and performed our audit in accordance with auditing standards. For example, the further removed non-compliance with laws and regulations (irregularities) is from the events and transactions reflected in the financial statements, the less likely the inherently limited procedures required by auditing standards would identify it. In addition, as with any audit, there remained a higher risk of nondetection of irregularities, as these may involve collusion, forgery, intentional omissions, misrepresentations, or the override of internal controls. We are not responsible for preventing noncompliance and cannot be expected to detect non-compliance with all laws and regulations.

Use of our report

This report is made solely to the charitable company’s members, as a body, in accordance with Chapter 3 of Part 16 of the Companies Act 2006. Our audit work has been undertaken so that we might state to the charitable company’s members those matters we are required to state to them in an auditor’s report and for no other purpose. To the fullest extent permitted by law, we do not accept or assume responsibility to anyone other than the charitable company and the charitable company’s members as a body, for our audit work, for this report, or for the opinions we have formed.

Vicky Szulist Senior Statutory Auditor For and on behalf of Crowe U.K. LLP Statutory Auditor The Lexicon Mount Street Manchester M2 5NT

Date: 3[rd] December 2021

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL ACTIVITIES (incorporating an income and expenditure account) For the year ended 31 March 2021

Restricted Unrestricted Total Total
Funds Funds Funds Funds
2021 2021 2021 2020
Note $ $ $ $
INCOME
Donations and legacies 2 2,000 - 2,000 -
Investment income 3 - 3,679 3,679 21,200
Charitable activities 4 5,780,909 5,763,293 11,544,202 5,415,933
TOTAL INCOME 5,782,909 5,766,972 11,549,881 5,437,133
EXPENDITURE
Charitable activities 5 3,732,825 3,472,692 7,205,517 7,008,713
TOTAL EXPENDITURE 3,732,825 3,472,692 7,205,517 7,008,713
NET INCOMING/(OUTGOING)
RESOURCES 2,050,084 2,294,280 4,344,364 (1,571,580)
TOTAL FUNDS AT 1 APRIL 2020 1,283,712 704,534 1,988,246 3,559,826
TOTAL FUNDS AT 31 MARCH
2021 10 3,333,796 2,998,814 6,332,610 1,998,246

All activities relate to continuing operations.

The Statement of Financial Activities includes all gains and losses recognised in the year.

The notes on pages 23 to 42 form part of these financial statements.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

BALANCE SHEET Registered Number: 6273538 As at 31 March 2021

Note
CURRENT ASSETS
Debtors
8
Cash at bank
CREDITORS:
Amounts falling due within one year
9
NET ASSETS
FUNDS
Unrestricted Funds
10
Restricted Funds
10
2021
$
$
$ 161,575
266,571
6,861,602
2,358,168
2021
$
$
$ 161,575
266,571
6,861,602
2,358,168
2020
$ 1,988,246
7,023,177
(690,567)
2,998,814
3,333,796
2,624,739
(636,493)
6,332,610
704,534
1,283,712

1,988,246
6,332,610

The financial statements were approved and authorised for issue by the Directors on 30 November 2021 and signed on their behalf, by:

D Davis Director and Treasurer

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

CASH FLOW STATEMENT As at 31 March 2021

Note
Cash flows from operating activities
Net cash used in operating activities
15
Cash Flows from investing activities
Interest received
Net cash provided by investing activities
Change in cash and cash equivalents in the year.
Cash and cash equivalents at the beginning of
the year.
Cash and cash equivalents at the
end of the year.
ANALYSIS OF CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS

Cash at hand
RECONCILIATION OF NET DEBT
2020
$
Cash at hand and at bank
2,358,168
2021
2020
$
$ 4,499,755
(1,663,542)
3,679
21,201
3,679
21,201
4,503,434
(1,642,341)
2,358,168
4,000,509
6,861,602
2,358,168
2021
2020
$
$ 6,861,602
2,358,168
Cash flow
2021
$
$
4,503,434
6,861,602

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

1. ACCOUNTING POLICIES

The principal accounting policies adopted, judgments and key sources of estimation uncertainty in the preparation of the financial statements are as follows:

1.1 Basis of preparation of financial statements

The financial statements have been prepared in accordance with Accounting and Reporting by Charities: Statement of Recommended Practice applicable to charities preparing their accounts in accordance with the Financial Reporting Standard applicable in the UK and Republic of Ireland (FRS102) (January 2019) – (Charities SORP (FRS102)), the Financial Reporting Standard applicable in the UK and Ireland (FRS102) and the Companies Act 2006.

Women in Informal Employment: Globalizing and Organizing (WIEGO) Limited meets the definition of a public benefit entity under FRS102. Assets and liabilities are initially recognised at historical cost at transaction value unless otherwise stated in the relevant accounting policy note.

1.2 Company information

The charity is a company limited by guarantee (registered number 6273538) which is incorporated and domiciled in the UK. The address of the registered office is 521 Royal Exchange, Manchester, M2 7EN.

1.3 Going concern

The directors have reviewed the forecasts and budgets for the forthcoming period. The Charity has contractual funding to cover the essential costs of running the organisation up to 31 March 2023 and beyond. On this basis, forecast budgets for the year ending 31 March 2023 have been prepared. The directors consider that the charity is a going concern and the financial statements have been prepared accordingly.

1.4 Company status

WIEGO Limited is a registered charitable company. The members of the company are the directors named on page 1. In the event of the company being wound up the Articles of Association indemnify the members of the council, officers and the directors against all liabilities incurred by them in their respective capacities.

1.5 Fund accounting

General funds are unrestricted funds which are available for use at the discretion of the directors in furtherance of the general objectives of the charitable company and which have not been designated for other purposes.

Restricted funds are funds which are to be used in accordance with specific restrictions imposed by donors which have been raised by the charitable company for particular purposes. The cost of raising and administering such funds are charged against the specific fund. The aim and use of each restricted fund is set out in the notes to the financial statements.

Investment income, gains and losses are allocated to the appropriate fund.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

1.6 Incoming resources

Voluntary income including donations, gifts, income arising from fundraising events, legacies and grants that provide core funding or are of general nature are recognised where there is entitlement, certainty of receipt and the amount can be measured with sufficient reliability.

Income from charitable activities, including income received under contract and grants where entitlement to funding is subject to specific performance conditions, is recognised as earned (as the related goods or services are provided). Grant income included in this category provides funding to support activities and is recognised where there is entitlement, certainty of receipt and the amount can be measured with sufficient reliability. Income is deferred when the donor has imposed conditions which must be met before the charity has unconditional entitlement or the donor has specified the funds can only be utilised in future accounting periods.

Gifts in kind received are accounted for in the Statement of Financial Activities as soon as it is prudent and practical to do so. They are valued as by the donor in the grant documentation.

Investment income is recognised on a receivable basis.

1.7 Resources expended

All expenditure is accounted for on an accruals basis and has been included under expense categories that aggregate all costs for allocation to activities. Where costs cannot be directly attributed to particular activities they have been allocated on a basis consistent with the use of the resources.

Overheads have been allocated on the above basis of allocation.

Support costs are those costs incurred directly in support of expenditure on the objects. Where costs cannot be directly attributed they have been allocated or apportioned on a fair and consistent basis.

Governance costs are those incurred in the governance of the Company’s assets and are associated with constitutional and statutory requirements.

1.8 Tangible fixed assets and depreciation

All tangible fixed assets costing more than $3,000 are capitalised.

1.9 Value added tax

Value Added Tax is not recoverable by the company and as such, is included in the relevant cost in the Statement of Financial Activities.

1.10 Foreign currencies

The charity’s financial statements are presented in US dollars which is the presentation currency. The charity’s functional currency is US dollars. The exchange rate difference from USD to GBP is expected to have little effect since we maintain USD bank accounts, from which our expenditure is also in USD.

Assets and liabilities in foreign currencies are translated into dollars at the rates of exchange ruling at the balance sheet date. Transactions in foreign currencies are translated into dollars at the rate of exchange ruling at the date of the transaction. Any gain or loss arising on translation is included in the Statement of Financial Activities. The exchange rate between sterling and the US dollar at 31 March 2021 was £1: $1.37832.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

1.11 Grant making policy

Grants are recognised in the financial statements when they are approved or when there is a legal or constructive obligation.

1.12 Interest Receivable

Interest on funds held on deposit in included when receivable and the amount can be measured reliably by the charity; this is normally upon notification of the interest paid or payable by the Bank.

1.13 Operating Leases

Operating leases are leases in which the title to the assets, and the risks and rewards of ownership, remain with the lessor. Rental charges are charged on a straight line basis over the term of the lease.

1.14 Debtors

Short term debtors are measured at transaction price, less any impairment.

1.15 Cash at bank and in hand

Cash at bank and cash in hand includes cash and short term highly liquid investments with short maturity of three months or less from the date of acquisition or opening of the deposit or similar account.

1.16 Creditors

Short term creditors are measured at the transaction price after allowing for any trade discount due.

1.17 Financial Instruments

The charity only has basic financial assets and financial liabilities of a kind that qualify as basic financial instruments. Basic financial instruments are initially recognised at transaction value and subsequently measured at their settlement value with the exception of bank loans which are measured at amortised cost using the effective interest rate method.

1.18 Pensions

The charity operates a defined contribution pension scheme. Contributions are charged to wages and salaries in the Statement of Financial Activities as they become payable. The assets of the scheme are held separately from the assets of the charity.

1.19 Judgements in applying accounting policies and key sources of estimation uncertainty

In the application of the entity’s accounting policies which are described above, the Directors are required to make judgments, estimates, assumptions about the carrying value of assets and liabilities that are not readily apparent from other sources. The estimates and underlying assumptions are based on historical experience and other factors that are considered to be relevant. Actual results may differ from these estimates.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

The estimates and underlying assumptions are reviewed on an on-going basis. Revisions to accounting estimates are recognised in the period in which the estimate is revised if the revision affects only that period or in the period of the revision and future periods if the revision affects the current and future periods.

In the view of the Directors, no assumptions concerning the future or estimation uncertainty affecting assets and liabilities at the balance sheet date are likely to result in a material adjustment to their carrying amounts in the next financial year

2. DONATIONS AND LEGACIES

Restricted
Funds
Unrestricted
Funds
2021
$
2021
$
Membership fees
2,000
-
Restricted
Funds
Unrestricted
Funds
2020
$
2020
$
Membership fees
-
-
Total
Funds
2021
$
2,000
Total
Funds
2020
$
-

3. INVESTMENT INCOME

Restricted
Funds
Unrestricted
Funds
2021
$
2021
$
Bank Interest
-
3,679
Restricted
Funds
Unrestricted
Funds
2020
$
2020
$
Bank Interest
14,874
6,326
Total
Funds
2021
$
3,679
Total
Funds
2020
$
21,200

26

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

4.
INCOME FROM CHARITABLE
ACTIVITES

The William Flora Hewlett
Foundation
Sida
The Open Society Foundations
IDRC Covid 19 Study
Ford Foundation
Comic Relief
Wellspring
DFID
UN Women
Cities Alliance
FES
ILO
Other Income
Anonymous


Sida
Hewlett Foundation – Focal Cities 2
Open Society Foundations
Anonymous
DFID Work Opportunities Project
Echidna/Schwab
Comic Relief
Hewlett Foundation
FMO
World Health Organisation
Cities Alliance
International Labour Organisation
USAID
Commonwealth Foundation
Other income
Restricted
Funds
Unrestricted
Funds
Total
Funds
2021
$
2021
$
2021
$
1,970,000
4,000,000
1,734,848
996,517
1,085,002
333,333
361,665
-
154,780
200,000
126,773
-
100,047
-
120,145
-
44,000
-
26,982
-
24,000
-
19,887
-
12,780
6,129
-
227,314
5,780,909
5,763,293
Restricted
Funds
Unrestricted
Funds
2020
$
2020
$
1,822,447
1,052,165
900,000
-
364,000
333,332
-
223,094
184,288
-
150,000
-
136,644
-
95,000
-
42,000
-
39,000
-
30,000
-
14,347
-
10,000
-
3,437
-
8,779
7,400
3,799,942
1,615,991
5,970,000
2,731,365
1,418,335
361,665
354,780
126,773
100,047
120,145
44,000
26,982
24,000
19,887
18,909
227,314
11,544,202
Total
Funds
2020
$
2,874,612
900,000
697,332
223,094
184,288
150,000
136,644
95,000
42,000
39,000
30,000
14,347
10,000
3,437
16,179
5,415,933

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

5. RESOURCES EXPENDED
Payments
to Sub
grantees
$
Charitable activities
Unrestricted Funds
Core Programmes
Law
-
Organisation & Representation
-
Social Protection
-
Statistics
-
Urban Policies
-
Focal Cities
-
Total Core Programmes
-
International
Coordination/Support
-
Restricted Funds
Cities Alliance - Liberia, SV
17,194
Comic Relief
65,386
DFID WOW Project
32,979
Echidna-Schwab
20,287
FES - Social Protection/IW & the
Law in an African Covid 19
Context
-
FORD FOUNDATION - HomeNet
International
-
Hewlett Foundation -
Communications Support &
Fundraising
-
Hewlett Foundation - Covid
Recovery
52,702
Hewlett Foundation - Focal Cities
2
-
Hewlett MLE Data Fin Training
-
International Development
Research Centre - Covid 19
Study
-
ILO
-
ILO – ESCWA
-
Open Society Foundations - Care
Givers Colombia
-
Open Society Foundations - Child
Care Rebuilding project
40,000
Open Society Foundations -
Covid Response - NETS
Communications
5,000
Open Society Foundations -
Covid Response 1
53,120
Open Society Foundations -
Covid Response WP Brazil
-
Activities
Under
taken
directly
$
331,728
528,523
342,597
375,739
708,734
446,767
2,734,088
206,073
19,166
83,800
76,016
60,805
24,000
5,087
33,297
92,914
420,887
36,164
244,295
6,064
3,528
7,015
-
13,059
339,883
139,733
Support
$
65,802
104,838
67,958
74,532
140,585
88,621
542,336
48,998
-
-
452
1,870
-
-
-
964
78,854
19,499
47,252
-
-
-
-
2,800
28,042
-
Total
2021
$
397,530
633,361
410,555
450,271
849,319
535,388
3,276,424
255,071
36,360
149,186
109,447
82,962
24,000
5,087
33,297
146,580
499,741
55,663
291,547
6,064
3,528
7,015
40,000
20,859
421,046
139,733

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

Open Society Foundations - DW
Social Protection Asia
Open Society Foundations –
Social Insurance Informal
Workers
Other Classes
Sida Nets Support
Sida Waste Picker Project
Coastal Cities
UN Women
USAID
WELSPRING PHILANTHROPIC
FUND
Governance costs
Gain on foreign exchange
TOTAL RESOURCES EXPENDED
-
18,000
7,180
592,513
76,150
-
-
-
980,512

-
-
980,512
19,637
33,264
3,590
466,889
309,051
42,386
800
-
2,481,330
67,208
(186,857)
5,301,838
3,257
-
-
52,562
56,928
1,614
-
37,739
331,833
-
-
923,167
22,894
51,264
10,770
1,111,964
442,129
44,000
800
37,739
3,793,674
67,208
(186,857)
7,205,517

Note: Sub grantees are subcontractors or institutions with contract arrangements who help to deliver the projects. Funds were allocated to IDWF, StreetNet, HomeNet South Asia, HomeNet South East Asia, SEWA, AeT, HomeNet Thailand and FACCYR/CTEP this year.

29

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

5. RESOURCES EXPENDED
Support Costs
Salaries
Meeting costs/events
Consultants and professional
Rent and office costs
2021
$
683,478
872
112,846
125,971
923,167
2020
$ 492,620
125,738
92,538
111,608
822,504
Support costs have been apportioned across core programmes according to the size of
programme.
2021
Governance Costs
$
Board meetings
24,432
Company secretarial
30,359
External Audit
12,417
67,208
the core
2020
$ 51,290
33,526
11,591
96,407

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

5. RESOURCES EXPENDED – YEAR ENDED 31 MARCH 2020

Payments to
Sub
grantees
Activities
Under
taken
directly
$
$
Charitable activities
Unrestricted Funds
Core Programmes
Law
-
410,609
Organisation & Representation
-
703,918
Social Protection
-
397,380
Statistics and Research
-
298,779
Urban Policies
-
695,054
Focal Cities
42,467
589,572
42,467
3,095,312
Membership Co-ordination/Support
-
214,610
Restricted Funds
Cities Alliance - Liberia
14,600
1,671
Comic Relief
26,209
13,453
Commonwealth Foundation
-
21,868
DFID WOW Project
77,505
122,330
Echidna/Schwab
9,730
11,503
FMO
-
61,456
Hewlett Foundation – Focal CIties
-
147,418
Hewlett Foundation - Focal Cities 2
-
189,107
Hewlett MLE Data Financial Training
-
39,337
International Labour Organisation
-
7,347
International Labour Organisation
Childcare Research
-
7,320
Open Society Foundations – Care
Givers Columbia
-
6,985
Open Society Foundations – DW
Social Protection Asia
43,075
15,980
Open Society Foundations –
Kazakhstan Mapping
-
6,030
Open Society Foundations –
Monitoring & Evaluation
-
318
Open Society Foundations – Social
Insurance Informal Workers
18,000
15,489
Open Society Foundations – Law
-
84,369
Other Classes
-
1,077
Sida Nets Support
698,652
542,217
Sida Waste Pickers – Coastal Cities
119,280
323,276
UNDP
-
7,653
USAID
-
10,000
WHO
-
24,000
WHO Kenya
-
15,000
1,007,051
1,675,202
Governance costs
-
96,407
Loss/(Gain) on foreign exchange
-
55,160
TOTAL RESOURCES EXPENDED
1,049,518
5,124,213
Support
costs
$
62,399
87,194
60,389
45,404
103,762
96,049
455,197
71,257
-
-
943
-
-
2,000
26,189
24,464
-
-
-
-
6,130
-
-
-
-
-
133,938
102,386
-
-
-
-
296,051
-
-
822,504
Total
2020
$
473,008
791,112
457,769
344,183
798,816
728,088
3,592,976
285,867
16,271
39,663
22,811
199,835
21,233
63,456
173,607
213,571
39,337
7,347
7,320
6,985
65,185
6,030
318
33,489
84,369
1,077
1,374,807
544,942
7,653
10,000
24,000
15,000
2,978,304
96,407
55,160
7,008,714

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

Note: Sub grantees are subcontractors or institutions with contract arrangements who help to deliver the projects. Funds were allocated to IDWF, StreetNet, HomeNet South Asia, HomeNet South East Asia and SEWA this year.

6. NET INCOMING/(OUTGOING) RESOURCES

This is stated after charging:
Operating lease rentals – property
Auditors' remuneration – Audit fees excluding VAT
2021
$
18,939
10,889
2020
$
4,463
9,819

7. STAFF COSTS, STAFF NUMBERS AND THE COST OF KEY MANAGEMENT PERSONEL

Staff costs were as follows:
Wages and salaries
Social security costs
Pension costs
2021
$
488,001
29,826
7,946
525,773
2020
$
414,355
22,436
5,787
442,578

The key management personnel of the charity are Sally Roever, International Co-ordinator and Mike Bird, the Operations Director. Sally Roever is employed by WIEGO and her salary is determined by the Board. She currently resides in the US. Mike Bird is employed by WIEGO in the UK, where rates of remuneration are set according to market rates and reviewed periodically by a Management Committee. The total cost of the key management personnel of the charity were $212,872 (2020 $198,495).

The average monthly number of employees during the year was as follows:

2021 2020
Number Number
Administration 8 7

During the year, the directors did not receive any reimbursement of expenses (2020: $4,723).

The directors received no remuneration or director fees during the year.

8. DEBTORS

Grant income receivable
Prepayments and other debtors
2021
$
124,735
36,840
161,575
2020
$
117,422
149,149
266,571

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

9. CREDITORS: Amounts falling due within one year

Accrued expenses
Grants deferred
2021
$
690,567
-

690,567
2020
$
636,493
-
636,493

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NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

10. STATEMENT OF FUNDS

Carried
Brought Forward Incoming Resources Transfers Forward
1 April 2020 Resources Expended 31 March 2021
$ $ $ $ $
UNRESTRICTED FUNDS
Designated funds
General Assembly Reserves 160,000 - - 80,000 240,000
DFID WOW Project 50,000 - - - 50,000
- -
Undesignated funds
Free reserves 460,744 - - 40,000 500,744
Unrestricted Funds 33,790 - - - 33,790
Ford Foundation - 200,000 - - 200,000
Hewlett Foundation - 4,000,000 (1,905,720) (120,000)
1,974,280
Sida - 924,880 (924,880) - -
Anonymous - 227,314 (227,314) - -
Open Society - Core Funding - 333,333 (333,333) - -
DFID WOW Counterpart - 71,637 (71,637) - -
Other Income/Other Classes - 9,808 (9,808) - -
Total Unrestricted Funds 704,534 5,766,972 (3,472,692) - 2,998,814
RESTRICTED FUNDS
Cities Alliance - Liberia & SV 7,866 26,982 (34,848) -
Comic Relief 96,762 126,773 (134,514) 89,021
DFID WOW (20,973) 120,145 (102,875) (3,703)
Echidna/Schwab Grant 128,767 - (82,962) 45,805
F E S - Friedrich Ebert Stiftung - 24,000 (24,000) -
Hewlett Communications Support and - 70,000 (33,297) 36,703
Fundraising

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

Hewlett Foundation - Focal Cities 2 686,887 900,000 (502,489) - 1,084,398
Hewlett Foundation - MLE, Database, FT 55,780 - (55,780) - -
Hewlett Foundation COVID Response - 1,000,000 (146,580) - 853,420
IDRC - COVID-19 Study - 361,665 (291,547) - 70,118
Open Society Foundation - Covid Response - 425,000 (421,046) - 3,954
Open Society Foundation - Kazakhstan 43,969 - - - 43,969
Mapping
Open Society Foundation - DW Social 134,885 - (22,894) - 111,991
Protection in Asia
Open Society Foundation - Social Insurance 116,511 150,000 (51,264) - 215,247
Informal Workers
Open Society Foundation - Care Givers in 7,015 - (7,015) - -
Colombia
Open Society Foundation - Covid Response - 200,000 (139,733) - 60,267
WP Brazil
Open Society Foundation - Covid Response - 165,000 (20,859) - 144,141
NETS Communications
Open Society Foundation - Child Care - 45,002 (40,000) - 5,002
Rebuilding Project
Open Society Initiative West Africa - 100,000 - - 100,000
Sida Nets Support - 1,256,269 (1,112,681) - 143,588
Sida Waste Picker Coastal Cities 26,243 478,579 (397,243) - 107,579
UN Women - 44,000 (44,000) - -
Wellspring Philanthropic Fund (WPF) - 100,047 (37,739) - 62,308
FORD FOUNDATION - HomeNet - 154,780 (5,087) - 149,693
International
ILO/ ILO ESCWA - 19,887 (9,591) - 10,297
Other Income - 14,780 (14,780) - -
Total Restricted Funds 1,283,712 5,782,909 (3,732,825) - 3,333,796
TOTAL FUNDS 1,988,246 11,549,881 (7,205,517) - 6,332,610

The DFID WOW Fund is in deficit as DFID only pay in arrears and £26k is due in July 2021.

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NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

10. STATEMENT OF FUNDS

UNRESTRICTED FUNDS
Designated funds
General Reserves
General Assembly in 2022
DFID WOW project
Undesignated funds
Free Reserves
Unrestricted Funds
Hewlett Foundation
Sida
South Street Green Room
Open Society Foundations – Core Funding
DFID WOW Counterpart
Other Income/Other Classes/Bank Interest
Total Unrestricted Funds
Cities Alliance – Liberia & SV
Comic Relief
Commonwealth Foundation
DFID WOW
Echidna/Schwab
FMO
Brought Forward
1 April 2019
Incoming
Resources
Resources
Expended
Transfers
Carried
Forward
31 March 2020
$
$
$
$
$
460,744
-
-
(460,744)
-
160,000
-
-
-
160,000
50,000
-
-
-
50,000
670,744
-
-
(460,744)
210,000
-
-
-
460,744
460,744
606,352
-
(572,562)
-
33,790
1,784,700
-
(1,784,700)
-
-
-
1,052,164
(1,052,164)
-
-
-
223,094
(223,094)
-
-
-
237,444
(237,444)
-
-
-
95,890
(95,890)
-
-
-
13,726
(13,726)
-
-
3,061,796
1,622,318
(3,979,580)
-
704,534
(3,431)
30,000
(18,703)
-
7,866
-
136,644
(39,881)
-
96,762
18,198
3,437
(21,635)
-
-
(5,825)
184,288
(199,436)
-
(20,973)
-
150,000
(21,233)
-
128,767
21,390
42,000
(63,390)
-
-

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NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

Hewlett Foundation – Focal Cities
Hewlett Foundation – Focal Cities 2
Hewlett Foundation – MLE, Database & FT
International Labour Organisation Childcare
Research
International Labour Organisation (Dakar)
Open Society Foundation – Kazakstan
Open Society Foundation – MLE
Open Society Foundation – DW SP Asia
Open Society Foundation – Social Insurance
Open Society Foundation – Care Givers
Colum
Open Society Foundation – Admin Law
SidaNets Support
SidaWaste Coastal Cities
USAID
UNDP
World Health Organisation
World Health Organisation Kenya
Other income/Other Classes/Bank Interest
Total Restricted Funds
TOTAL FUNDS
171,592
-
(171,592)
-
-
-
900,000
(213,113)
-
686,887
-
95,000
(39,220)
-
55,780
320
7,000
(7,320)
-
-
-
7,347
(7,347)
-
-
25,000
25,000
(6,031)
-
43,969
(19,613)
20,000
(387)
-
-
100,000
100,000
(65,115)
-
134,885
-
150,000
(33,489)
-
116,511
-
14,000
(6,985)
-
7,015
29,132
55,000
(84,132)
-
-
72,485
1,319,703
(1,392,188)
-
-
88,783
502,744
(565,284)
-
26,244
-
10,000
(10,000)
-
-
-
7,653
(7,653)
-
-
-
24,000
(24,000)
-
-
-
15,000
(15,000)
-
-
-
16,000
(16,000)
-
-
498,030
3,814,815
(3,029,133)
-
1,283,712
3,559,826
5,437,133
(7,008,713)
-
1,988,246

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NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

10. STATEMENT OF FUNDS (continued)

Period Amount Objective
Designated funds $160,000
$50,000
Funds set aside as a contribution towards the
General Assembly in 2020.
Funds set aside for DFID WoW
Unrestricted funds
William and Flora Hewlett
Foundation
23/03/2020- 23/03/2022 $4,000,000 To provide general operating support
Sida – Swedish International
Development Co-operation
Agency
01/04/18 - 31/03/22 SEK
10,000,000
To support the core activities
Open Society Foundations 01/10/2018-30/09/2021 $1,000,000 To provide general operating support
Ford Foundation 01/10/20-30/09/22 $400,000 To provide general operating support
Anonymous Donation December 2016 – 20 £375,000 To provide general operating support
Anonymous Donation June 2019 – June 2023 £500,000 To provide general operating support
Restricted Funds
Sida – Swedish International
Development Co-operation
Agency
01/04/18 - 31/03/22 SEK
12,600,000
To provide support to the WIEGO Network of
informal workers’ associations
Sida – Swedish International
Development Co-operation
Agency
01/04/18 - 31/03/22 SEK
4,800,000
Waste Pickers as environmental agents
Hewlett Foundation 23/03/20 – 23/03/22 $70,000 To provide support to WIEGO communications
Support and Fundraising
Hewlett Foundation – Focal
Cities 2
2/12/19 - 2/12/22 $1,800,000 To establish Urban Livelihood Learning Hubs in
Mexico, Senegal and Ghana
Hewlett Foundation 04/09/20-23/03/22 $1,000,000 Covid Response
UNOPS/Cities Alliance 1/6/16 - 31/5/2021 $180,951 Support for the Street/Market vendors in city
governance and inclusive planning in Greater
Monrovia in Liberia.
IDRC 1/7/20 - 30/06/22 CAD 941,500 Covid 19 Study
Open Society Foundations 1/10/18 -31/12/21 $200,000 Social Protection for domestic workers
Open Society Foundations 1/11/19 – 1/11/22 $300,000 Social Insurance – Informal Workers
Open Society Foundations 1/10/18 -30/9/21 $50,000 Mapping in Kazakhstan
Open Society Foundations 1/10/18 -30/9/21 $40,000 Monitoring, Learning and Evaluation
Open Society Foundations 15/10/19 - 31/8/20 $14,000 Care Givers in Columbia
Open Society Foundations 01/06/20-31/05/21 $425,000 Covid Response
Open Society Foundations 26/10/20- 26/10/21 $165,000 Covid Response NETS Communications
Open Society Foundations 01/10/20-30/03/22 $ 50,002 Child Care Rebuilding Project to document the
experience of shared business ownership
models for worker-run and managed child care
services during the pandemic.
Open Society Initiative for
West Africa
20/12/20 – 19/07/22 $200,000 To strengthen women and informal sector
workers’ leadership and representation in time of
crisis and post.

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NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

10. STATEMENT OF FUNDS (continued)

Echidna Giving/Schwab
Charitable
12/12/19-30/09/21 $150,000 Develop Quality Standards for child care
services in Africa
Hewlett Foundation 3/6/19 – 3/9/20 $95,000 MLE plan, Database & Finance Training
Comic Relief 1/9/19 - 30/8/2024 £505,000 Empowering Women Home-Based Workers
DFID WoW Project 1/3/19 – 31/1/2022 £498,752 HBW – Organising for Economic
Empowerment
USAID 25/8/18 - 31/12/21 $10,000 The Development Innovations Group
UN Women 01/09/20-31/12/20 $44,000 For the implementation of UN Women’s
programmes
Friedrich Ebert Stiftung ( FES) 18/08/20-31/03/21 $24,000 Social Protection Laws in Africa
Ford Foundation – HNI 01/01/21 – 31/12/22 £500,000 HomeNet International
Wellspring Philanthropic 01/10/20 – 31/03/22 $150,000 Support women in the Informal Economy:
Relief, Recovery and Resilience
International Labour Office 01/01/21 – 31/07/21 $27,097 Implementation of PH/development of a
national database of home-based workers
in the garment and crafts sectors
development of a national database of
home-based workers in the garment and
crafts sectors in South Africa
International Labour Office 22/03/21- 30/11/21 $10,250 ILO Informality report Statistical advisor
contract
Unrestricted Funds
Restricted Funds
Total of Funds
Balance
at
1 April
2020
$
704,534
1,283,712
1,988,246
Incoming
Resources
Resources
Expended
Transfers
Balance at
31 March
2021
$
$
$
$
5,766,972
(3,472,692)
-
2,998,814
5,782,909
(3,732,825)
-
3,333,796
11,549,881
(7,205,517)
-
6,332,610

38

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NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

ANALYSIS OF NET ASSETS BETWEEN FUNDS

Restricted
Funds
Unrestricted
Funds
2021
$
2021
$
Current assets
3,660,460
3,362,717
Creditors due within one year
(326,664)
(363,903)
Total of Funds
3,333,796
2,998,814
Total
Funds
2021
$
7,023,177
(690,567)
6,332,610

ANALYSIS OF NET ASSETS BETWEEN FUNDS

Restricted
Funds
Unrestricted
Funds
2020
$
2020
$
Current assets
1,685,086
939,653
Creditors due within one year
(401,374)
235,119)
Total of Funds
1,283,712
704,534
Total
Funds
2020
$
2,624,739
(636,493)

1,988,246

11. COMPANY LIMITED BY GUARANTEE

The company is a company limited by guarantee. The members of the company are the directors named on page 1 who have each guaranteed to contribute £1 ($1.40) to the company’s assets in the event of the company being wound up. The company is controlled by the members.

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NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

12. RELATED PARTY DISCLOSURES

According to its Articles of Association, three members of the WIEGO Board should be elected representatives from Institutional Members of WIEGO. From time to time, WIEGO enters into partnership on specific projects with its Institutional Members, including those represented on the WIEGO Board. In addition, Individual Members of WIEGO on the Board and co-opted Board members may have involvement with partner organisations. The WIEGO Board and management agree that in the interest of transparency, such activities and/or relationships should be disclosed in the financial statements.

The WIEGO Board notes that the following Board members have working involvement in organisations that have partnered with WIEGO. In each case, the named trustee or officer was neither directly associated with the project nor in receipt of any compensation related to it.

Mirai Chatterjee is a Trustee of Lok Swasthya SEWA Trust (LSST). Payments to LSST were $20,000 USD during the year. Mirai is also the Director of the Social Security team at the Self Employed Women’s Association (SEWA). No direct payments were made to Social Security SEWA.

Payments to SEWA Bharat of $36,88 and payments to the Indian Academy of SEWA of $28,979 were both made during the year.

Elizabeth Tang is General Secretary (remunerated) of the International Domestic Workers Federation (IDWF). Payments to IDWF were $189,000 USD during the year.

Uma Rani is a Senior Economist (remunerated) at the International Labour Office (ILO). WIEGO received grants from the ILO of $19,887 USD during the year.

Gabriela Calandria is a member of the International Council for StreetNet. Payments to StreetNet International were $238,516 USD during the year.

Patrick Ndovlu is a remunerated employee of Asiye e Tafuleni. Payments to Asiye e Tafuleni were $129,858 during the year.

Caroline Skinner the Research Director for Urban Policies is a Board member for Asiye e Tafuleni. Payments to Asiye e Tafuleni were $129,858 during the year.

13. FINANCIAL COMMITMENTS

At 31 March 2021 the Charity had future minimum lease payments under non-cancellable operating leases as follows:


Payable:

Within one year

Between two and five years

Land & Buildings
2021
2020
$
$ 14,204
4,463
4,735
-
18,939
4,463

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

14.
FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS
Financial assets
Financial assets measured at amortised cost
Financial liabilities
Financial liabilities measured at amortised cost
2021

$

7,023,177
690,567
2020
$ 2,624,739
636,493

Financial assets consist of cash, grant income receivable and other debtors.

Financial liabilities consist of trade creditors, other creditors and accruals.

15. RECONCILIATION OF NET MOVEMENT TO NET CASH FLOW FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES

Net incoming/(outgoing) resources for the year
Adjustments for:
Interest received
Decrease/(increase) in debtors
Increase/(decrease) in creditors
Net cash used in operating
activities
2021
$
4,344,364
(3,679)
104,996
54,075
4,499,755
2020
$ (1,571,580)
(21,201)
(43,526)
(27,235)
(1,663,542)

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NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

16. COMPARATIVE SOFA FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 MARCH 2021

Restricted
Funds
Unrestricted
Funds
Note
2020
$
2020
$
INCOME
Donations and legacies
2
-
-
Investment income
3
14,874
6,326
Charitable activities
4
3,799,941
1,615,992
TOTAL INCOME
3,814,815
1,622,318
EXPENDITURE
Charitable activities
5
3,027,760
3,968,475
TOTAL EXPENDITURE
3,027,760
3,968,475
NET INCOMING/(OUTGOING)
RESOURCES
787,055
2,346,157
TOTAL FUNDS AT 1 APRIL 2019
498,030
3,061,796
TOTAL FUNDS AT 31 MARCH
2020
10
1,285,085
715,639
Total
Funds
2020
$
-
21,200
5,415,933
5,437,133
7,008,714
7,008,714
1,571,580
3,559,826
1,988,246

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

APPENDIX 1 For the year ended 31 March 2021

MEMBERSHIP

BOARD OF DIRECTORS * Chair [Mirai Chatterjee, India]

----- Start of picture text -----
FINANCE COMMITTEE
MANAGEMENT COMMITTEE
[Debra Davis, UK]
[Mirai Chatterjee, India]
[Barbro Budin, Sweden]
[William Steel, Ghana]
[William Steel, Ghana]
[Luciana Itikawa, Brazil]
[Uma Rani, Switzerland]
[Gabriela Calandria, Uruguay]
[Sally Roever, Italy]
[Sally Roever, Italy]
[Jacqui Fendall, UK]
PROGRAMME SUPPORT & COMMUNICATIONS SECRETARIAT OPERATIONS OFFICE [UK]
Programme Strategy Advisor [Rhonda Douglas] International Coordinator [Sally Operations Director [Mike Bird]
Communications Advisor [Demetria Tsoutouras] Roever] Financial Controller/Company Secretary [Jacqui Fendall]
FOCAL CITIES INITIATIVE
Coordinator [Jenna Harvey]
5 x City Coordinators [Accra, Dakar, Delhi, CORE PROGRAMMES RESEARCH COORDINATOR
Lima, Mexico] [Françoise Carr é , USA]
LAW SOCIAL PROTECTION ORGANIZATION & URBAN POLICIES STATISTICS
Advisory Committee REPRESENTATION Advisory Committee
Advisory Committee
Programme Director
[Marlese v Broembsen] Programme Director Programme Director Programme Director
[South Africa] [Laura Alfers] Programme Director [Mike Rogan (Acting)] [Françoise Carr é]
[South Africa] [Jane Barrett] [South Africa]
[USA]
[South Africa]
----- End of picture text -----**

** This organogram illustrates the Delegation of Powers to the International Coordinator and key team members. There are many other team members who contribute to WIEGO’s work, many of whom are mentioned in Appendix 2.

The following pages do not form part of the statutory financial statements.

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APPENDIX 2 For the year ended 31 March 2021

The Year in Review

Mirai Chatterjee, Chair of the Board

This past year we have witnessed and endured some of our greatest challenges ever. The serious consequences of systemic inequality and injustice, visible to all in the COVID-19 crisis, have left us mourning the loss of our leaders and members across the movement while coping with the devastating economic fallout of the global pandemic. So many workers have lost their livelihoods. So many have seen what few assets they held disappear. So many have seen their earnings drop to zero and barely recover, if at all.

The uncertainty of the pandemic and its consequences has remained with us throughout the year. What has also remained with us is the steadfast commitment of the women and men in our network to battle the injustices in these most difficult of circumstances. Collectively, membership-based organizations have mobilized around relief efforts, ensured that governments designate their members as essential, and developed new communication structures to ensure no one is alone. They have filled gaps where no one else could and brought hope where it was hard to find.

Our team, members and partners throughout the WIEGO Network have also helped to increase public understanding of the role informal workers play in communities, households and societies. They have come together across sectors and regions to join hands in solidarity and advocate for fairer policies and practices. They have formed new partnerships and alliances, developed new leaders and grown in number and diversity. They have helped to build resilience in their communities and families. They have shown us pathways to recovery by rebuilding local economies in an inclusive and fair manner.

Through everything we do as a network, our members’ needs are central. The world of work as it existed before the crisis was built on unsustainable inequalities. There is now more recognition of the urgency to end those inequalities and put into place a world of work that is centred on justice and inclusion. Our strength is solidarity and we are united in our vision of a recovery for all workers.

Mirai Chatterjee Chair, WIEGO Board of Directors October 2021

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APPENDIX 2 For the year ended 31 March 2021

Sally Roever, International Coordinator

Adaptation and learning have been at the centre of our journey through the harrowing months of 20202021. In April 2020, as the pandemic began to play out, we undertook an unprecedented mobilization of resources to quickly design and implement two studies – a rapid appraisal with our institutional members and a mixed-method study with partners – to assess the impact of COVID-19 on informal workers in 12 cities. Never before had our network conducted a study under the circumstances we faced at that time. But putting data in the hands of workers, now as throughout our history, was critical to their efforts to convince governments to include them in relief measures.

Several years of research, organizing and networking culminated in another monumental achievement despite the circumstances of the pandemic: the launch of HomeNet International in February 2021. Home-based workers’ organizations from four regions found creative ways to continue their work towards building a democratic, representative global network, even while navigating the severe impact of the pandemic on home-based workers. In coordination with the launch, our Statistics Programme published briefs profiling the size and composition of the home-based work sector in several countries and globally, showing its crucial role in local and global production.

WIEGO’s unique model combining research, organizing and advocacy shaped the way policy makers saw and understood informal employment at a pivotal moment in history. Our work with partners documenting barriers to social protection and how innovations can overcome them was disseminated through the world’s most influential multilateral institutions. The garment sector work we undertook with members and partners in Asia shaped the way in which stakeholders see informality throughout the supply chain and its effects on working conditions. Local governments participated in dialogues with worker organizations as a result of our joint work with members and partners to produce policy-relevant research.

As we reflect on the lessons learned from the past year, we see our foundation of solidarity in action and the potential it holds for our common future. And as we join hands in the struggle for the future, the courage we have seen in the past year can be a source of inspiration and hope for a more just and inclusive world of work.

In solidarity,

Sally Roever, PhD International Coordinator, WIEGO October 2021

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APPENDIX 2 For the year ended 31 March 2021

The Formation of a Global Network for Home-Based Workers

The launch of HomeNet International – a global network for home-based workers – in February 2021 was the culmination of over two decades of organization building. This historic moment was witnessed by a huge number of workers and allies who attended the virtual launch at a time when an in-person meeting was impossible: there were 80 delegates from 36 affiliates from 20 countries, joined by around 200 home-based workers as observers and 200 allies.

The aim of the network is to build solidarity, share knowledge and information, take up home-based worker issues globally, raise a global voice in spaces such as the International Labour Organization, and to provide support to all regions and affiliate organizations.

The idea of a global network for home-based workers was born in the early 1990s when the issue of a convention for home-based workers was placed on the agenda of the International Labour Conference. However, early attempts to form a global network didn’t succeed and, instead, the formation and building of regional networks became the focus – HomeNet South Asia and HomeNet South-East Asia – with WIEGO in a supporting role. For the past 10 years, WIEGO has also supported organizations of home-based workers in Africa, Latin America and Eastern Europe. In 2018, representatives of all five regions took the unanimous decision to form HomeNet International within two years.

WIEGO supported the formation of HomeNet International with capacity building, knowledge generation, statistics and network building. We will continue to support HomeNet International in the same way that we support the established global network organizations of street vendors (StreetNet International) and domestic workers (International Domestic Workers Federation).

A Global Network of Waste Pickers

WIEGO is supporting waste pickers to work towards a global network to amplify their voice. Representatives of waste picker organizations from 13 countries participated in the first online meeting for the constitution of the Global Advisory Committee of the Global Alliance of Waste Pickers in June 2020. This is a significant step forward in a process that started in 2008.

How Workers Mobilized During the Pandemic

The COVID-19 crisis has hit informal workers hard. Overnight, in places where governments enacted strict lockdowns, workers’ livelihoods vanished and, to make matters worse, many found themselves stigmatized as the spreaders of the disease. Even as lockdowns eased, earnings recovered slowly and for many remained below pre-COVID-19 levels. With workers eager to get back to work instead of waiting for relief, informal worker organizations fought for the recognition of workers’ essential roles in society and supported their members during this difficult time when governments failed to do enough. WIEGO has stood by them every step of the way.

Here is what we have achieved together:

Recognition as essential workers

When lockdowns were imposed, informal workers used WIEGO statistics and reports to formulate arguments to persuade their governments to allow them to return to work. Peru, South Africa and Colombia are some of the places where governments recognized informal workers – including waste pickers, street vendors and market traders – as essential workers, allowing them to work during lockdown. Waste pickers provide essential sanitation and solid waste management services, which contribute to public health and safety. Street vendors and market traders provide necessary goods and services and contribute to food security for the poorest and most vulnerable communities.

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Increased public awareness

The pandemic has increased public awareness of the working poor’s essential roles and the hardships they face, not least because workers are standing up and telling their stories. In Peru, media reported on street markets’ crucial role in the urban food chain – something WIEGO’s Lima team has continuously raised with national media – and many were eventually allowed to reopen. In Senegal, WIEGO supported informal worker organizations to speak out publicly about their stigmatization as spreaders of COVID-19. In South Africa, resident organizations, that had previously called for aggressive action against waste pickers, now recognized the importance of their work.

Receipt of cash transfers

Advocacy for cash transfers or grants to informal workers affected by the pandemic was successful in Peru, Ghana and South Africa. WIEGO supported this through media outreach and articulating workers’ needs.

Cross-sector solidarity

At the start of the pandemic, WIEGO organized a meeting of regional and global networks of informal workers. Since then, they have been holding weekly (now biweekly) meetings, which have significantly increased cross-sectoral solidarity – a crucial element for movement-building. The networks have worked together on various big moments as a result, including a joint statement on May Day when they presented a global platform of demands, and the preparation of a common platform of demands for the International Labour Conference.

In a series of Workers’ Voices webinars – made possible by interpretation into various languages – WIEGO provided a space for exchange where workers’ organizations and networks of informal workers could learn from each other and discuss experiences. They talked about innovative policy, advocacy, and organizing strategies during the crisis, as well as positive policy responses. Interventions led by workers’ organizations to support informal workers in the pandemic were also discussed.

Strengthened communications

The pandemic contributed to the development of new communications structures, and the strengthening of existing ones, for organizations of informal workers to monitor the impact of COVID19 and share news with their members. Information technology systems were set up to support members in applying for relief programmes and increase their use of online platforms and tools for virtual communication. The organizations also used crowdfunding platforms and created systems for food distribution among their members.

How WIEGO Programmes Support Domestic Workers Organization and Representation Programme

WIEGO has supported the International Domestic Workers Federation (IDWF) to become recognized as a relevant partner at the European level. European trade unions, the Federation of Food, Agriculture and Tourism Trade Unions (EFFAT) and UNI Europa, and employers’ organizations European Federation for Services to Individuals (EFSI) and the European Federation for Family Employment (EFFE) published a joint statement on the impact of the pandemic on domestic workers in 2020, and another demanding priority access to COVID-19 vaccines for home care workers. For the first time, following engagement by WIEGO and IDWF, IDWF was recognized as supporting the statements.

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Statistics Programme

The programme’s Statistical Briefs provide statistics on all WIEGO sectors, including domestic workers, and thus bring visibility to these workers at national and international levels. Tabulations for informal workers, including domestic workers, in India, urban India and Delhi, as well as in Mexico, urban Mexico and Mexico City were provided in two new briefs. These are essential tools for planning and advocacy.

Law Programme

The Law Programme builds the capacity of regional and global networks of informal worker organizations by providing technical input to support their strategies and advocacy, including on the COVID-19 response. Between March and November 2020, the Law Programme collected, collated and analyzed the laws and regulations adopted by 85 countries in response to COVID-19, with a particular focus on street vendors and domestic workers. The analysis for domestic workers focused on whether and how they were recognized as essential workers; whether and how governments protected domestic workers against lay-offs and whether they created health and safety obligations for their employers; and whether they were included in social assistance, social protection and stimulus measures.

Social Protection Programme

WIEGO works continuously with the International Domestic Workers Federation (IDWF) to raise the profile of social protection among their membership. The Social Protection Programme raised funds and designed a social protection survey with IDWF’s members, which helped the National Domestic Workers Union in Bangladesh and the All Nagaland Domestic Workers Union in India to better reflect on their social protection priorities and understand the needs of their members.

Urban Policies Programme

To unpack the hardship, injustice and possibility for transformation within our economic system, laid bare by the pandemic, the Urban Policies Programme is hosting the WIEGO-led COVID-19 Crisis and the Informal Economy Study. Together with worker organizations, WIEGO is listening to the experiences of informal workers, including domestic workers, in 12 cities. The study found that, among domestic workers, “live-out” workers were more likely to face unemployment, while “live-in” workers suffered deteriorating working conditions and terms of employment.

How WIEGO Programmes Support Home-Based Workers

Organization and Representation Programme

Collective voice is key to improving the income, working conditions and status of workers in the informal economy – especially women – whose voices are often not heard by those who make decisions that affect their lives. Through strong, democratic membership-based organizations (MBOs) that are created and led by workers, they gain the knowledge, skills, confidence and solidarity to change this. This year, as a result of the programme’s support with organization building, HomeNet International and HomeNet Kenya were founded.

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Statistics Programme

Country-specific data on home-based workers are not commonly available and WIEGO has long worked to change that. This year the Statistics Programme, in collaboration with the International Labour Organization and HomeNet International, prepared the first ever global brief with cross-national comparable estimates of home-based workers by world regions and country income groups. Together with home-based worker statistical briefs for Bangladesh, India and Pakistan, they supported the HomeNet International founding congress. The briefs have laid the foundation and built interest in subsequent statistical briefs planned for countries in other regions, including Latin America and SubSaharan Africa.

Law Programme

WIEGO seeks to influence key civil society organizations that are engaging with brands and in policy processes to include homeworkers in their strategies. In 2020, together with informal worker organizations and Asia Floor Wage Alliance (AFWA), the Law Programme called on global brands to extend a one-time Supply-chain Relief Contribution to all garment workers in their supply chains. The Law Programme also supported, together with the Organization and Representation Programme, organizations of home-based workers to participate in an EU law-making process – a first – to compel EU companies to undertake a mandatory human rights and environmental due diligence in their supply chains. As a result, 12 organizations of homeworkers from 10 South and Southeast Asian countries developed and submitted a platform of demands to the European Union Commission.

Social Protection Programme

The Social Protection Programme aims to enhance the knowledge and strategic capabilities of organizations of informal workers, including women within these organizations, to exercise voice and engage in alliance building for social protection. The WIEGO Briefing Note Violence at Work, spearheaded by WIEGO’s Social Protection team, shows how informal workers, including home-based workers, can use the ILO Violence and Harassment Convention (no. 190) and accompanying Recommendation (no. 206) to draw attention to the domestic violence they experience in their homes and workplaces. Private homes in which domestic workers and home-based workers operate are considered high-risk workplaces due to the isolation of these workers.

Urban Policies Programme

To unpack the hardship, injustice and possibility for transformation within our economic system, laid bare by the pandemic, the Urban Policies Programme is hosting a WIEGO-led COVID-19 Crisis Study. Together with worker organizations, we are listening to the experiences of informal workers in 12 cities. HomeNet South Asia (HNSA) and HomeNet Thailand used the COVID-19 study survey questionnaire to undertake further study of home-based workers in 17 additional cities, thereby increasing our understanding of the challenges workers are facing during the pandemic.

How WIEGO Programmes Support Street Vendors and Market Traders

Organization and Representation Programme

From the beginning of the COVID-19 lockdown in South Africa in March 2020, street vendors were not able to meet and became very isolated from each other. WIEGO supported the organization of virtual monthly meetings for street vendors in all nine provinces in the country. These meetings have created regular interaction and enhanced coordination among the workers, allowing them to keep track of what is going on in all the different provinces.

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Statistics Programme

Our statistical brief for urban Thailand, which included data on all informal workers including street vendors and market traders, was used by the Urban Design and Development Center (UDDC) to improve city planning to accommodate the number of street vendors and convince the Bangkok Governor to return street vendors to footpaths. The brief was also used by HomeNet Thailand to ask the National Health Commission Office (NHCO) to help facilitate a public policy for street vendors in Bangkok. NHCO agreed to discuss this issue with other stakeholders because of the large number of people affected, based on our figures.

Law Programme

The pandemic has dealt a heavy economic blow on the African continent. The Law Programme analyzed the COVID-19 laws of 41 Anglophone, Francophone and Lusophone African countries through an informal trading lens. The paper in which these findings are reported considers the implications of these laws for informal traders' continuity of work, measures to prevent the spread of COVID-19, and social dialogue and engagement with governments. The research will be used to provide online training and capacity building for organizations of informal workers and has been made available to a wide range of stakeholders. The project is being implemented together with WIEGO’s Social Protection Programme.

Social Protection Programme

The programme produced a series of briefs to analyze the Social Protection Responses to COVID-19, drawing from WIEGO's database of social protection responses to COVID-19, in order to support movements in their advocacy efforts to expand social protection to informal workers in this period of crisis. Various donors and organizations of informal workers have drawn on these briefs, including for advocacy. For example, StreetNet International used it in their presentation at the Global Platform on the Right to the City, and the International Labour Organization’s influential Social Protection Spotlight policy brief included WIEGO’s contribution based on one of the briefs.

Urban Policies Programme

In July 2020, the Legal Resources Centre in South Africa used WIEGO’s health guidelines for street vendors in a court case to secure the opening of markets in Cape Town. The health guidelines helped demonstrate that traders have taken health concerns seriously, including those related to COVID-19. The case was won and the ruling allowed traders to start working again. The guidelines were prepared together with occupational health professors, food security experts, Asiye eTafuleni – an NGO supporting informal traders in South Africa – and trader leaders.

How WIEGO Programmes Support Waste Pickers

Organization and Representation Programme

WIEGO’s Reducing Waste in Coastal Cities Project supports waste picker organizations in preventing ocean waste pollution by improving the capacity of waste picker organizations to be formally integrated into solid waste management in their cities. In September 2020, the city of Mangalore, India, issued occupational ID cards for 156 waste pickers as a result of enumeration of workers conducted as part of the project. This is a clear recognition by the state that informal waste pickers are part of the solid waste management infrastructure of the city. The ID cards also make the workers eligible for certain social welfare benefits, including health insurance, and allows them to open a bank account.

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Statistics Programme

There is particularly little data on waste pickers, relative to other informal worker groups, in country and international statistics. WIEGO prepared statistical briefs on informal workers, including waste pickers, in India, urban India and Delhi and Mexico, urban Mexico and Mexico City. This affirms the importance of the continued collection of data, which makes tabulation of these workers possible.

Law Programme

When the Kpone landfill in Accra, Ghana, was suddenly being decommissioned without consultation in June 2020, it came as a shock to the hundreds of waste pickers who rely on their work at the site to survive and feed their families. The Law Programme engaged the Accra-based Advocates for Community Alternatives to support the Kpone Wastepickers’ Association to engage the World Bank on the government’s lack of compliance with the Bank’s safeguarding policies – requiring consultation and the development of a livelihoods restoration plan. The World Bank did not ultimately assume responsibility for safeguarding, and waste pickers are now advocating with the government to secure waste management contracts, finance and infrastructure to operate as an independent cooperative in the waste value chain.

Social Protection Programme

The programme’s Informal Economy Podcast: Social Protection is a source of accessible information that raises awareness about research and debates on social protection for informal workers, including waste pickers. This year, it featured topics such as universal basic income, social protection needs for older workers, and the impact of the pandemic on workers. Socialprotection.org – the leading webbased platform for dissemination of social protection resources – featured WIEGO’s social protection work in Lima after it was discussed on our podcast.

Urban Policies Programme

The Urban Policies Programme supports informal workers in their efforts to transform urban systems, including through raising the visibility of waste pickers in important debates. Marli Beraldo, a waste picker leader from the Acamares association in Minas Gerais, Brazil, participated in a webinar led by Brazil’s National Health Foundation about the impacts of COVID-19. She shared the health and economic impacts felt by waste pickers during the pandemic. The invitation was a result of WIEGO’s ongoing interactions with the Foundation on COVID-19-related work.

How WIEGO’s Focal Cities Teams are Supporting Informal Workers WIEGO’s Focal Cities approach supports informal worker organizations to engage with government officials to secure more inclusive laws and regulations, improved urban services and a voice in urban planning and policy-making processes. WIEGO’s five Focal Cities are Accra, Ghana; Dakar, Senegal; Delhi, India; Lima, Peru and Mexico City, Mexico.

Accra, Ghana

The team works with market traders , street vendors , waste pickers and kayayei /market porters . After a fire in a shopping mall, WIEGO reached out to worker leaders to find out the extent of the impact on informal traders and to offer support with a statement to demand a response from the authorities. The joint statement from the Greater Accra Markets Association (GAMA) and Informal Hawkers and Vendors of Ghana (IHVAG) received a lot of media attention; this was an opportunity workers used to reiterate their demand for a safe and secure working environment. Following the statement, the National Board for Small Scale Industries (NBSSI) agreed to increase the number of eligible beneficiaries of a COVID-19 alleviation programme – although support has remained limited.

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Dakar, Senegal

The team works with home-based producers , street and market vendors , waste pickers , taxi drivers , laundresses , carpenters and construction workers .

WIEGO is working to secure waste pickers’ livelihoods in the process of the eventual closure of the Mbeubeuss dumpsite. In partnership with strategic allies, WIEGO works to strengthen the capacity of Bokk Diom – the association of Waste Pickers of Mbeubeuss – to defend their rights and interests as workers. Bokk Diom leaders are now holding the authorities to account for the protection of their livelihoods and are demanding inclusion in the project. In March 2021, Bokk Diom began the process of becoming a union. With the International Labour Organization and WIEGO, Bokk Diom worked in the development of two feasibility studies for the creation of a cooperative, identifying potential areas where they could participate within the waste management chain.

Delhi, India

The team works with domestic workers , home-based workers , street vendors and waste pickers .

In Delhi, WIEGO joined a diverse coalition of allies who together formed the Main Bhi Dilli (“I, too, am Delhi”) Campaign – to advocate for the need for a more participatory and inclusive approach to the next Delhi master plan, which sets the tone for the city’s development for the next 20 years. As a result of the campaign’s advocacy efforts, the city opened up its most inclusive public consultation process yet – accepting for the first time citizen input on the master plan before the release of a draft rather than after.

Lima, Peru

The team works with domestic workers , home-based workers , street vendors , waste pickers , “canillitas”/newspaper vendors and market porters .

COVID-19 restrictions in Peru were among the strictest and longest in the world. Informal workers were not able to go to work for almost four months. Team Lima worked closely with membership-based organizations, government officials and the media to advocate for cash grants for self-employed workers. At the start of the pandemic, the national government granted cash support to households categorized as poor or “extremely poor”, but the urban directories were not up to date and the majority of informal workers were left out of the benefit. A cash grant for self-employed workers was approved a couple of weeks after WIEGO’s advocacy started and improved the reach of the cash grants to include many informal workers.

Mexico City, Mexico

The team works with domestic workers , street vendors , waste pickers and non-salaried workers including mariachi musicians, coffee vendors, shoe shiners and organ players.

Through the “Rifados de la Basura” campaign, launched by WIEGO in April 2020, waste pickers drew attention to their working conditions through the media and gained visibility and recognition from government officials and the public. The Mexico City Human Rights Commission issued a press release soon after the start of the campaign urging Mexico City’s government to protect informal waste pickers due to the high risks they faced in the COVID-19 crisis, incorporating two of the central demands of WIEGO’s campaign.

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Improving the Accessibility of Our Work

Making our research available in accessible formats and disseminating it on various channels and in a wide variety of languages contributes to an inclusive environment in which workers can use our materials to inform their advocacy. Over the past year, our new trilingual website, increasingly visual social media messaging, and media outreach conducted by a dedicated press team have contributed to improved accessibility.

These strategies were, for example, used for the dissemination of WIEGO’s 12-city study, which is conducted in collaboration with organizations of informal workers and assesses the impact of the COVID-19 crisis on specific groups of workers and their households. The results and outputs from the study have been widely shared by donors and multilateral international organizations, as well as by workers who have used it in their advocacy for better working conditions and rights during the pandemic.

In Peru alone, the study results were featured in 80 news and interview pieces; the ministries of labour and production in Peru took action on a recommendation of the study to provide access to small credit to informal workers; and, following a public parliamentary session on climate where the results were presented, the Lima municipal government designated informal recyclers as essential. The ILO’s flagship online publication – the International Labour Review – accepted for publication two WIEGOauthored papers on the study findings. Various news outlets around the world reported on the impacts of the crisis on informal workers after receiving a press release from WIEGO.

The Law Programme commissioned the creation of engaging materials for their Waste Pickers and Human Rights work, which aims to improve working conditions for waste pickers through a human rights perspective and to extend the right to work to include informal workers. The materials (Spanish only) included a comic, a snakes and ladders game and a guide to recyclers’ rights.

Disseminating our work in partnership with donors and large international organizations makes it more accessible for a larger audience and thus increases the reach of our work. In partnership with Ford Foundation and UNU-WIDER, WIEGO co-hosted an online event to celebrate the book The Informal Economy Revisited: Examining the Past, Envisioning the Future and to call attention to the future of informal work. This 34-chapter open-access book brings together leading scholars from a broad range of disciplines to investigate recent conceptual shifts, research findings and policy debates on the informal economy. Edited by Marty Chen and Françoise Carré, the volume is the culmination of WIEGO’s first 20 years of pioneering work on the informal economy. As a whole, it calls for a paradigm shift in theory and research as well as policies, laws and regulations on the informal economy.

Increased availability of translation and interpretation provided by the communications team makes trainings and workshops accessible for a wider audience and has improved representation from our constituencies, also in global campaigns – such as the 16 Days Campaign to call for the ratification of ILO Convention 190 to end all forms of gender-based violence, which focused on women in informal employment.

For International Women’s Day, WIEGO amplified the voices of women leaders – in their own words, made possible by translation – whose organizations stepped up to provide relief when governments failed to do enough during the COVID-19 pandemic.

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Company Registration No: 6273538 Charity Registration No: 1143510

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

(COMPANY LIMITED BY GUARANTEE) For the year ended 31 March 2021

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

CONTENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

Page
Legal and administrative information 1 - 2
Directors’ report 3 - 16
Independent Auditors' report 17 - 19
Statement of financial activities 20
Balance sheet 21
Cash Flow Statement 22
Notes to the financial statements 23 - 42
Appendices 43 - 53

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

LEGAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE INFORMATION For the year ended 31 March 2021

Name:

Women in Informal Employment: Globalizing and Organizing (WIEGO) Limited

Charity Registration No: Company Registration No: Principal and Registered Address

1143510

6273538

521 Royal Exchange Manchester M2 7EN United Kingdom

Telephone: Website:

0161 819 1200 www.wiego.org

Names of Current Directors

The Directors of WIEGO, which is a charitable company, are its trustees for the purposes of charity law. Throughout this report the Directors are collectively referred to as the Board.

Mirai Chatterjee (Chair) Debra Davis (Treasurer) Barbro Budin Lin Lim Lean William (Biff) Steel Gabriela Calandria Luciana Fukimoto Itikawa Uma Rani Elizabeth yin Ngor Tang Patrick Sibusiso Ndlovu

Chief Executive Officer (known as International Co-ordinator)

Sally Roever

Company Secretary

Jacqui Fendall

Bankers

Santander UK Bank plc Manchester Business Centre 298 Deansgate Manchester M3 4HH

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LEGAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE INFORMATION For the year ended 31 March 2021

Auditors

Crowe U.K. LLP The Lexicon Mount Street Manchester M2 5NT

Solicitors Bates Wells and Braithwaite 2 – 6 Cannon Street London EC4M 6YH Programme Team Sally Roever International Co-ordinator Jane Barrett Programme Director, Organization & Representation Marlese von Broembsen Programme Director, Law Rhonda Douglas Programme Strategy Advisor Laura Alfers Programme Director, Social Protection Mike Rogan Interim Programme Director, Urban Policies Francoise Carré Programme Director, Statistics

Operations Team Sally Roever International Co-ordinator Jacqui Fendall Financial Controller/ Company Secretary Rhonda Douglas Programme Strategy Advisor Mike Bird Operations Director Megan Landeros Research and Administrative Assistant to the International Co-ordinator Carol Clayman Executive Assistant to International Coordinator

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DIRECTORS REPORT

For the year ended 31 March 2021

The Board of Directors of Women in Informal Employment: Globalizing and Organizing (WIEGO) Ltd presents the Directors’ Annual Report for the year end 31st March 2021.

1. STRUCTURE, GOVERNANCE AND MANAGEMENT

WIEGO’s structure, governance and management are illustrated by the organogram in Appendix 1.

Structure

WIEGO is a charity registered in England and Wales (No. 1143510) and is constituted as a company registered in England and Wales and limited by guarantee (No. 6273538). The Directors, officers and advisors of the organisation during 2020-21 are listed on page 1 and 2. The company was established under a Memorandum of Association which established the objects and powers of the company and is governed under our Articles of Association. Revised governing documents of WIEGO conforming to the Companies Act 2006 and the decisions of the Global Assembly in April 2010 were accepted by the Board and lodged with Companies House in July 2011. In the event of the company being wound up members are not required to contribute an amount exceeding £1.

All WIEGO funds are received and managed by the Operations Office of WIEGO in Manchester, UK. Until June of 2020 WIEGO paid Harvard University for the costs related to the WIEGO Senior Advisor who is located at the Harvard Kennedy School.

The WIEGO accounts at Harvard University are audited each year as part of the annual financial audit of Harvard University. Income within those accounts is recognised in the accounts of WIEGO in the UK and these are audited each year by an external auditor.

As at the end of the financial year, more than fourteen institutional funders provided financial support for WIEGO including a two year $5 million USD grant from the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation and a three year grant from Sida. WIEGO also received grants from the Open Society Foundations, Ford Foundation, UK FCDO, Echidna Giving/Schwab Charitable, IDRC, Comic Relief, Cities Alliance, FES, International Labour Organisation, UN Women, USAID and Wellspring Philanthropy.

Governance

WIEGO is governed by a 10-person Board of Directors. The Directors are the Members of the Company and also the trustees of WIEGO as a registered charity. The Board ensures that WIEGO’s activities carry into effect the Charity’s object. Its work includes setting the strategic direction; scrutinising performance, quality and finances; and agreeing the financial strategy and operational budgets. The Board meets at least three times a year either physically, by teleconference, or by electronic means. In the current year, given the circumstances of the pandemic, there was one video conference meeting of the Board and two teleconference meetings.

WIEGO’s Board of Directors is comprised of three representatives of membership-based organizations of informal workers (one of whom serves as the Chair); two representatives each from the other two constituencies of WIEGO (researchers and development professionals); and three other persons coopted by the Board as needed to carry out the functions of the Board.

The Board was re-constituted during the four-yearly General Assembly that was held in Johannesburg in November 2018. Four of the previous Board of Directors were nominated and elected by the membership of the wider WIEGO network at this General Assembly and three new Directors were appointed. Three other members were co-opted by the Board thereafter. The Board has representation from Africa, Latin America and Asia as well as Europe and North America. A full term for any Director is four years and Directors may be re-elected or re-appointed to serve for a further term in any given office. The Board represents all WIEGO members between General Assemblies in accordance with WIEGO’s Articles of Association.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2021

The International Coordinator speaks regularly with the Chair of the Board, the Treasurer and other Directors to ensure that they are all kept fully informed. Delegated decisions made at other levels of WIEGO are regularly reported to the Board and its Committees to ensure Directors have full information to fulfil their roles. The Board is supported in its work by the Management Committee, the Finance Committee and other ad hoc committees and working groups as required. The Human Resources Sub Committee of the Management Committee considers and makes recommendations regarding human resource issues. Committee reports are a standing agenda item for the Board of Directors meetings.

The Management Committee consists of five members including four Directors and the International Coordinator. The Management Committee is chiefly responsible for overseeing the programmes and policies of WIEGO. The core programmes of WIEGO (Social Protection, Organisation and Representation, Urban Policies, Statistics and Law) are each led by a Programme Director. Reports are received from the Programme Directors of these programme areas by the International Coordinator and the Management Committee, together with reports from the Company Secretary, Programme Strategy Advisor, Regional Advisors, the Research Coordinator and the Operations Director.

The Finance Committee reports to the Board of Directors and consists of six members, comprising three Directors, the International Coordinator, the Financial Controller/Company Secretary and the Operations Director. It convenes at least four times a year to consider reports from, among others the Treasurer, the International Coordinator, the Financial Controller (who also serves as Company Secretary) and external auditors. The Finance Committee is responsible for reviewing and monitoring all aspects relating to the preparation and production of the annual financial statements of WIEGO. Specifically, in terms of annual statutory accounts, this includes consideration of accounting policies, levels of disclosure, risk management policies, compliance with applicable corporate governance requirements, and reviewing any relevant matters relating to annual financial statements raised by the external auditors as a result of audit work. The Finance Committee recommends the audited financial statements to the Board of Directors for approval. It makes recommendations regarding the appointment of the external auditors and approves their remuneration and terms of engagement. It reviews the performance and reports the results of external auditors’ work annually to the Board.

Since our incorporation, WIEGO has undergone considerable change and expansion. This change and expansion has required an extensive updating of our management and operations processes and procedures. As this organisational development has progressed, WIEGO has ensured that our governance arrangements are appropriate, effective and evolving to changed circumstances by having Directors who bring a wealth of organisational, research and professional experience to WIEGO. Because of this, the Operations Manual is regularly updated.

The Directors are assisted by WIEGO’s International Coordinator, the Programme Directors, the Programme Strategy Advisor, the Operations Director, the Financial Controller / Company Secretary. Board Members are kept informed about major issues affecting WIEGO. All Directors are aware of their legal and financial responsibility to run the company effectively and to act in its best interests.

All WIEGO Directors are also aware of their responsibility for WIEGO’s strategic direction and their responsibility to fulfil WIEGO’s objectives through assessing the organisation’s performance, ensuring the correct policies are in place and that WIEGO’s activities reflect the needs of our beneficiaries. Reflecting this responsibility, the WIEGO Board and Team monitor the implementation of the current 5 year strategic plan, which was set out in 2018.

The Directors also have access to professional advice and guidance from external advisors, including WIEGO’s external auditors, Crowe U.K. LLP, Co-operatives UK and its solicitors, Bates Wells & Braithwaite LLP.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2021

Recruitment and Appointment

The WIEGO General Assembly in 2018 elected seven Board members from the three constituencies of members. A Nominating Committee solicits nominations from the WIEGO Membership and then proposes a slate of nominees to the Board and the General Assembly for their approval. The Nominating Committee consists of five persons, two appointed by the Board and one person elected by each constituency of the membership at the time of each quadrennial General Assembly. Elections are usually agreed by consensus but if that is not possible then by a simple majority of votes cast. In preparing the slate of nominees for the Board, from among those nominated by the membership, the Nominating Committee is guided by the principle of achieving reasonable balance on the Board as a whole and ensuring representation from each of the three membership constituencies. The Nominating Committee also takes into account the range of skills and experience required for the Board to exercise its responsibilities and to conduct its business in an efficient and effective manner to the benefit of WIEGO and its beneficiaries.

Last year the Board Chair who was elected in 2018, Renana Jhabvala, stepped down from the Board and was replaced on the Board by Mirai Chatterjee after an election process among the members of the Constituency of Institutional Members of WIEGO. Dr Chatterjee, was endorsed as Chair by the Board at its meeting on the 13[th] November 2019.

The Board also has powers to co-opt to fill vacancies. It co-opted Debra Davis, a chartered accountant with international experience as a Director and Treasurer at the time of General Assembly in 2018. Two further Directors were co-opted by the Board at its meeting on the 9[th] May 2019.

Each has a commitment to WIEGO’s aims and their appointment ends at the next General Assembly, to be held in the financial year 2022/23. They may be re-appointed.

Induction and training

In line with National Council for Voluntary Organisations (NCVO) guidelines, all Directors were inducted into the work of WIEGO and the legal roles and responsibilities of Directors, through briefings by the International Coordinator, the Company Secretary, the Board Chair and the Programme Directors.

Management

The Board has delegated day-to-day leadership and management of WIEGO’s affairs and the implementing of agreed policies and strategies to the International Coordinator, Sally Roever. She is assisted by a team of Programme Directors, the Programme Strategy Advisor, a Research Coordinator and an Operations Team who operate within an approved scheme of delegation (see Appendix 1). The former International Coordinator, Marty Chen, has stayed on as Senior Advisor to WIEGO and continues to support the organisation especially in the areas of research and fundraising.

The development of the organisation since 2007 has required the extension and updating of operational procedures. This is a continuing process requiring revision of the Operations Manual on occasion through 2020/21.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2021

Equality and Diversity

In its Articles of Association, WIEGO is committed to opposing discrimination in matters of gender, race, faith, age, sexual orientation, or disability, and to operate within an equal opportunities framework. This commitment is currently applied to the delivery of WIEGO’s programme, our employment practices and for the organisation of our membership. During the 2020/21 financial year we established a Diversity, Equity and Inclusion working group, chaired by the International Coordinator, to take a thorough look at how WIEGO can work more effectively to confront and overcome the biases and power imbalances that are present within WIEGO as much as in any other institution.

Staff Involvement

WIEGO seeks to engage all employees, key contractors and members in our activities and achievements. A number of teams have been set up to improve working together and ensure delivery of results. These include the Operations Team, the Programme Team, the Communications Team, the Fundraising Team and others. There are a number of routine communication methods, notably frequent and regular emails, an intranet, skyping, teleconferences, and periodic physical meetings. All teams are kept up-to-date by the International Coordinator and via the WIEGO intranet with the activities and developments, such as Directors’ decisions after each cycle of Board and Committee meetings.

There is normally a physical meeting of the WIEGO Team each year, the Team Retreat, but owing to an organisational decision not to hold international meetings in view of the pandemic, this was cancelled in the current year. We are planning a “virtual” Team Retreat in the 2021/22 financial year because of the continuing restrictions on international travel in order to ensure we do not lose the opportunity to have all voices and perspectives present in one meeting. With a diverse and geographically dispersed team, it has been important to hold face-to-face meetings in order to establish a team spirit and provide an opportunity to share ideas and challenges and our plan is to recreate this as closely as possible.

Risk Management and Internal Controls

Review of the Risk Register is delegated to both the Management Committee and the Finance Committee to support the Board in assessing and prioritising risks and risk-mitigating strategies across WIEGO. Relevant sections of the Risk Register were reviewed by the Finance and Management Committees according to their terms of reference. The Committees monitored the major risks to which WIEGO is exposed, recommended steps to mitigate risks, and oversaw the implementation of effective risk management. The two Committees report once a year to the Board on the Risk Register and the risk management strategy. The Risk Register was amended by the Finance and Management Committees in June and in November of 2020.

The Finance and Management Committees identify the operational, financial and reputational risks WIEGO faces, prioritising them in terms of potential impact and likelihood of occurrence and proposing means of mitigating the risks. With the continuing development of the risk management strategy, the Board is assured that:

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2021

The Covid pandemic has led us to consider new risks relating to the physical and mental health of the WIEGO Team and we have put in place protocols to manage these, including strict controls on face-toface working where this is possible to undertake at all, and frequent Team meetings. We have also taken steps to manage the increased risk of cyber-crime. Foreign exchange risk is also a key risk as we receive funds in USD, GBP and SEK. Currency matching and the continuing review of the impact of exchange rate fluctuations are in place. We are not facing any increased risk of failing to raise funds for WIEGO’s work and in fact many of our donors have contributed additional funds to enable us to respond to the pandemic and its impact on informal workers.

The Board recognises that, to achieve the objectives of WIEGO, the nature of our work requires acceptance of some risks which are outside our control and cannot therefore be eliminated or fully managed. Where this happens, there is active and clear monitoring of such risk. The Board is satisfied that systems are in place to monitor, manage and mitigate WIEGO’s exposure to major risks.

Internal Financial Control

The Financial Controller’s work is framed largely by WIEGO’s regulations, policies, operations manual and risk assessments. The Directors created an Operations Manual when WIEGO was incorporated to ensure the adequacy of WIEGO’s internal controls. It has been updated during the year and is reviewed regularly. Audit recommendations are systematically followed up and monitoring reports are received by the Finance Committee. The Accounting Software system used by WIEGO (Xero) provides access to financial information by budget holders and others across the globe.

The Treasurer reviews the work and ensures, through the Finance Committee and the Operations Team, that the Board and the Management Committee have confidence that:

The key procedures which the Directors have established with a view to providing effective internal control are as follows:

Key Management Personnel

The Key Management Personnel consists of Sally Roever, International Coordinator and Mike Bird, the Operations Director. Sally Roever is employed by WIEGO and in the course of the current financial year she moved from Rome, Italy to Church Falls in Virginia, USA. Her salary is determined by the Board.

Mike Bird is employed by WIEGO in the UK, where remuneration is set according to market rates and reviewed periodically by a Management Committee.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2021

2. OBJECTIVES, AIMS AND PUBLIC BENEFIT

Women in Informal Employment: Globalizing and Organizing (WIEGO) is a global research-policy network that seeks to improve the status of the working poor, especially women, in the informal economy. By doing so, our aim is to ensure in the long term the well-being of the working poor and the reduction of poverty.

The objects of the charity are set out in paragraphs 3 and 4 of WIEGO’s Articles of Association as follows:

The Company's objects are to relieve poverty: in particular, the poverty of the working poor in the informal economy caused by low earnings, high risks, and adverse working environments and conditions associated with the informal economy worldwide (including non-standard or unprotected employment for formal firms);

In carrying out its objects, the Company shall promote equality of opportunity and oppose any form of discrimination on grounds of race, ethnic origin, gender, sexual orientation, age, disability or religion.

In order to achieve our objects, WIEGO seeks to increase the Visibility, Validity and Voice of the working poor in informal employment:

The individuals and institutions in the WIEGO network are drawn from three broad constituencies: membership-based organizations (MBOs) of informal workers; individuals undertaking research and statistical work with regard to informal employment, and development practitioners in agencies of various types (non-governmental, governmental, and inter-governmental).

Together with our allies in the international movement of informal workers, WIEGO seeks:

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2021

Since its founding, the WIEGO network has developed several distinct features that enable us to influence mainstream perceptions, policies and institutions. First, WIEGO focuses on the concrete reality of the working poor, especially women, in the informal economy and seeks to integrate an evidenced based understanding of this concrete reality into mainstream development thinking, policies and institutions.

Second, WIEGO builds effective alliances between our three constituencies and draws on the distinct expertise of each constituency in our work:

Third, WIEGO has developed programme initiatives and technical expertise on a range of issues that address the expressed needs and concerns of informal workers. Finally, and importantly, WIEGO builds networks and partnerships by providing technical support to and working closely with membershipbased organisations of informal workers. A more detailed account of WIEGO’s activities, achievements and performance during 2020/21 is provided in a separate Appendix 2.

Grant making

Our grant making policy is to work with associations within WIEGO’s wider network who share WIEGO’s objectives and are well placed to deliver effective projects. Grants are recognised in the financial statements when they are approved or when there is a legal constructive obligation.

Public Benefit

In preparing this report, the Directors confirm that they have complied with the duty in section 17 of the 2011 Charities Act. To the best of their ability, they took into account and consistently applied the Charity Commission’s guidance on public benefit, as set out in its publications “Charities and Public Benefit: the Charity Commission’s general guidance on public benefit” and “The Prevention or Relief of Poverty for Public Benefit”.

The Charity’s object is set out in our Articles of Association as revised on 19[th] July 2011 and the Directors’ current interpretation of these is set out in this report, while the report as a whole covers WIEGO’s activities and achievements throughout the world pursuant to this object.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT

For the year ended 31 March 2021

3. ACHIEVEMENTS AND PERFORMANCE

A detailed account of WIEGO’s activities, achievements and performance during 2020/21 is provided as Appendix 2. WIEGO publishes an Annual Report each year for general distribution. Appendix 2 is an abridged version of that Annual Report.

Evidence of Impact

For a detailed report on impact achieved during 2020/21 please see Appendix 2.

Communications, Membership Support and Outreach

WIEGO aims to expand its network – partners, members and allies – to strengthen the collaborative activities under this network, and to extend our reach and impact. As of March 2021, WIEGO had 208 members: 36 Institutional Members and 172 Individual Members in some 45 countries.

WIEGO has strengthened membership support and outreach to provide help in building organisational capacity of the Institutional Members (all democratic, member-based organisations of informal workers) and in developing improved two-way communication with them. In the current financial year this included creating a new post of Network Liaison Officer to coordinate and deepen this work.

WIEGO maintained our strong communications capacity during 2020/21 to help meet our goals of producing user-friendly publications and improving how we disseminate information, with an increasing focus on supporting our messaging through social media. We undertook an external review of the communications function in the current year and this led to a restructuring of the Communications Team.

We have continued to respond to the need for information on the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic and what informal workers can do to keep safe, with new pages on the WIEGO website and health education messages disseminated via social media in 14 languages.

External Factors Affecting Achievement - Covid-19

Due to the international nature of our work and also our link with partners in countries across the globe, WIEGO recognises there are a number of factors which could affect achievement of our aims and objectives. Significant external factors affecting WIEGO's work and achievements included:

Economic, Policy, and Political Environment: faced by the Working Poor in the Informal Economy

While all these factors are beyond WIEGO’s control, we are able to seek the advice of international partners and experts and consult with the Board and WIEGO’s membership on how best WIEGO can play its role in support of the global movement of informal workers.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2021

Conclusion

From our inception in 1997, WIEGO has been an organisation prepared to undertake policy research and advocacy on behalf of informal workers to increase their Voice, Visibility and Validity and thereby help to increase the well-being and relieve the poverty of the working poor, especially women. This has remained unchanged through 2020/21. WIEGO’s mission, vision and purpose have remained essentially unchanged but the breadth and depth of our activities, the size and capacity of our team, and the effectiveness of our operations and governance systems have remained robust.

4. FINANCIAL REVIEW

The financial statements have been prepared in accordance with the accounting policies set out in Note 1 to the financial statements and comply with the requirements of the Statement of Recommended Practice for Accounting and Reporting by Charities, the Charities Acts, and the Companies Acts.

The financial strategy for the year was developed to build on our strategy and achievements from the previous year, which were designed to ensure the sustainability and future viability of WIEGO. We reviewed the resources expended in relation to activities implemented and results achieved. We have also factored in when current grants will end, in order to carefully monitor expenditure and activities to ensure maximum benefit and minimal disruption for members and partners as we try to raise funds for our future work. During the fiscal year ending 31 March 2021, our total incoming resources were $11,549,881 (as compared to $5,437,133 in the previous year). We continue to experience peaks and troughs in our income due to the regulation on income recognition.

Our total expenditure was $7,205,517 (as compared with $7,008,713 in the previous year).

The overall aim of the financial strategy is to ensure that resources are used efficiently to contribute to meeting programme and project targets and achieve WIEGO’s priorities. In order to achieve our objectives, the maximum levels of resources possible are channelled to the direct benefit of programmes and to deliver necessary quality improvements in research, policy advocacy and capacity building, while maintaining prudent financial management controls over resources of WIEGO as a whole. Budgetary and financial control continues to be reviewed in order to reduce the risks of under or overspending and to mitigate the effect of a drop in income in any one financial year. This is underpinned by the building of reserves.

Going Concern

The indications at the time of writing are that WIEGO is well-placed to weather the storm of the Covid19 pandemic and the policies that have been put in place to combat it. Since the start of the pandemic all of our major donors have been in touch to offer their support in the form of additional funding and/or extensions to grant periods and the possibility to redirect funds as necessary in order to meet new and unexpected needs as they arise.

The financial outlook for WIEGO is secure with two- and three-year extensions to unrestricted grant funding signed with the Hewlett Foundation and Sida respectively at the end of the 2019/20 financial year. The respective grants agreed are for US$4 million, since increased by a further US$1 million, and the equivalent of $8.4 million. We have also secured additional funding from the Open Society Foundations, the Ford Foundation, the International Development Research Centre of Canada and Wellspring Philanthropy during the 2020/21 financial year in a mix of unrestricted and targeted Covid19 response grants, which all have contract periods extending into the 2022/23 financial year.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2021

From an organisational point of view WIEGO is also well-placed to continue its work. Almost all of the WIEGO Team already worked from home before the pandemic and the Manchester office has been able to adapt to remote working relatively easily because our banking, financial management and payment systems are all on-line. During the pandemic we have set up systems to ensure that we are taking care of the health and well-being of the Team. We set up weekly meetings of the Manchester office team plus town hall meetings for the whole Team and liaison meetings with the leaders of the networks of informal workers that are our members. These meetings are now held monthly and continue to enable effective management and communication.

The external website and the internal intranet both have dedicated Covid-19 pages that provide effective information management for our Team and wider network.

The Operations Team has added new risks to the WIEGO risk register to cover our understanding of the potential risks to the WIEGO work programme and the health and well-being risks to the Team and this has recently been reviewed by the Finance and Management Committees of the Board. In the meantime, we have demonstrated that the work of WIEGO can continue, albeit through different kinds of activities and delivery mechanisms given the current circumstances. The view of the Directors and the WIEGO management is that the measures described above provide an effective strategy to reduce the risks to the Team.

The charity has contractual funding to cover the essential costs of running the organisation up to 31 March 2023 and beyond. On this basis, forecast budgets for the year ending 31 March 2023 have been prepared. The directors consider that the charity is a going concern and the financial statements have been prepared accordingly (Financial Statements Note 1.3).

Reserves Policy

WIEGO has built reserves to meet any adverse contingencies. The Board of Directors created reserves to:

During 2020/21 as shown in the Financial Statements, designated reserves were maintained to counter any cash flow issues and to maintain WIEGO’s core activities in the event of fundraising problems. WIEGO has reserves to make long-term commitments to projects, and to protect our work against the effects of financial fluctuations and other uncertainty. The Board of Directors seeks to have reserves at a level at which core programmes can be maintained for a 3-month period.

At present, this requires reserves of approximately $510k. The current reserves are adequate although the necessary level of reserves is subject to regular review. We also have $240k set aside for the General Assembly which is a meeting of our members, and a crucial part of our governance structure. This takes place every four years and we are building funds towards meeting the cost of the next General Assembly in November 2022.

The free reserves of $500k carried forward into the new financial year are to fund budgeted costs of the core programmes over the next financial year. These reserves will be carried forward into the new financial year and will be used to fund the budgeted costs of the core programmes over the next financial year.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT

For the year ended 31 March 2021

Investment Policy and Objectives

WIEGO’s treasury management policy objective is to optimise returns consistent with our cash flow requirements and the overriding need to protect the capital value of WIEGO’s funds. WIEGO funds are invested only with UK Clearing Banks. Treasury management is carried out within the context of WIEGO’s statutory background and our Memorandum and Articles of Association.

Liquidity is generally preferred over investment. Cash balances are placed in time deposits when appropriate. The board has not established formal targets for return on investment.

In order to minimise foreign exchange losses due to currency exchange rate fluctuations, our policy is to hold funds in the currency in which they are received and to expend them in the same currency wherever possible.

Principal Funding Sources

During 2020/21 WIEGO received our principal funding from the following funders:

William and Flora Hewlett Foundation Swedish International Development Agency (Sida) Open Society Foundations IDRC Ford Foundation Comic Relief UK FCDO (formerly DFID) Wellspring Philanthropic Fund UN Women Cities Alliance FES International Labour Organisation

There are no outstanding liens against WIEGO.

WIEGO does not undertake any commercial or trading activities.

In note 12 to the Statement of Financial Activities, a declaration on related parties has been made.

Fundraising

The charity had no fundraising activities requiring disclosure under S162A of the Charities Act 2011.

5. PLANS FOR FUTURE PERIODS Membership

WIEGO is committed to building sector-specific networks or federations of democratic, member-based organisations of informal workers (MBOs). MBOs can become institutional members of WIEGO and form one of three constituencies of membership. Individuals can become members of WIEGO as part of the researchers/statisticians constituency or the development practitioners constituency. The challenges to WIEGO with regard to our relationships with members are various, including how to:

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2021

Programmes and functions

WIEGO has five core programmes of work together with global projects and special initiatives. Across these strands of work cut four functions: research, policy advocacy, communication and capacity building. As part of the strategic review that gave rise to the current five-year strategic plan, work plans for the coming period identify the following challenges:

Allies and Target Audiences

The natural allies and target audiences for WIEGO’s work differ across the domains of our core programmes as highlighted in Appendix 2. Identifying key allies and audiences is difficult in most domains of WIEGO’s work as there are often a large number and range of actors with different perspectives. In many contexts, specific organisations can be both allies and target audiences. The major challenge is identifying and mapping organisations and individuals relevant to each programme area and then building co-operation with the key organisations and individuals.

Transitions

WIEGO has successfully addressed many challenges in the past five years. Strong financial and operational systems have been devised and implemented. These are managed by the WIEGO Office in Manchester, UK, which comprises an Operations Director, Company Secretary/Financial Controller, two Senior Finance Officers, three Finance Officers (one of whom has been on maternity leave for part of the year), an Events and Logistics Manager, an HR Officer and an Administrative Assistant. As the external audit showed, good operational and financial systems are in place.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2021

6. STATEMENT OF DIRECTORS’ RESPONSIBILITIES FOR FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

The Directors are responsible for preparing the Directors' Report and the financial statements in accordance with applicable law and regulations.

Company law requires the Directors to prepare financial statements for each financial year in accordance with United Kingdom Generally Accepted Accounting Practice (United Kingdom Accounting Standards) and applicable law.

Under company law the Directors must not approve the financial statements unless they are satisfied that they give a true and fair view of the state of affairs of the charitable company and of our net incoming resources for that period. In preparing these financial statements, the Directors are required to:

The Directors are responsible for keeping adequate accounting records that are sufficient to show and explain the charitable company's transactions and disclose with reasonable accuracy at any time the financial position of the charitable company and enable them to ensure that the financial statements comply with the Companies Act 2006. They are also responsible for safeguarding the assets of the company and hence for taking reasonable steps for the prevention and detection of fraud and other irregularities.

The Directors ensure that there are appropriate financial and management controls in place sufficient to safeguard charitable funds and that these funds are used only in accordance with the conditions under which they have been made available. In addition, the Directors are responsible for ensuring the economic, efficient and effective management of WIEGO’s resources so that the benefits that should be derived from the application of charitable funds are not put at risk

The Directors confirm that, so far as they are aware, the WIEGO auditors were able to examine all relevant audit information. They have taken all the steps that they ought to have taken as Directors in order to make them aware of any relevant audit information and to establish that WIEGO’s auditors may examine that information.

Political donations

WIEGO made no political donations and had no such expenditure.

Financial Risk Management

WIEGO’s treasury management policy objective is to optimise returns consistent with our cash flow requirements and the overriding need to protect the capital value of WIEGO’s funds. WIEGO funds are invested only with UK Clearing Banks. Treasury management is carried out within the context of WIEGO’s statutory background and our Memorandum and Articles of Association.

The financial risk management and policies are conservative. Hedge accounting is not used and the exposure of the company to price risk, credit risk, liquidity risk and cash flow risk is low.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT

For the year ended 31 March 2021

Number of employees

The average number of persons employed by the company in each week during the financial year has been 8.

Auditors

Crowe U.K. LLP continues as the auditor of WIEGO following a competitive tender during 2018.

The organisation completed a competitive tender exercise this year for the period 2018/2022. Crowe were re-appointed.

This report, which incorporates the Directors’ Report, was approved by the Board of Directors on 30 November 2021 and signed on its behalf, by:

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Jacqui Fendall Company Secretary

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

INDEPENDENT AUDITORS’ REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2021

Opinion

We have audited the financial statements of Women in Informal Employment: Globalizing and Organizing (WIEGO) Limited (‘the charitable company’) for the year ended 31 March 2021 which comprise the Statement of Financial Activities, the Balance Sheet, the Cash Flow Statement and notes to the financial statements, including significant accounting policies. The financial reporting framework that has been applied in their preparation is applicable law and United Kingdom Accounting Standards, including Financial Reporting Standard 102 The Financial Reporting Standard applicable in the UK and Republic of Ireland (United Kingdom Generally Accepted Accounting Practice).

In our opinion the financial statements:

Basis for opinion

We conducted our audit in accordance with International Standards on Auditing (UK) (ISAs (UK)) and applicable law. Our responsibilities under those standards are further described in the Auditor’s responsibilities for the audit of the financial statements section of our report. We are independent of the charitable company in accordance with the ethical requirements that are relevant to our audit of the financial statements in the UK, including the FRC’s Ethical Standard, and we have fulfilled our other ethical responsibilities in accordance with these requirements. We believe that the audit evidence we have obtained is sufficient and appropriate to provide a basis for our opinion.

Conclusions relating to going concern

In auditing the financial statements, we have concluded that the trustees' use of the going concern basis of accounting in the preparation of the financial statements is appropriate.

Based on the work we have performed, we have not identified any material uncertainties relating to events or conditions that, individually or collectively, may cast significant doubt on the charitable company's ability to continue as a going concern for a period of at least twelve months from when the financial statements are authorised for issue.

Our responsibilities and the responsibilities of the trustees with respect to going concern are described in the relevant sections of this report.

Other information

The trustees are responsible for the other information contained within the annual report. The other information comprises the information included in the annual report, other than the financial statements and our auditor’s report thereon. Our opinion on the financial statements does not cover the other information and, except to the extent otherwise explicitly stated in our report, we do not express any form of assurance conclusion thereon.

Our responsibility is to read the other information and, in doing so, consider whether the other information is materially inconsistent with the financial statements or our knowledge obtained in the audit or otherwise appears to be materially misstated. If we identify such material inconsistencies or apparent material misstatements, we are required to determine whether this gives rise to a material misstatement in the financial statements themselves. If, based on the work we have performed, we conclude that there is a material misstatement of this other information, we are required to report that fact.

We have nothing to report in this regard.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

INDEPENDENT AUDITORS’ REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2021

Opinions on other matters prescribed by the Companies Act 2006

In our opinion based on the work undertaken in the course of our audit

Matters on which we are required to report by exception

In light of the knowledge and understanding of the charitable company and their environment obtained in the course of the audit, we have not identified material misstatements in the strategic report or the directors’ report included within the trustees’ report.

We have nothing to report in respect of the following matters in relation to which the Companies Act 2006 requires us to report to you if, in our opinion:

Responsibilities of directors

As explained more fully in the directors’ responsibilities statement set out on page 15, the directors (who are also the directors of the charitable company for the purposes of company law) are responsible for the preparation of the financial statements and for being satisfied that they give a true and fair view, and for such internal control as the directors determine is necessary to enable the preparation of financial statements that are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error.

In preparing the financial statements, the directors are responsible for assessing the charitable company’s ability to continue as a going concern, disclosing, as applicable, matters related to going concern and using the going concern basis of accounting unless the trustees either intend to liquidate the charitable company or to cease operations, or have no realistic alternative but to do so.

Auditor’s responsibilities for the audit of the financial statements

Our objectives are to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements as a whole are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error, and to issue an auditor’s report that includes our opinion. Reasonable assurance is a high level of assurance, but is not a guarantee that an audit conducted in accordance with ISAs (UK) will always detect a material misstatement when it exists. Misstatements can arise from fraud or error and are considered material if, individually or in the aggregate, they could reasonably be expected to influence the economic decisions of users taken on the basis of these financial statements.

Details of the extent to which the audit was considered capable of detecting irregularities, including fraud and non-compliance with laws and regulations are set out below.

A further description of our responsibilities for the audit of the financial statements is located on the Financial Reporting Council’s website at: www.frc.org.uk/auditorsresponsibilities. This description forms part of our auditor’s report.

Extent to which the audit was considered capable of detecting irregularities, including fraud

Irregularities, including fraud, are instances of non-compliance with laws and regulations. We identified and assessed the risks of material misstatement of the financial statements from irregularities, whether due to fraud or error, and discussed these between our audit team members. We then designed and performed audit procedures responsive to those risks, including obtaining audit evidence sufficient and appropriate to provide a basis for our opinion.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

INDEPENDENT AUDITORS’ REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2021

We obtained an understanding of the legal and regulatory frameworks within which the charitable company operates, focusing on those laws and regulations that have a direct effect on the determination of material amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. The laws and regulations we considered in this context were the Companies Act 2006, the Charities Act 2011 together with the Charities SORP (FRS 102). We assessed the required compliance with these laws and regulations as part of our audit procedures on the related financial statement items.

In addition, we considered provisions of other laws and regulations that do not have a direct effect on the financial statements but compliance with which might be fundamental to the charitable company’s ability to operate or to avoid a material penalty. We also considered the opportunities and incentives that may exist within the charitable company for fraud. The laws and regulations we considered in this context for the UK operations were those contained within the Charities Act.

Auditing standards limit the required audit procedures to identify non-compliance with these laws and regulations to enquiry of the Trustees and other management and inspection of regulatory and legal correspondence, if any.

We identified the greatest risk of material impact on the financial statements from irregularities, including fraud, to be within the timing of recognition of income and the override of controls by management. Our audit procedures to respond to these risks included enquiries of management about their own identification and assessment of the risks of irregularities, sample testing on the posting of journals, reviewing accounting estimates for biases, reviewing regulatory correspondence with the Charity Commission and reading minutes of meetings of those charged with governance.

Owing to the inherent limitations of an audit, there is an unavoidable risk that we may not have detected some material misstatements in the financial statements, even though we have properly planned and performed our audit in accordance with auditing standards. For example, the further removed non-compliance with laws and regulations (irregularities) is from the events and transactions reflected in the financial statements, the less likely the inherently limited procedures required by auditing standards would identify it. In addition, as with any audit, there remained a higher risk of nondetection of irregularities, as these may involve collusion, forgery, intentional omissions, misrepresentations, or the override of internal controls. We are not responsible for preventing noncompliance and cannot be expected to detect non-compliance with all laws and regulations.

Use of our report

This report is made solely to the charitable company’s members, as a body, in accordance with Chapter 3 of Part 16 of the Companies Act 2006. Our audit work has been undertaken so that we might state to the charitable company’s members those matters we are required to state to them in an auditor’s report and for no other purpose. To the fullest extent permitted by law, we do not accept or assume responsibility to anyone other than the charitable company and the charitable company’s members as a body, for our audit work, for this report, or for the opinions we have formed.

Vicky Szulist Senior Statutory Auditor For and on behalf of Crowe U.K. LLP Statutory Auditor The Lexicon Mount Street Manchester M2 5NT

Date: 3[rd] December 2021

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL ACTIVITIES (incorporating an income and expenditure account) For the year ended 31 March 2021

Restricted Unrestricted Total Total
Funds Funds Funds Funds
2021 2021 2021 2020
Note $ $ $ $
INCOME
Donations and legacies 2 2,000 - 2,000 -
Investment income 3 - 3,679 3,679 21,200
Charitable activities 4 5,780,909 5,763,293 11,544,202 5,415,933
TOTAL INCOME 5,782,909 5,766,972 11,549,881 5,437,133
EXPENDITURE
Charitable activities 5 3,732,825 3,472,692 7,205,517 7,008,713
TOTAL EXPENDITURE 3,732,825 3,472,692 7,205,517 7,008,713
NET INCOMING/(OUTGOING)
RESOURCES 2,050,084 2,294,280 4,344,364 (1,571,580)
TOTAL FUNDS AT 1 APRIL 2020 1,283,712 704,534 1,988,246 3,559,826
TOTAL FUNDS AT 31 MARCH
2021 10 3,333,796 2,998,814 6,332,610 1,998,246

All activities relate to continuing operations.

The Statement of Financial Activities includes all gains and losses recognised in the year.

The notes on pages 23 to 42 form part of these financial statements.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

BALANCE SHEET Registered Number: 6273538 As at 31 March 2021

Note
CURRENT ASSETS
Debtors
8
Cash at bank
CREDITORS:
Amounts falling due within one year
9
NET ASSETS
FUNDS
Unrestricted Funds
10
Restricted Funds
10
2021
$
$
$ 161,575
266,571
6,861,602
2,358,168
2021
$
$
$ 161,575
266,571
6,861,602
2,358,168
2020
$ 1,988,246
7,023,177
(690,567)
2,998,814
3,333,796
2,624,739
(636,493)
6,332,610
704,534
1,283,712

1,988,246
6,332,610

The financial statements were approved and authorised for issue by the Directors on 30 November 2021 and signed on their behalf, by:

D Davis Director and Treasurer

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

CASH FLOW STATEMENT As at 31 March 2021

Note
Cash flows from operating activities
Net cash used in operating activities
15
Cash Flows from investing activities
Interest received
Net cash provided by investing activities
Change in cash and cash equivalents in the year.
Cash and cash equivalents at the beginning of
the year.
Cash and cash equivalents at the
end of the year.
ANALYSIS OF CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS

Cash at hand
RECONCILIATION OF NET DEBT
2020
$
Cash at hand and at bank
2,358,168
2021
2020
$
$ 4,499,755
(1,663,542)
3,679
21,201
3,679
21,201
4,503,434
(1,642,341)
2,358,168
4,000,509
6,861,602
2,358,168
2021
2020
$
$ 6,861,602
2,358,168
Cash flow
2021
$
$
4,503,434
6,861,602

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

1. ACCOUNTING POLICIES

The principal accounting policies adopted, judgments and key sources of estimation uncertainty in the preparation of the financial statements are as follows:

1.1 Basis of preparation of financial statements

The financial statements have been prepared in accordance with Accounting and Reporting by Charities: Statement of Recommended Practice applicable to charities preparing their accounts in accordance with the Financial Reporting Standard applicable in the UK and Republic of Ireland (FRS102) (January 2019) – (Charities SORP (FRS102)), the Financial Reporting Standard applicable in the UK and Ireland (FRS102) and the Companies Act 2006.

Women in Informal Employment: Globalizing and Organizing (WIEGO) Limited meets the definition of a public benefit entity under FRS102. Assets and liabilities are initially recognised at historical cost at transaction value unless otherwise stated in the relevant accounting policy note.

1.2 Company information

The charity is a company limited by guarantee (registered number 6273538) which is incorporated and domiciled in the UK. The address of the registered office is 521 Royal Exchange, Manchester, M2 7EN.

1.3 Going concern

The directors have reviewed the forecasts and budgets for the forthcoming period. The Charity has contractual funding to cover the essential costs of running the organisation up to 31 March 2023 and beyond. On this basis, forecast budgets for the year ending 31 March 2023 have been prepared. The directors consider that the charity is a going concern and the financial statements have been prepared accordingly.

1.4 Company status

WIEGO Limited is a registered charitable company. The members of the company are the directors named on page 1. In the event of the company being wound up the Articles of Association indemnify the members of the council, officers and the directors against all liabilities incurred by them in their respective capacities.

1.5 Fund accounting

General funds are unrestricted funds which are available for use at the discretion of the directors in furtherance of the general objectives of the charitable company and which have not been designated for other purposes.

Restricted funds are funds which are to be used in accordance with specific restrictions imposed by donors which have been raised by the charitable company for particular purposes. The cost of raising and administering such funds are charged against the specific fund. The aim and use of each restricted fund is set out in the notes to the financial statements.

Investment income, gains and losses are allocated to the appropriate fund.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

1.6 Incoming resources

Voluntary income including donations, gifts, income arising from fundraising events, legacies and grants that provide core funding or are of general nature are recognised where there is entitlement, certainty of receipt and the amount can be measured with sufficient reliability.

Income from charitable activities, including income received under contract and grants where entitlement to funding is subject to specific performance conditions, is recognised as earned (as the related goods or services are provided). Grant income included in this category provides funding to support activities and is recognised where there is entitlement, certainty of receipt and the amount can be measured with sufficient reliability. Income is deferred when the donor has imposed conditions which must be met before the charity has unconditional entitlement or the donor has specified the funds can only be utilised in future accounting periods.

Gifts in kind received are accounted for in the Statement of Financial Activities as soon as it is prudent and practical to do so. They are valued as by the donor in the grant documentation.

Investment income is recognised on a receivable basis.

1.7 Resources expended

All expenditure is accounted for on an accruals basis and has been included under expense categories that aggregate all costs for allocation to activities. Where costs cannot be directly attributed to particular activities they have been allocated on a basis consistent with the use of the resources.

Overheads have been allocated on the above basis of allocation.

Support costs are those costs incurred directly in support of expenditure on the objects. Where costs cannot be directly attributed they have been allocated or apportioned on a fair and consistent basis.

Governance costs are those incurred in the governance of the Company’s assets and are associated with constitutional and statutory requirements.

1.8 Tangible fixed assets and depreciation

All tangible fixed assets costing more than $3,000 are capitalised.

1.9 Value added tax

Value Added Tax is not recoverable by the company and as such, is included in the relevant cost in the Statement of Financial Activities.

1.10 Foreign currencies

The charity’s financial statements are presented in US dollars which is the presentation currency. The charity’s functional currency is US dollars. The exchange rate difference from USD to GBP is expected to have little effect since we maintain USD bank accounts, from which our expenditure is also in USD.

Assets and liabilities in foreign currencies are translated into dollars at the rates of exchange ruling at the balance sheet date. Transactions in foreign currencies are translated into dollars at the rate of exchange ruling at the date of the transaction. Any gain or loss arising on translation is included in the Statement of Financial Activities. The exchange rate between sterling and the US dollar at 31 March 2021 was £1: $1.37832.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

1.11 Grant making policy

Grants are recognised in the financial statements when they are approved or when there is a legal or constructive obligation.

1.12 Interest Receivable

Interest on funds held on deposit in included when receivable and the amount can be measured reliably by the charity; this is normally upon notification of the interest paid or payable by the Bank.

1.13 Operating Leases

Operating leases are leases in which the title to the assets, and the risks and rewards of ownership, remain with the lessor. Rental charges are charged on a straight line basis over the term of the lease.

1.14 Debtors

Short term debtors are measured at transaction price, less any impairment.

1.15 Cash at bank and in hand

Cash at bank and cash in hand includes cash and short term highly liquid investments with short maturity of three months or less from the date of acquisition or opening of the deposit or similar account.

1.16 Creditors

Short term creditors are measured at the transaction price after allowing for any trade discount due.

1.17 Financial Instruments

The charity only has basic financial assets and financial liabilities of a kind that qualify as basic financial instruments. Basic financial instruments are initially recognised at transaction value and subsequently measured at their settlement value with the exception of bank loans which are measured at amortised cost using the effective interest rate method.

1.18 Pensions

The charity operates a defined contribution pension scheme. Contributions are charged to wages and salaries in the Statement of Financial Activities as they become payable. The assets of the scheme are held separately from the assets of the charity.

1.19 Judgements in applying accounting policies and key sources of estimation uncertainty

In the application of the entity’s accounting policies which are described above, the Directors are required to make judgments, estimates, assumptions about the carrying value of assets and liabilities that are not readily apparent from other sources. The estimates and underlying assumptions are based on historical experience and other factors that are considered to be relevant. Actual results may differ from these estimates.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

The estimates and underlying assumptions are reviewed on an on-going basis. Revisions to accounting estimates are recognised in the period in which the estimate is revised if the revision affects only that period or in the period of the revision and future periods if the revision affects the current and future periods.

In the view of the Directors, no assumptions concerning the future or estimation uncertainty affecting assets and liabilities at the balance sheet date are likely to result in a material adjustment to their carrying amounts in the next financial year

2. DONATIONS AND LEGACIES

Restricted
Funds
Unrestricted
Funds
2021
$
2021
$
Membership fees
2,000
-
Restricted
Funds
Unrestricted
Funds
2020
$
2020
$
Membership fees
-
-
Total
Funds
2021
$
2,000
Total
Funds
2020
$
-

3. INVESTMENT INCOME

Restricted
Funds
Unrestricted
Funds
2021
$
2021
$
Bank Interest
-
3,679
Restricted
Funds
Unrestricted
Funds
2020
$
2020
$
Bank Interest
14,874
6,326
Total
Funds
2021
$
3,679
Total
Funds
2020
$
21,200

26

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

4.
INCOME FROM CHARITABLE
ACTIVITES

The William Flora Hewlett
Foundation
Sida
The Open Society Foundations
IDRC Covid 19 Study
Ford Foundation
Comic Relief
Wellspring
DFID
UN Women
Cities Alliance
FES
ILO
Other Income
Anonymous


Sida
Hewlett Foundation – Focal Cities 2
Open Society Foundations
Anonymous
DFID Work Opportunities Project
Echidna/Schwab
Comic Relief
Hewlett Foundation
FMO
World Health Organisation
Cities Alliance
International Labour Organisation
USAID
Commonwealth Foundation
Other income
Restricted
Funds
Unrestricted
Funds
Total
Funds
2021
$
2021
$
2021
$
1,970,000
4,000,000
1,734,848
996,517
1,085,002
333,333
361,665
-
154,780
200,000
126,773
-
100,047
-
120,145
-
44,000
-
26,982
-
24,000
-
19,887
-
12,780
6,129
-
227,314
5,780,909
5,763,293
Restricted
Funds
Unrestricted
Funds
2020
$
2020
$
1,822,447
1,052,165
900,000
-
364,000
333,332
-
223,094
184,288
-
150,000
-
136,644
-
95,000
-
42,000
-
39,000
-
30,000
-
14,347
-
10,000
-
3,437
-
8,779
7,400
3,799,942
1,615,991
5,970,000
2,731,365
1,418,335
361,665
354,780
126,773
100,047
120,145
44,000
26,982
24,000
19,887
18,909
227,314
11,544,202
Total
Funds
2020
$
2,874,612
900,000
697,332
223,094
184,288
150,000
136,644
95,000
42,000
39,000
30,000
14,347
10,000
3,437
16,179
5,415,933

27

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

5. RESOURCES EXPENDED
Payments
to Sub
grantees
$
Charitable activities
Unrestricted Funds
Core Programmes
Law
-
Organisation & Representation
-
Social Protection
-
Statistics
-
Urban Policies
-
Focal Cities
-
Total Core Programmes
-
International
Coordination/Support
-
Restricted Funds
Cities Alliance - Liberia, SV
17,194
Comic Relief
65,386
DFID WOW Project
32,979
Echidna-Schwab
20,287
FES - Social Protection/IW & the
Law in an African Covid 19
Context
-
FORD FOUNDATION - HomeNet
International
-
Hewlett Foundation -
Communications Support &
Fundraising
-
Hewlett Foundation - Covid
Recovery
52,702
Hewlett Foundation - Focal Cities
2
-
Hewlett MLE Data Fin Training
-
International Development
Research Centre - Covid 19
Study
-
ILO
-
ILO – ESCWA
-
Open Society Foundations - Care
Givers Colombia
-
Open Society Foundations - Child
Care Rebuilding project
40,000
Open Society Foundations -
Covid Response - NETS
Communications
5,000
Open Society Foundations -
Covid Response 1
53,120
Open Society Foundations -
Covid Response WP Brazil
-
Activities
Under
taken
directly
$
331,728
528,523
342,597
375,739
708,734
446,767
2,734,088
206,073
19,166
83,800
76,016
60,805
24,000
5,087
33,297
92,914
420,887
36,164
244,295
6,064
3,528
7,015
-
13,059
339,883
139,733
Support
$
65,802
104,838
67,958
74,532
140,585
88,621
542,336
48,998
-
-
452
1,870
-
-
-
964
78,854
19,499
47,252
-
-
-
-
2,800
28,042
-
Total
2021
$
397,530
633,361
410,555
450,271
849,319
535,388
3,276,424
255,071
36,360
149,186
109,447
82,962
24,000
5,087
33,297
146,580
499,741
55,663
291,547
6,064
3,528
7,015
40,000
20,859
421,046
139,733

28

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

Open Society Foundations - DW
Social Protection Asia
Open Society Foundations –
Social Insurance Informal
Workers
Other Classes
Sida Nets Support
Sida Waste Picker Project
Coastal Cities
UN Women
USAID
WELSPRING PHILANTHROPIC
FUND
Governance costs
Gain on foreign exchange
TOTAL RESOURCES EXPENDED
-
18,000
7,180
592,513
76,150
-
-
-
980,512

-
-
980,512
19,637
33,264
3,590
466,889
309,051
42,386
800
-
2,481,330
67,208
(186,857)
5,301,838
3,257
-
-
52,562
56,928
1,614
-
37,739
331,833
-
-
923,167
22,894
51,264
10,770
1,111,964
442,129
44,000
800
37,739
3,793,674
67,208
(186,857)
7,205,517

Note: Sub grantees are subcontractors or institutions with contract arrangements who help to deliver the projects. Funds were allocated to IDWF, StreetNet, HomeNet South Asia, HomeNet South East Asia, SEWA, AeT, HomeNet Thailand and FACCYR/CTEP this year.

29

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

5. RESOURCES EXPENDED
Support Costs
Salaries
Meeting costs/events
Consultants and professional
Rent and office costs
2021
$
683,478
872
112,846
125,971
923,167
2020
$ 492,620
125,738
92,538
111,608
822,504
Support costs have been apportioned across core programmes according to the size of
programme.
2021
Governance Costs
$
Board meetings
24,432
Company secretarial
30,359
External Audit
12,417
67,208
the core
2020
$ 51,290
33,526
11,591
96,407

30

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

5. RESOURCES EXPENDED – YEAR ENDED 31 MARCH 2020

Payments to
Sub
grantees
Activities
Under
taken
directly
$
$
Charitable activities
Unrestricted Funds
Core Programmes
Law
-
410,609
Organisation & Representation
-
703,918
Social Protection
-
397,380
Statistics and Research
-
298,779
Urban Policies
-
695,054
Focal Cities
42,467
589,572
42,467
3,095,312
Membership Co-ordination/Support
-
214,610
Restricted Funds
Cities Alliance - Liberia
14,600
1,671
Comic Relief
26,209
13,453
Commonwealth Foundation
-
21,868
DFID WOW Project
77,505
122,330
Echidna/Schwab
9,730
11,503
FMO
-
61,456
Hewlett Foundation – Focal CIties
-
147,418
Hewlett Foundation - Focal Cities 2
-
189,107
Hewlett MLE Data Financial Training
-
39,337
International Labour Organisation
-
7,347
International Labour Organisation
Childcare Research
-
7,320
Open Society Foundations – Care
Givers Columbia
-
6,985
Open Society Foundations – DW
Social Protection Asia
43,075
15,980
Open Society Foundations –
Kazakhstan Mapping
-
6,030
Open Society Foundations –
Monitoring & Evaluation
-
318
Open Society Foundations – Social
Insurance Informal Workers
18,000
15,489
Open Society Foundations – Law
-
84,369
Other Classes
-
1,077
Sida Nets Support
698,652
542,217
Sida Waste Pickers – Coastal Cities
119,280
323,276
UNDP
-
7,653
USAID
-
10,000
WHO
-
24,000
WHO Kenya
-
15,000
1,007,051
1,675,202
Governance costs
-
96,407
Loss/(Gain) on foreign exchange
-
55,160
TOTAL RESOURCES EXPENDED
1,049,518
5,124,213
Support
costs
$
62,399
87,194
60,389
45,404
103,762
96,049
455,197
71,257
-
-
943
-
-
2,000
26,189
24,464
-
-
-
-
6,130
-
-
-
-
-
133,938
102,386
-
-
-
-
296,051
-
-
822,504
Total
2020
$
473,008
791,112
457,769
344,183
798,816
728,088
3,592,976
285,867
16,271
39,663
22,811
199,835
21,233
63,456
173,607
213,571
39,337
7,347
7,320
6,985
65,185
6,030
318
33,489
84,369
1,077
1,374,807
544,942
7,653
10,000
24,000
15,000
2,978,304
96,407
55,160
7,008,714

31

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

Note: Sub grantees are subcontractors or institutions with contract arrangements who help to deliver the projects. Funds were allocated to IDWF, StreetNet, HomeNet South Asia, HomeNet South East Asia and SEWA this year.

6. NET INCOMING/(OUTGOING) RESOURCES

This is stated after charging:
Operating lease rentals – property
Auditors' remuneration – Audit fees excluding VAT
2021
$
18,939
10,889
2020
$
4,463
9,819

7. STAFF COSTS, STAFF NUMBERS AND THE COST OF KEY MANAGEMENT PERSONEL

Staff costs were as follows:
Wages and salaries
Social security costs
Pension costs
2021
$
488,001
29,826
7,946
525,773
2020
$
414,355
22,436
5,787
442,578

The key management personnel of the charity are Sally Roever, International Co-ordinator and Mike Bird, the Operations Director. Sally Roever is employed by WIEGO and her salary is determined by the Board. She currently resides in the US. Mike Bird is employed by WIEGO in the UK, where rates of remuneration are set according to market rates and reviewed periodically by a Management Committee. The total cost of the key management personnel of the charity were $212,872 (2020 $198,495).

The average monthly number of employees during the year was as follows:

2021 2020
Number Number
Administration 8 7

During the year, the directors did not receive any reimbursement of expenses (2020: $4,723).

The directors received no remuneration or director fees during the year.

8. DEBTORS

Grant income receivable
Prepayments and other debtors
2021
$
124,735
36,840
161,575
2020
$
117,422
149,149
266,571

32

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

9. CREDITORS: Amounts falling due within one year

Accrued expenses
Grants deferred
2021
$
690,567
-

690,567
2020
$
636,493
-
636,493

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

10. STATEMENT OF FUNDS

Carried
Brought Forward Incoming Resources Transfers Forward
1 April 2020 Resources Expended 31 March 2021
$ $ $ $ $
UNRESTRICTED FUNDS
Designated funds
General Assembly Reserves 160,000 - - 80,000 240,000
DFID WOW Project 50,000 - - - 50,000
- -
Undesignated funds
Free reserves 460,744 - - 40,000 500,744
Unrestricted Funds 33,790 - - - 33,790
Ford Foundation - 200,000 - - 200,000
Hewlett Foundation - 4,000,000 (1,905,720) (120,000)
1,974,280
Sida - 924,880 (924,880) - -
Anonymous - 227,314 (227,314) - -
Open Society - Core Funding - 333,333 (333,333) - -
DFID WOW Counterpart - 71,637 (71,637) - -
Other Income/Other Classes - 9,808 (9,808) - -
Total Unrestricted Funds 704,534 5,766,972 (3,472,692) - 2,998,814
RESTRICTED FUNDS
Cities Alliance - Liberia & SV 7,866 26,982 (34,848) -
Comic Relief 96,762 126,773 (134,514) 89,021
DFID WOW (20,973) 120,145 (102,875) (3,703)
Echidna/Schwab Grant 128,767 - (82,962) 45,805
F E S - Friedrich Ebert Stiftung - 24,000 (24,000) -
Hewlett Communications Support and - 70,000 (33,297) 36,703
Fundraising

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

Hewlett Foundation - Focal Cities 2 686,887 900,000 (502,489) - 1,084,398
Hewlett Foundation - MLE, Database, FT 55,780 - (55,780) - -
Hewlett Foundation COVID Response - 1,000,000 (146,580) - 853,420
IDRC - COVID-19 Study - 361,665 (291,547) - 70,118
Open Society Foundation - Covid Response - 425,000 (421,046) - 3,954
Open Society Foundation - Kazakhstan 43,969 - - - 43,969
Mapping
Open Society Foundation - DW Social 134,885 - (22,894) - 111,991
Protection in Asia
Open Society Foundation - Social Insurance 116,511 150,000 (51,264) - 215,247
Informal Workers
Open Society Foundation - Care Givers in 7,015 - (7,015) - -
Colombia
Open Society Foundation - Covid Response - 200,000 (139,733) - 60,267
WP Brazil
Open Society Foundation - Covid Response - 165,000 (20,859) - 144,141
NETS Communications
Open Society Foundation - Child Care - 45,002 (40,000) - 5,002
Rebuilding Project
Open Society Initiative West Africa - 100,000 - - 100,000
Sida Nets Support - 1,256,269 (1,112,681) - 143,588
Sida Waste Picker Coastal Cities 26,243 478,579 (397,243) - 107,579
UN Women - 44,000 (44,000) - -
Wellspring Philanthropic Fund (WPF) - 100,047 (37,739) - 62,308
FORD FOUNDATION - HomeNet - 154,780 (5,087) - 149,693
International
ILO/ ILO ESCWA - 19,887 (9,591) - 10,297
Other Income - 14,780 (14,780) - -
Total Restricted Funds 1,283,712 5,782,909 (3,732,825) - 3,333,796
TOTAL FUNDS 1,988,246 11,549,881 (7,205,517) - 6,332,610

The DFID WOW Fund is in deficit as DFID only pay in arrears and £26k is due in July 2021.

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NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

10. STATEMENT OF FUNDS

UNRESTRICTED FUNDS
Designated funds
General Reserves
General Assembly in 2022
DFID WOW project
Undesignated funds
Free Reserves
Unrestricted Funds
Hewlett Foundation
Sida
South Street Green Room
Open Society Foundations – Core Funding
DFID WOW Counterpart
Other Income/Other Classes/Bank Interest
Total Unrestricted Funds
Cities Alliance – Liberia & SV
Comic Relief
Commonwealth Foundation
DFID WOW
Echidna/Schwab
FMO
Brought Forward
1 April 2019
Incoming
Resources
Resources
Expended
Transfers
Carried
Forward
31 March 2020
$
$
$
$
$
460,744
-
-
(460,744)
-
160,000
-
-
-
160,000
50,000
-
-
-
50,000
670,744
-
-
(460,744)
210,000
-
-
-
460,744
460,744
606,352
-
(572,562)
-
33,790
1,784,700
-
(1,784,700)
-
-
-
1,052,164
(1,052,164)
-
-
-
223,094
(223,094)
-
-
-
237,444
(237,444)
-
-
-
95,890
(95,890)
-
-
-
13,726
(13,726)
-
-
3,061,796
1,622,318
(3,979,580)
-
704,534
(3,431)
30,000
(18,703)
-
7,866
-
136,644
(39,881)
-
96,762
18,198
3,437
(21,635)
-
-
(5,825)
184,288
(199,436)
-
(20,973)
-
150,000
(21,233)
-
128,767
21,390
42,000
(63,390)
-
-

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

Hewlett Foundation – Focal Cities
Hewlett Foundation – Focal Cities 2
Hewlett Foundation – MLE, Database & FT
International Labour Organisation Childcare
Research
International Labour Organisation (Dakar)
Open Society Foundation – Kazakstan
Open Society Foundation – MLE
Open Society Foundation – DW SP Asia
Open Society Foundation – Social Insurance
Open Society Foundation – Care Givers
Colum
Open Society Foundation – Admin Law
SidaNets Support
SidaWaste Coastal Cities
USAID
UNDP
World Health Organisation
World Health Organisation Kenya
Other income/Other Classes/Bank Interest
Total Restricted Funds
TOTAL FUNDS
171,592
-
(171,592)
-
-
-
900,000
(213,113)
-
686,887
-
95,000
(39,220)
-
55,780
320
7,000
(7,320)
-
-
-
7,347
(7,347)
-
-
25,000
25,000
(6,031)
-
43,969
(19,613)
20,000
(387)
-
-
100,000
100,000
(65,115)
-
134,885
-
150,000
(33,489)
-
116,511
-
14,000
(6,985)
-
7,015
29,132
55,000
(84,132)
-
-
72,485
1,319,703
(1,392,188)
-
-
88,783
502,744
(565,284)
-
26,244
-
10,000
(10,000)
-
-
-
7,653
(7,653)
-
-
-
24,000
(24,000)
-
-
-
15,000
(15,000)
-
-
-
16,000
(16,000)
-
-
498,030
3,814,815
(3,029,133)
-
1,283,712
3,559,826
5,437,133
(7,008,713)
-
1,988,246

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NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

10. STATEMENT OF FUNDS (continued)

Period Amount Objective
Designated funds $160,000
$50,000
Funds set aside as a contribution towards the
General Assembly in 2020.
Funds set aside for DFID WoW
Unrestricted funds
William and Flora Hewlett
Foundation
23/03/2020- 23/03/2022 $4,000,000 To provide general operating support
Sida – Swedish International
Development Co-operation
Agency
01/04/18 - 31/03/22 SEK
10,000,000
To support the core activities
Open Society Foundations 01/10/2018-30/09/2021 $1,000,000 To provide general operating support
Ford Foundation 01/10/20-30/09/22 $400,000 To provide general operating support
Anonymous Donation December 2016 – 20 £375,000 To provide general operating support
Anonymous Donation June 2019 – June 2023 £500,000 To provide general operating support
Restricted Funds
Sida – Swedish International
Development Co-operation
Agency
01/04/18 - 31/03/22 SEK
12,600,000
To provide support to the WIEGO Network of
informal workers’ associations
Sida – Swedish International
Development Co-operation
Agency
01/04/18 - 31/03/22 SEK
4,800,000
Waste Pickers as environmental agents
Hewlett Foundation 23/03/20 – 23/03/22 $70,000 To provide support to WIEGO communications
Support and Fundraising
Hewlett Foundation – Focal
Cities 2
2/12/19 - 2/12/22 $1,800,000 To establish Urban Livelihood Learning Hubs in
Mexico, Senegal and Ghana
Hewlett Foundation 04/09/20-23/03/22 $1,000,000 Covid Response
UNOPS/Cities Alliance 1/6/16 - 31/5/2021 $180,951 Support for the Street/Market vendors in city
governance and inclusive planning in Greater
Monrovia in Liberia.
IDRC 1/7/20 - 30/06/22 CAD 941,500 Covid 19 Study
Open Society Foundations 1/10/18 -31/12/21 $200,000 Social Protection for domestic workers
Open Society Foundations 1/11/19 – 1/11/22 $300,000 Social Insurance – Informal Workers
Open Society Foundations 1/10/18 -30/9/21 $50,000 Mapping in Kazakhstan
Open Society Foundations 1/10/18 -30/9/21 $40,000 Monitoring, Learning and Evaluation
Open Society Foundations 15/10/19 - 31/8/20 $14,000 Care Givers in Columbia
Open Society Foundations 01/06/20-31/05/21 $425,000 Covid Response
Open Society Foundations 26/10/20- 26/10/21 $165,000 Covid Response NETS Communications
Open Society Foundations 01/10/20-30/03/22 $ 50,002 Child Care Rebuilding Project to document the
experience of shared business ownership
models for worker-run and managed child care
services during the pandemic.
Open Society Initiative for
West Africa
20/12/20 – 19/07/22 $200,000 To strengthen women and informal sector
workers’ leadership and representation in time of
crisis and post.

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NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

10. STATEMENT OF FUNDS (continued)

Echidna Giving/Schwab
Charitable
12/12/19-30/09/21 $150,000 Develop Quality Standards for child care
services in Africa
Hewlett Foundation 3/6/19 – 3/9/20 $95,000 MLE plan, Database & Finance Training
Comic Relief 1/9/19 - 30/8/2024 £505,000 Empowering Women Home-Based Workers
DFID WoW Project 1/3/19 – 31/1/2022 £498,752 HBW – Organising for Economic
Empowerment
USAID 25/8/18 - 31/12/21 $10,000 The Development Innovations Group
UN Women 01/09/20-31/12/20 $44,000 For the implementation of UN Women’s
programmes
Friedrich Ebert Stiftung ( FES) 18/08/20-31/03/21 $24,000 Social Protection Laws in Africa
Ford Foundation – HNI 01/01/21 – 31/12/22 £500,000 HomeNet International
Wellspring Philanthropic 01/10/20 – 31/03/22 $150,000 Support women in the Informal Economy:
Relief, Recovery and Resilience
International Labour Office 01/01/21 – 31/07/21 $27,097 Implementation of PH/development of a
national database of home-based workers
in the garment and crafts sectors
development of a national database of
home-based workers in the garment and
crafts sectors in South Africa
International Labour Office 22/03/21- 30/11/21 $10,250 ILO Informality report Statistical advisor
contract
Unrestricted Funds
Restricted Funds
Total of Funds
Balance
at
1 April
2020
$
704,534
1,283,712
1,988,246
Incoming
Resources
Resources
Expended
Transfers
Balance at
31 March
2021
$
$
$
$
5,766,972
(3,472,692)
-
2,998,814
5,782,909
(3,732,825)
-
3,333,796
11,549,881
(7,205,517)
-
6,332,610

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NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

ANALYSIS OF NET ASSETS BETWEEN FUNDS

Restricted
Funds
Unrestricted
Funds
2021
$
2021
$
Current assets
3,660,460
3,362,717
Creditors due within one year
(326,664)
(363,903)
Total of Funds
3,333,796
2,998,814
Total
Funds
2021
$
7,023,177
(690,567)
6,332,610

ANALYSIS OF NET ASSETS BETWEEN FUNDS

Restricted
Funds
Unrestricted
Funds
2020
$
2020
$
Current assets
1,685,086
939,653
Creditors due within one year
(401,374)
235,119)
Total of Funds
1,283,712
704,534
Total
Funds
2020
$
2,624,739
(636,493)

1,988,246

11. COMPANY LIMITED BY GUARANTEE

The company is a company limited by guarantee. The members of the company are the directors named on page 1 who have each guaranteed to contribute £1 ($1.40) to the company’s assets in the event of the company being wound up. The company is controlled by the members.

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NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

12. RELATED PARTY DISCLOSURES

According to its Articles of Association, three members of the WIEGO Board should be elected representatives from Institutional Members of WIEGO. From time to time, WIEGO enters into partnership on specific projects with its Institutional Members, including those represented on the WIEGO Board. In addition, Individual Members of WIEGO on the Board and co-opted Board members may have involvement with partner organisations. The WIEGO Board and management agree that in the interest of transparency, such activities and/or relationships should be disclosed in the financial statements.

The WIEGO Board notes that the following Board members have working involvement in organisations that have partnered with WIEGO. In each case, the named trustee or officer was neither directly associated with the project nor in receipt of any compensation related to it.

Mirai Chatterjee is a Trustee of Lok Swasthya SEWA Trust (LSST). Payments to LSST were $20,000 USD during the year. Mirai is also the Director of the Social Security team at the Self Employed Women’s Association (SEWA). No direct payments were made to Social Security SEWA.

Payments to SEWA Bharat of $36,88 and payments to the Indian Academy of SEWA of $28,979 were both made during the year.

Elizabeth Tang is General Secretary (remunerated) of the International Domestic Workers Federation (IDWF). Payments to IDWF were $189,000 USD during the year.

Uma Rani is a Senior Economist (remunerated) at the International Labour Office (ILO). WIEGO received grants from the ILO of $19,887 USD during the year.

Gabriela Calandria is a member of the International Council for StreetNet. Payments to StreetNet International were $238,516 USD during the year.

Patrick Ndovlu is a remunerated employee of Asiye e Tafuleni. Payments to Asiye e Tafuleni were $129,858 during the year.

Caroline Skinner the Research Director for Urban Policies is a Board member for Asiye e Tafuleni. Payments to Asiye e Tafuleni were $129,858 during the year.

13. FINANCIAL COMMITMENTS

At 31 March 2021 the Charity had future minimum lease payments under non-cancellable operating leases as follows:


Payable:

Within one year

Between two and five years

Land & Buildings
2021
2020
$
$ 14,204
4,463
4,735
-
18,939
4,463

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

14.
FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS
Financial assets
Financial assets measured at amortised cost
Financial liabilities
Financial liabilities measured at amortised cost
2021

$

7,023,177
690,567
2020
$ 2,624,739
636,493

Financial assets consist of cash, grant income receivable and other debtors.

Financial liabilities consist of trade creditors, other creditors and accruals.

15. RECONCILIATION OF NET MOVEMENT TO NET CASH FLOW FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES

Net incoming/(outgoing) resources for the year
Adjustments for:
Interest received
Decrease/(increase) in debtors
Increase/(decrease) in creditors
Net cash used in operating
activities
2021
$
4,344,364
(3,679)
104,996
54,075
4,499,755
2020
$ (1,571,580)
(21,201)
(43,526)
(27,235)
(1,663,542)

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NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2021

16. COMPARATIVE SOFA FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 MARCH 2021

Restricted
Funds
Unrestricted
Funds
Note
2020
$
2020
$
INCOME
Donations and legacies
2
-
-
Investment income
3
14,874
6,326
Charitable activities
4
3,799,941
1,615,992
TOTAL INCOME
3,814,815
1,622,318
EXPENDITURE
Charitable activities
5
3,027,760
3,968,475
TOTAL EXPENDITURE
3,027,760
3,968,475
NET INCOMING/(OUTGOING)
RESOURCES
787,055
2,346,157
TOTAL FUNDS AT 1 APRIL 2019
498,030
3,061,796
TOTAL FUNDS AT 31 MARCH
2020
10
1,285,085
715,639
Total
Funds
2020
$
-
21,200
5,415,933
5,437,133
7,008,714
7,008,714
1,571,580
3,559,826
1,988,246

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

APPENDIX 1 For the year ended 31 March 2021

MEMBERSHIP

BOARD OF DIRECTORS * Chair [Mirai Chatterjee, India]

----- Start of picture text -----
FINANCE COMMITTEE
MANAGEMENT COMMITTEE
[Debra Davis, UK]
[Mirai Chatterjee, India]
[Barbro Budin, Sweden]
[William Steel, Ghana]
[William Steel, Ghana]
[Luciana Itikawa, Brazil]
[Uma Rani, Switzerland]
[Gabriela Calandria, Uruguay]
[Sally Roever, Italy]
[Sally Roever, Italy]
[Jacqui Fendall, UK]
PROGRAMME SUPPORT & COMMUNICATIONS SECRETARIAT OPERATIONS OFFICE [UK]
Programme Strategy Advisor [Rhonda Douglas] International Coordinator [Sally Operations Director [Mike Bird]
Communications Advisor [Demetria Tsoutouras] Roever] Financial Controller/Company Secretary [Jacqui Fendall]
FOCAL CITIES INITIATIVE
Coordinator [Jenna Harvey]
5 x City Coordinators [Accra, Dakar, Delhi, CORE PROGRAMMES RESEARCH COORDINATOR
Lima, Mexico] [Françoise Carr é , USA]
LAW SOCIAL PROTECTION ORGANIZATION & URBAN POLICIES STATISTICS
Advisory Committee REPRESENTATION Advisory Committee
Advisory Committee
Programme Director
[Marlese v Broembsen] Programme Director Programme Director Programme Director
[South Africa] [Laura Alfers] Programme Director [Mike Rogan (Acting)] [Françoise Carr é]
[South Africa] [Jane Barrett] [South Africa]
[USA]
[South Africa]
----- End of picture text -----**

** This organogram illustrates the Delegation of Powers to the International Coordinator and key team members. There are many other team members who contribute to WIEGO’s work, many of whom are mentioned in Appendix 2.

The following pages do not form part of the statutory financial statements.

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APPENDIX 2 For the year ended 31 March 2021

The Year in Review

Mirai Chatterjee, Chair of the Board

This past year we have witnessed and endured some of our greatest challenges ever. The serious consequences of systemic inequality and injustice, visible to all in the COVID-19 crisis, have left us mourning the loss of our leaders and members across the movement while coping with the devastating economic fallout of the global pandemic. So many workers have lost their livelihoods. So many have seen what few assets they held disappear. So many have seen their earnings drop to zero and barely recover, if at all.

The uncertainty of the pandemic and its consequences has remained with us throughout the year. What has also remained with us is the steadfast commitment of the women and men in our network to battle the injustices in these most difficult of circumstances. Collectively, membership-based organizations have mobilized around relief efforts, ensured that governments designate their members as essential, and developed new communication structures to ensure no one is alone. They have filled gaps where no one else could and brought hope where it was hard to find.

Our team, members and partners throughout the WIEGO Network have also helped to increase public understanding of the role informal workers play in communities, households and societies. They have come together across sectors and regions to join hands in solidarity and advocate for fairer policies and practices. They have formed new partnerships and alliances, developed new leaders and grown in number and diversity. They have helped to build resilience in their communities and families. They have shown us pathways to recovery by rebuilding local economies in an inclusive and fair manner.

Through everything we do as a network, our members’ needs are central. The world of work as it existed before the crisis was built on unsustainable inequalities. There is now more recognition of the urgency to end those inequalities and put into place a world of work that is centred on justice and inclusion. Our strength is solidarity and we are united in our vision of a recovery for all workers.

Mirai Chatterjee Chair, WIEGO Board of Directors October 2021

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

APPENDIX 2 For the year ended 31 March 2021

Sally Roever, International Coordinator

Adaptation and learning have been at the centre of our journey through the harrowing months of 20202021. In April 2020, as the pandemic began to play out, we undertook an unprecedented mobilization of resources to quickly design and implement two studies – a rapid appraisal with our institutional members and a mixed-method study with partners – to assess the impact of COVID-19 on informal workers in 12 cities. Never before had our network conducted a study under the circumstances we faced at that time. But putting data in the hands of workers, now as throughout our history, was critical to their efforts to convince governments to include them in relief measures.

Several years of research, organizing and networking culminated in another monumental achievement despite the circumstances of the pandemic: the launch of HomeNet International in February 2021. Home-based workers’ organizations from four regions found creative ways to continue their work towards building a democratic, representative global network, even while navigating the severe impact of the pandemic on home-based workers. In coordination with the launch, our Statistics Programme published briefs profiling the size and composition of the home-based work sector in several countries and globally, showing its crucial role in local and global production.

WIEGO’s unique model combining research, organizing and advocacy shaped the way policy makers saw and understood informal employment at a pivotal moment in history. Our work with partners documenting barriers to social protection and how innovations can overcome them was disseminated through the world’s most influential multilateral institutions. The garment sector work we undertook with members and partners in Asia shaped the way in which stakeholders see informality throughout the supply chain and its effects on working conditions. Local governments participated in dialogues with worker organizations as a result of our joint work with members and partners to produce policy-relevant research.

As we reflect on the lessons learned from the past year, we see our foundation of solidarity in action and the potential it holds for our common future. And as we join hands in the struggle for the future, the courage we have seen in the past year can be a source of inspiration and hope for a more just and inclusive world of work.

In solidarity,

Sally Roever, PhD International Coordinator, WIEGO October 2021

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

APPENDIX 2 For the year ended 31 March 2021

The Formation of a Global Network for Home-Based Workers

The launch of HomeNet International – a global network for home-based workers – in February 2021 was the culmination of over two decades of organization building. This historic moment was witnessed by a huge number of workers and allies who attended the virtual launch at a time when an in-person meeting was impossible: there were 80 delegates from 36 affiliates from 20 countries, joined by around 200 home-based workers as observers and 200 allies.

The aim of the network is to build solidarity, share knowledge and information, take up home-based worker issues globally, raise a global voice in spaces such as the International Labour Organization, and to provide support to all regions and affiliate organizations.

The idea of a global network for home-based workers was born in the early 1990s when the issue of a convention for home-based workers was placed on the agenda of the International Labour Conference. However, early attempts to form a global network didn’t succeed and, instead, the formation and building of regional networks became the focus – HomeNet South Asia and HomeNet South-East Asia – with WIEGO in a supporting role. For the past 10 years, WIEGO has also supported organizations of home-based workers in Africa, Latin America and Eastern Europe. In 2018, representatives of all five regions took the unanimous decision to form HomeNet International within two years.

WIEGO supported the formation of HomeNet International with capacity building, knowledge generation, statistics and network building. We will continue to support HomeNet International in the same way that we support the established global network organizations of street vendors (StreetNet International) and domestic workers (International Domestic Workers Federation).

A Global Network of Waste Pickers

WIEGO is supporting waste pickers to work towards a global network to amplify their voice. Representatives of waste picker organizations from 13 countries participated in the first online meeting for the constitution of the Global Advisory Committee of the Global Alliance of Waste Pickers in June 2020. This is a significant step forward in a process that started in 2008.

How Workers Mobilized During the Pandemic

The COVID-19 crisis has hit informal workers hard. Overnight, in places where governments enacted strict lockdowns, workers’ livelihoods vanished and, to make matters worse, many found themselves stigmatized as the spreaders of the disease. Even as lockdowns eased, earnings recovered slowly and for many remained below pre-COVID-19 levels. With workers eager to get back to work instead of waiting for relief, informal worker organizations fought for the recognition of workers’ essential roles in society and supported their members during this difficult time when governments failed to do enough. WIEGO has stood by them every step of the way.

Here is what we have achieved together:

Recognition as essential workers

When lockdowns were imposed, informal workers used WIEGO statistics and reports to formulate arguments to persuade their governments to allow them to return to work. Peru, South Africa and Colombia are some of the places where governments recognized informal workers – including waste pickers, street vendors and market traders – as essential workers, allowing them to work during lockdown. Waste pickers provide essential sanitation and solid waste management services, which contribute to public health and safety. Street vendors and market traders provide necessary goods and services and contribute to food security for the poorest and most vulnerable communities.

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APPENDIX 2 For the year ended 31 March 2021

Increased public awareness

The pandemic has increased public awareness of the working poor’s essential roles and the hardships they face, not least because workers are standing up and telling their stories. In Peru, media reported on street markets’ crucial role in the urban food chain – something WIEGO’s Lima team has continuously raised with national media – and many were eventually allowed to reopen. In Senegal, WIEGO supported informal worker organizations to speak out publicly about their stigmatization as spreaders of COVID-19. In South Africa, resident organizations, that had previously called for aggressive action against waste pickers, now recognized the importance of their work.

Receipt of cash transfers

Advocacy for cash transfers or grants to informal workers affected by the pandemic was successful in Peru, Ghana and South Africa. WIEGO supported this through media outreach and articulating workers’ needs.

Cross-sector solidarity

At the start of the pandemic, WIEGO organized a meeting of regional and global networks of informal workers. Since then, they have been holding weekly (now biweekly) meetings, which have significantly increased cross-sectoral solidarity – a crucial element for movement-building. The networks have worked together on various big moments as a result, including a joint statement on May Day when they presented a global platform of demands, and the preparation of a common platform of demands for the International Labour Conference.

In a series of Workers’ Voices webinars – made possible by interpretation into various languages – WIEGO provided a space for exchange where workers’ organizations and networks of informal workers could learn from each other and discuss experiences. They talked about innovative policy, advocacy, and organizing strategies during the crisis, as well as positive policy responses. Interventions led by workers’ organizations to support informal workers in the pandemic were also discussed.

Strengthened communications

The pandemic contributed to the development of new communications structures, and the strengthening of existing ones, for organizations of informal workers to monitor the impact of COVID19 and share news with their members. Information technology systems were set up to support members in applying for relief programmes and increase their use of online platforms and tools for virtual communication. The organizations also used crowdfunding platforms and created systems for food distribution among their members.

How WIEGO Programmes Support Domestic Workers Organization and Representation Programme

WIEGO has supported the International Domestic Workers Federation (IDWF) to become recognized as a relevant partner at the European level. European trade unions, the Federation of Food, Agriculture and Tourism Trade Unions (EFFAT) and UNI Europa, and employers’ organizations European Federation for Services to Individuals (EFSI) and the European Federation for Family Employment (EFFE) published a joint statement on the impact of the pandemic on domestic workers in 2020, and another demanding priority access to COVID-19 vaccines for home care workers. For the first time, following engagement by WIEGO and IDWF, IDWF was recognized as supporting the statements.

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APPENDIX 2 For the year ended 31 March 2021

Statistics Programme

The programme’s Statistical Briefs provide statistics on all WIEGO sectors, including domestic workers, and thus bring visibility to these workers at national and international levels. Tabulations for informal workers, including domestic workers, in India, urban India and Delhi, as well as in Mexico, urban Mexico and Mexico City were provided in two new briefs. These are essential tools for planning and advocacy.

Law Programme

The Law Programme builds the capacity of regional and global networks of informal worker organizations by providing technical input to support their strategies and advocacy, including on the COVID-19 response. Between March and November 2020, the Law Programme collected, collated and analyzed the laws and regulations adopted by 85 countries in response to COVID-19, with a particular focus on street vendors and domestic workers. The analysis for domestic workers focused on whether and how they were recognized as essential workers; whether and how governments protected domestic workers against lay-offs and whether they created health and safety obligations for their employers; and whether they were included in social assistance, social protection and stimulus measures.

Social Protection Programme

WIEGO works continuously with the International Domestic Workers Federation (IDWF) to raise the profile of social protection among their membership. The Social Protection Programme raised funds and designed a social protection survey with IDWF’s members, which helped the National Domestic Workers Union in Bangladesh and the All Nagaland Domestic Workers Union in India to better reflect on their social protection priorities and understand the needs of their members.

Urban Policies Programme

To unpack the hardship, injustice and possibility for transformation within our economic system, laid bare by the pandemic, the Urban Policies Programme is hosting the WIEGO-led COVID-19 Crisis and the Informal Economy Study. Together with worker organizations, WIEGO is listening to the experiences of informal workers, including domestic workers, in 12 cities. The study found that, among domestic workers, “live-out” workers were more likely to face unemployment, while “live-in” workers suffered deteriorating working conditions and terms of employment.

How WIEGO Programmes Support Home-Based Workers

Organization and Representation Programme

Collective voice is key to improving the income, working conditions and status of workers in the informal economy – especially women – whose voices are often not heard by those who make decisions that affect their lives. Through strong, democratic membership-based organizations (MBOs) that are created and led by workers, they gain the knowledge, skills, confidence and solidarity to change this. This year, as a result of the programme’s support with organization building, HomeNet International and HomeNet Kenya were founded.

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APPENDIX 2 For the year ended 31 March 2021

Statistics Programme

Country-specific data on home-based workers are not commonly available and WIEGO has long worked to change that. This year the Statistics Programme, in collaboration with the International Labour Organization and HomeNet International, prepared the first ever global brief with cross-national comparable estimates of home-based workers by world regions and country income groups. Together with home-based worker statistical briefs for Bangladesh, India and Pakistan, they supported the HomeNet International founding congress. The briefs have laid the foundation and built interest in subsequent statistical briefs planned for countries in other regions, including Latin America and SubSaharan Africa.

Law Programme

WIEGO seeks to influence key civil society organizations that are engaging with brands and in policy processes to include homeworkers in their strategies. In 2020, together with informal worker organizations and Asia Floor Wage Alliance (AFWA), the Law Programme called on global brands to extend a one-time Supply-chain Relief Contribution to all garment workers in their supply chains. The Law Programme also supported, together with the Organization and Representation Programme, organizations of home-based workers to participate in an EU law-making process – a first – to compel EU companies to undertake a mandatory human rights and environmental due diligence in their supply chains. As a result, 12 organizations of homeworkers from 10 South and Southeast Asian countries developed and submitted a platform of demands to the European Union Commission.

Social Protection Programme

The Social Protection Programme aims to enhance the knowledge and strategic capabilities of organizations of informal workers, including women within these organizations, to exercise voice and engage in alliance building for social protection. The WIEGO Briefing Note Violence at Work, spearheaded by WIEGO’s Social Protection team, shows how informal workers, including home-based workers, can use the ILO Violence and Harassment Convention (no. 190) and accompanying Recommendation (no. 206) to draw attention to the domestic violence they experience in their homes and workplaces. Private homes in which domestic workers and home-based workers operate are considered high-risk workplaces due to the isolation of these workers.

Urban Policies Programme

To unpack the hardship, injustice and possibility for transformation within our economic system, laid bare by the pandemic, the Urban Policies Programme is hosting a WIEGO-led COVID-19 Crisis Study. Together with worker organizations, we are listening to the experiences of informal workers in 12 cities. HomeNet South Asia (HNSA) and HomeNet Thailand used the COVID-19 study survey questionnaire to undertake further study of home-based workers in 17 additional cities, thereby increasing our understanding of the challenges workers are facing during the pandemic.

How WIEGO Programmes Support Street Vendors and Market Traders

Organization and Representation Programme

From the beginning of the COVID-19 lockdown in South Africa in March 2020, street vendors were not able to meet and became very isolated from each other. WIEGO supported the organization of virtual monthly meetings for street vendors in all nine provinces in the country. These meetings have created regular interaction and enhanced coordination among the workers, allowing them to keep track of what is going on in all the different provinces.

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APPENDIX 2 For the year ended 31 March 2021

Statistics Programme

Our statistical brief for urban Thailand, which included data on all informal workers including street vendors and market traders, was used by the Urban Design and Development Center (UDDC) to improve city planning to accommodate the number of street vendors and convince the Bangkok Governor to return street vendors to footpaths. The brief was also used by HomeNet Thailand to ask the National Health Commission Office (NHCO) to help facilitate a public policy for street vendors in Bangkok. NHCO agreed to discuss this issue with other stakeholders because of the large number of people affected, based on our figures.

Law Programme

The pandemic has dealt a heavy economic blow on the African continent. The Law Programme analyzed the COVID-19 laws of 41 Anglophone, Francophone and Lusophone African countries through an informal trading lens. The paper in which these findings are reported considers the implications of these laws for informal traders' continuity of work, measures to prevent the spread of COVID-19, and social dialogue and engagement with governments. The research will be used to provide online training and capacity building for organizations of informal workers and has been made available to a wide range of stakeholders. The project is being implemented together with WIEGO’s Social Protection Programme.

Social Protection Programme

The programme produced a series of briefs to analyze the Social Protection Responses to COVID-19, drawing from WIEGO's database of social protection responses to COVID-19, in order to support movements in their advocacy efforts to expand social protection to informal workers in this period of crisis. Various donors and organizations of informal workers have drawn on these briefs, including for advocacy. For example, StreetNet International used it in their presentation at the Global Platform on the Right to the City, and the International Labour Organization’s influential Social Protection Spotlight policy brief included WIEGO’s contribution based on one of the briefs.

Urban Policies Programme

In July 2020, the Legal Resources Centre in South Africa used WIEGO’s health guidelines for street vendors in a court case to secure the opening of markets in Cape Town. The health guidelines helped demonstrate that traders have taken health concerns seriously, including those related to COVID-19. The case was won and the ruling allowed traders to start working again. The guidelines were prepared together with occupational health professors, food security experts, Asiye eTafuleni – an NGO supporting informal traders in South Africa – and trader leaders.

How WIEGO Programmes Support Waste Pickers

Organization and Representation Programme

WIEGO’s Reducing Waste in Coastal Cities Project supports waste picker organizations in preventing ocean waste pollution by improving the capacity of waste picker organizations to be formally integrated into solid waste management in their cities. In September 2020, the city of Mangalore, India, issued occupational ID cards for 156 waste pickers as a result of enumeration of workers conducted as part of the project. This is a clear recognition by the state that informal waste pickers are part of the solid waste management infrastructure of the city. The ID cards also make the workers eligible for certain social welfare benefits, including health insurance, and allows them to open a bank account.

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APPENDIX 2 For the year ended 31 March 2021

Statistics Programme

There is particularly little data on waste pickers, relative to other informal worker groups, in country and international statistics. WIEGO prepared statistical briefs on informal workers, including waste pickers, in India, urban India and Delhi and Mexico, urban Mexico and Mexico City. This affirms the importance of the continued collection of data, which makes tabulation of these workers possible.

Law Programme

When the Kpone landfill in Accra, Ghana, was suddenly being decommissioned without consultation in June 2020, it came as a shock to the hundreds of waste pickers who rely on their work at the site to survive and feed their families. The Law Programme engaged the Accra-based Advocates for Community Alternatives to support the Kpone Wastepickers’ Association to engage the World Bank on the government’s lack of compliance with the Bank’s safeguarding policies – requiring consultation and the development of a livelihoods restoration plan. The World Bank did not ultimately assume responsibility for safeguarding, and waste pickers are now advocating with the government to secure waste management contracts, finance and infrastructure to operate as an independent cooperative in the waste value chain.

Social Protection Programme

The programme’s Informal Economy Podcast: Social Protection is a source of accessible information that raises awareness about research and debates on social protection for informal workers, including waste pickers. This year, it featured topics such as universal basic income, social protection needs for older workers, and the impact of the pandemic on workers. Socialprotection.org – the leading webbased platform for dissemination of social protection resources – featured WIEGO’s social protection work in Lima after it was discussed on our podcast.

Urban Policies Programme

The Urban Policies Programme supports informal workers in their efforts to transform urban systems, including through raising the visibility of waste pickers in important debates. Marli Beraldo, a waste picker leader from the Acamares association in Minas Gerais, Brazil, participated in a webinar led by Brazil’s National Health Foundation about the impacts of COVID-19. She shared the health and economic impacts felt by waste pickers during the pandemic. The invitation was a result of WIEGO’s ongoing interactions with the Foundation on COVID-19-related work.

How WIEGO’s Focal Cities Teams are Supporting Informal Workers WIEGO’s Focal Cities approach supports informal worker organizations to engage with government officials to secure more inclusive laws and regulations, improved urban services and a voice in urban planning and policy-making processes. WIEGO’s five Focal Cities are Accra, Ghana; Dakar, Senegal; Delhi, India; Lima, Peru and Mexico City, Mexico.

Accra, Ghana

The team works with market traders , street vendors , waste pickers and kayayei /market porters . After a fire in a shopping mall, WIEGO reached out to worker leaders to find out the extent of the impact on informal traders and to offer support with a statement to demand a response from the authorities. The joint statement from the Greater Accra Markets Association (GAMA) and Informal Hawkers and Vendors of Ghana (IHVAG) received a lot of media attention; this was an opportunity workers used to reiterate their demand for a safe and secure working environment. Following the statement, the National Board for Small Scale Industries (NBSSI) agreed to increase the number of eligible beneficiaries of a COVID-19 alleviation programme – although support has remained limited.

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APPENDIX 2 For the year ended 31 March 2021

Dakar, Senegal

The team works with home-based producers , street and market vendors , waste pickers , taxi drivers , laundresses , carpenters and construction workers .

WIEGO is working to secure waste pickers’ livelihoods in the process of the eventual closure of the Mbeubeuss dumpsite. In partnership with strategic allies, WIEGO works to strengthen the capacity of Bokk Diom – the association of Waste Pickers of Mbeubeuss – to defend their rights and interests as workers. Bokk Diom leaders are now holding the authorities to account for the protection of their livelihoods and are demanding inclusion in the project. In March 2021, Bokk Diom began the process of becoming a union. With the International Labour Organization and WIEGO, Bokk Diom worked in the development of two feasibility studies for the creation of a cooperative, identifying potential areas where they could participate within the waste management chain.

Delhi, India

The team works with domestic workers , home-based workers , street vendors and waste pickers .

In Delhi, WIEGO joined a diverse coalition of allies who together formed the Main Bhi Dilli (“I, too, am Delhi”) Campaign – to advocate for the need for a more participatory and inclusive approach to the next Delhi master plan, which sets the tone for the city’s development for the next 20 years. As a result of the campaign’s advocacy efforts, the city opened up its most inclusive public consultation process yet – accepting for the first time citizen input on the master plan before the release of a draft rather than after.

Lima, Peru

The team works with domestic workers , home-based workers , street vendors , waste pickers , “canillitas”/newspaper vendors and market porters .

COVID-19 restrictions in Peru were among the strictest and longest in the world. Informal workers were not able to go to work for almost four months. Team Lima worked closely with membership-based organizations, government officials and the media to advocate for cash grants for self-employed workers. At the start of the pandemic, the national government granted cash support to households categorized as poor or “extremely poor”, but the urban directories were not up to date and the majority of informal workers were left out of the benefit. A cash grant for self-employed workers was approved a couple of weeks after WIEGO’s advocacy started and improved the reach of the cash grants to include many informal workers.

Mexico City, Mexico

The team works with domestic workers , street vendors , waste pickers and non-salaried workers including mariachi musicians, coffee vendors, shoe shiners and organ players.

Through the “Rifados de la Basura” campaign, launched by WIEGO in April 2020, waste pickers drew attention to their working conditions through the media and gained visibility and recognition from government officials and the public. The Mexico City Human Rights Commission issued a press release soon after the start of the campaign urging Mexico City’s government to protect informal waste pickers due to the high risks they faced in the COVID-19 crisis, incorporating two of the central demands of WIEGO’s campaign.

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APPENDIX 2 For the year ended 31 March 2021

Improving the Accessibility of Our Work

Making our research available in accessible formats and disseminating it on various channels and in a wide variety of languages contributes to an inclusive environment in which workers can use our materials to inform their advocacy. Over the past year, our new trilingual website, increasingly visual social media messaging, and media outreach conducted by a dedicated press team have contributed to improved accessibility.

These strategies were, for example, used for the dissemination of WIEGO’s 12-city study, which is conducted in collaboration with organizations of informal workers and assesses the impact of the COVID-19 crisis on specific groups of workers and their households. The results and outputs from the study have been widely shared by donors and multilateral international organizations, as well as by workers who have used it in their advocacy for better working conditions and rights during the pandemic.

In Peru alone, the study results were featured in 80 news and interview pieces; the ministries of labour and production in Peru took action on a recommendation of the study to provide access to small credit to informal workers; and, following a public parliamentary session on climate where the results were presented, the Lima municipal government designated informal recyclers as essential. The ILO’s flagship online publication – the International Labour Review – accepted for publication two WIEGOauthored papers on the study findings. Various news outlets around the world reported on the impacts of the crisis on informal workers after receiving a press release from WIEGO.

The Law Programme commissioned the creation of engaging materials for their Waste Pickers and Human Rights work, which aims to improve working conditions for waste pickers through a human rights perspective and to extend the right to work to include informal workers. The materials (Spanish only) included a comic, a snakes and ladders game and a guide to recyclers’ rights.

Disseminating our work in partnership with donors and large international organizations makes it more accessible for a larger audience and thus increases the reach of our work. In partnership with Ford Foundation and UNU-WIDER, WIEGO co-hosted an online event to celebrate the book The Informal Economy Revisited: Examining the Past, Envisioning the Future and to call attention to the future of informal work. This 34-chapter open-access book brings together leading scholars from a broad range of disciplines to investigate recent conceptual shifts, research findings and policy debates on the informal economy. Edited by Marty Chen and Françoise Carré, the volume is the culmination of WIEGO’s first 20 years of pioneering work on the informal economy. As a whole, it calls for a paradigm shift in theory and research as well as policies, laws and regulations on the informal economy.

Increased availability of translation and interpretation provided by the communications team makes trainings and workshops accessible for a wider audience and has improved representation from our constituencies, also in global campaigns – such as the 16 Days Campaign to call for the ratification of ILO Convention 190 to end all forms of gender-based violence, which focused on women in informal employment.

For International Women’s Day, WIEGO amplified the voices of women leaders – in their own words, made possible by translation – whose organizations stepped up to provide relief when governments failed to do enough during the COVID-19 pandemic.

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Women in Informal Employment: Globalizing and Organizing

Year ended 31 March 2021 Audit Findings Report DRAFT

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Audit / Tax / Advisory / Risk Smart Decisions. Lasting value.
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The Lexicon Mount Street Manchester, M2 5NT

The Directors

Women in Informal Employment: Globalizing and Organizing (WIEGO) Limited 521 Royal Exchange Manchester M2 7EN

5 July 2021

Dear Directors

Audit for the year ended 31 March 2021

Following the completion of our audit fieldwork on the financial statements of Women in Informal Employment: Globalizing and Organizing (WIEGO) for the year ended 31 March 2021 we have pleasure in submitting our Audit Findings Report setting out the significant matters which have come to our attention during our audit of which we believe you need to be aware when considering the financial statements. The matters included in this report have been discussed with WIEGO’s management during our audit and at our closing meeting on 5 July 2021. Mike Bird and Jacqui Fendall have seen a draft of this report and we have incorporated their comments and/or proposed actions where relevant.

The Covid-19 virus outbreak continues to have a significant impact on the WIEGO’s reporting and on our audit processes this year and we have commented specifically on this in the report. Vicky Szulist will be attending your meeting on 21 July 2021 and will be pleased to provide any further information or clarification on this or any other matters which you may require.

We would like to express our appreciation for the assistance provided to us by the finance team and the other staff at the charity during this year’s audit.

Use of this report

This report has been provided to the Finance Committee to consider and ratify on behalf of the Board of Trustees, in line with your governance structure. We accept no duty, responsibility or liability to any other parties, since this report has not been prepared, and is not intended, for any other purpose. It should not be made available to any other parties without our prior written consent.

Yours sincerely

Crowe U.K. LLP

Contents Page
1. Audit overview 1
2. Significant matters from our audit 4
3. Other matters from our audit 9
4. Fraud and irregularities and our audit reporting 10
5. Managing in uncertain times 14
6.
Controls in remote working and into the new normal
16
Appendix 1 - Systems and controls issues 17
Appendix 2 - Reporting audit adjustments 18
Appendix 3 - External developments 19
Appendix 4 - Non Profits events, courses and briefings 27

1. Audit overview

Audit scope and approach

Our audit work has been undertaken for the purposes of forming our audit opinion on the financial statements of WIEGO prepared by management with the oversight of the directors and has been carried out in accordance with International Standards on Auditing (UK) (‘ISAs’).

Our work combined substantive procedures (involving the direct verification of transactions and balances on a test basis and including obtaining confirmations from third parties where we considered this to be necessary) with a review of certain of your financial systems and controls where we considered that these were relevant to our audit.

We have commented below on matters that need to be finalised before we complete our audit and also later in this report on our approach to the key audit risks. Subject to the satisfactory completion of the outstanding matters, we believe that the we will have obtained sufficient audit evidence and that there have not been any restrictions or limitations on our audit.

Communicating significant findings from our audit

We are required by ISAs to communicate with the directors as “those charged

with governance” various matters from our audit including:

We have included comments in relation to the above where relevant in the subsequent sections of this report.

We also report to you any significant deficiencies in internal control identified during our audit which, in our professional judgment, are of sufficient importance to merit your attention. We confirm that we have no significant control deficiencies identified from our audit which we need to bring to your attention.

You should note that our evaluation of the systems of control at WIEGO was carried out for the purposes of our audit and accordingly it is not intended to be a comprehensive review of systems and processes. It would not necessarily reveal all weaknesses in accounting practice or internal controls which a special investigation might highlight, nor irregularities or errors not material in relation to the financial statements.

Audit completion

We have substantially completed our audit subject to the matters set out below.

We will report to you orally in respect of any modifications to the findings or opinions contained in this report that arise on completion of the outstanding matters. On satisfactory completion of the outstanding matters, we anticipate issuing an unmodified audit opinion on the truth and fairness of the financial statements.

Critical audit matters

We have identified income recognition and management override of controls as being critical to the financial statements and have considered these matters further in section 2 of this report.

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Audit overview

Additionally, going concern has become an increased risk area for all organisations given the current unprecedented environment surrounding COVID-19 and we have considered in section 2 going concern and the impact of COVID-19 on the Trustees’ Report and financial statements

Other significant audit matters

In Section 3 we have also discussed in detail the findings from our work in relation to the following matters.

Materiality and identified misstatements

As we explained in our Audit Planning Report, we do not seek to certify that the financial statements are 100% correct; rather we use the concept of “materiality” to plan our sample sizes and also to decide whether any errors or misstatements discovered during the audit (by you or us) require adjustment. The assessment of materiality is a matter of professional judgement but overall a matter is material if its omission or misstatement would reasonably influence the economic decisions of a user of the financial statements.

The audit materiality for the financial statements set as part of our audit planning took account of the level of activity of WIEGO and was set at approximately 2% of income. We have reviewed this level of materiality based on the draft financial statements for year ended 31 March 2021 and are satisfied that it continues to be appropriate.

We also report to you any unadjusted individual errors other than where we consider the amounts to be trivial, and for this purpose we have determined trivial to be approximately 3% of our audit materiality.

We have listed in Appendix 2 any misstatements we have noted which have not been adjusted by management. The unadjusted errors would result in a decrease of $3k in the net income recorded in the Statement of Financial Activities and management have concluded that this is not material. We will be requesting confirmation from the Trustees in our audit representation letter that you do not wish to adjust for these misstatements.

Ethical Standard

We are required by the Ethical Standard for auditors issued by the Financial Reporting Council (‘FRC’) to inform you of all significant facts and matters that may bear upon the integrity, objectivity and independence of our firm.

Crowe U.K. LLP has procedures in place to ensure that its partners and professional staff comply with both the relevant Ethical Standard for auditors and the Code of Ethics adopted by The Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales.

In our professional judgement there are no relationships between Crowe U.K. LLP and WIEGO or other matters that would compromise the integrity, objectivity and independence of our firm or of the audit partner and audit staff. We are not aware of any further developments which should be brought to your attention.

Having considered the safeguards as noted at planning, in order to provide the maximum independence to the Finance Committee, whilst providing you with the ability to retain our cumulative audit knowledge and experience, we have included a second partner review into our internal processes this year.

Legal and regulatory disclosure requirements

In undertaking our audit work we considered compliance with the following legal and regulatory disclosure requirements, where relevant.

Financial statements

The trustees of WIEGO are responsible for the preparation of the financial statements on a going concern basis (unless this basis is inappropriate). The trustees are also responsible for ensuring that the financial statements give a true and fair view, that the process your management go through to arrive at

2

Audit overview

the necessary estimates or judgements is appropriate, and that any disclosure on going concern is clear, balanced and proportionate.

Directors’ responsibilities

Under the provisions of the Companies Act, the Directors’ Report is required to include a statement confirming for each director who was a director at the time of the approval of the financial statements that:

information and to establish that the company’s auditor is aware of that information; and

3

Audit overview

2. Significant matters from our audit

We reported in our Audit Planning Report a number of areas we identified as having specific audit risk including the potential risk from management override of controls which auditing standards deem to be a significant risk for all audits. We have commented below on the results of our work in these areas as well as on any key additional risks, judgements or other matters in relation to the financial statements of WIEGO identified during our audit.

2.1 Going concern

We explained in our Audit Planning Report that in preparing the financial statements to comply with Financial Reporting Standard 102 the Trustees and management are required to make an assessment of the charity’s ability to continue as a going concern. In assessing whether the going concern assumption is appropriate, the Trustees and management are required to consider all available information about the future of the charity in the period of at least, but not limited to, twelve months from the date when the financial statements are approved and authorised for issue.

The trustees’ going concern assessment is a key area of emphasis and importance for our audit and, in accordance with the requirements of ISAs (UK), our audit report includes a specific reference to going concern.

The impact of the Covid-19 outbreak will require all entities, including charities, to reassess their financial position and their ability to continue to operate as a going concern. This may require considering a number of factors including updating the charity’s budgets and forecasts. Where trustees identify possible events or scenarios, other than those with a remote probability of occurring, that could lead to failure, then these should be disclosed in the financial statements.

Trustees may consider and take account of realistic mitigating responses open to them, considering the likely success of any response.

We have discussed this with WIEGO’s management and explained that our work on going concern includes the following:

account of the potential impacts of Covid-19 on the charity to ensure that these appropriately support the trustees’ conclusion,

The Financial Reporting Council thinks it is likely that more companies (and this will include charities) will disclose “material uncertainties” to going concern in the current circumstances. For these reasons we have identified this area as a specific area of audit risk with respect to WIEGO.

Covid-19 is a fast-moving situation and it will be important that the trustees consider not only the budgets and forecasts but also the sensitivity analysis on these. Key considerations will be around reserves, liquidity and resilience.

a) Reserves

The Charity Commission guidance “Managing financial difficulties & insolvency in charities” (CC12) stresses the importance for “ a trustee body to have a good knowledge and understanding of the charity and its finances so that, as far as possible, the continued viability of the charity and its charitable activities can be assured .”.

This is a theme that runs through the Charity Commission’s updates and alerts including its guidance on whether charities can use reserves and restricted funds to help the charity through the crisis.

The Charity Commission guidance highlights a number of factors the trustees need to consider.

Significant matters from our audit

4

b) Liquidity and resilience

The Charity Commission guidance goes on to explain that “ The overall responsibility for effective governance and the implementation of proper financial management rests with the trustees, but may well involve all staff members whether paid or volunteers .”

As well as the level of available reserves the trustees will also need to understand and consider the charity’s liquidity.

generate cash flow and valuation information, including the choice and consistent use of key assumptions.

In April 2016 the FRC issued its guidance on the Going Concern Basis of Accounting and Reporting on Solvency and Liquidity Risks for companies that do not apply the UK Corporate Governance Code. Whilst this guidance refers to “directors” and “companies”, the report makes it clear that it is designed to relate to all other entities preparing accounts under the going concern basis and it will therefore be applicable to charities and charity trustees.

The guidance defines Solvency Risk as “ the risk that a company will be unable to meet its liabilities in full” and Liquidity Risk as “the risk that a company will be unable to meet its liabilities as they fall due” .

The guidance sets out some of the factors which directors should consider as part of their assessment process but also explains that it is the directors that need to determine the relevance of these factors considering the size, complexity and the particular circumstances of the organisation, its industry and the general economic conditions.

In their updated guidance ‘Company Guidance Update March 2020 (COVID19), the Financial Reporting Council, explain “ Given the systemic uncertainties that currently exist, many boards will be less confident in stating that they have a reasonable expectation that the company will be able to continue in operation and meet its liabilities as they fall due over a period of assessment (“the viability statement” as required for compliance with the UK Corporate Governance Code )”.

However, the FRC stresses the following points:

Significant matters from our audit

5

emergency and unprecedented pace of change, any reasonable level of expectation would naturally carry a much lower level of confidence;

In describing any qualifications to the statement, a board should describe the limits of the predictions, the level of confidence with which they have been made and the uncertain future events that could prove critical to viability.

Similarly, the key assumptions made and the future scenarios considered should be explained. Many companies already use scenario and stress testing in developing their statements and this should continue as far as practicable. The use of reverse stress testing, to identify future scenarios that could lead to corporate failures, is also good practice.

At this time, the need for fuller disclosure is paramount.”

In addition, there may be charity specific issues to consider including ensuring that there are no breaches of trust with respect to any restricted income or endowed funds and that the charity is able to meet its obligations in relation to these funds. Trustees may be held liable for a breach of trust if they apply restricted funds for purposes outside of the relevant restriction.

CC25: “Charity finances: trustee essentials” – issued in March 2017 emphasises the need for charities to be resilient. This is a key theme for much of the Commission’s guidance is also discussed in the updated CC19 guidance entitled “Charity reserves: building resilience”.

In the section on ‘managing financial difficulties and insolvency, CC25 explains that if charities face financial difficulties then the trustees must:

c) Insolvency

There are normally two tests of insolvency – the balance sheet test (positive net assets) and the cashflow test. The key issue is, can the organisation pay its debts as they fall due? The cash flow test is of particular importance and a charity can be insolvent even if it has positive net assets. Careful consideration is required of many factors, such as what values can be realised in time to meet debts and what assets can be used to meet liabilities. Understanding is needed of the implications of the different restricted and endowed funds held by the charity. The position for trustees of an unincorporated charity is different and the risks are usually higher.

Directors and shadow directors can be guilty of wrongful trading if they continue to trade and incur liabilities they knew or ought to have known that there was no reasonable prospect of avoiding insolvent liquidation.

Fraudulent trading is also a risk. Section 213 of the Insolvency Act provides that on the application of the liquidator of a company the Court may order that any persons who were knowingly party to carrying on the business of the company with intent to defraud creditors must make a contribution to the

Significant matters from our audit

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company’s assets. For a fraudulent trading action, intent to defraud creditors must be proved and the onus of proof is on the liquidator. There must be evidence of actual dishonesty. For an insolvent charitable company, senior management, and not just the trustees, could also be made liable for fraudulent trading. The charity should avoid entering into preferential transactions which put another party in a better position to the detriment of other creditors. The court will recognise mitigating circumstances. For example, if the directors took proper steps to minimise the potential loss to the company’s creditors.

On 28 March 2020 the government announced changes to the insolvency regime aimed to provide companies breathing space and keep trading through the COVID-19 pandemic. There will be a temporary suspension of wrongful trading provisions to remove the threat of personal liability during the pandemic, applied retrospectively for the periods 1 March 2020 to 30 September 2020 and 26 November 2020 to 30 June 2021. In addition, there is be a temporary moratorium until 30 September 2021 for companies undergoing a restructuring process so that they cannot be put into administration by creditors and will continue to be able to pay suppliers and staff. The detail and the underpinning legislation is yet to follow. However, it has been clarified that these measures do not impact the existing laws relating to matters such as fraudulent trading, transactions defrauding creditors and misfeasance.

d) Finalising the financial statements

Given the potential for rapid spreading of the virus, required disclosures will likely change over time as more information about the epidemic emerges. As a result, the trustees will need to monitor developments and ensure that they are providing up-to-date and meaningful disclosure before finalising their yearend report.

The Financial Reporting Council in their ‘Company Guidance Update March 2020 (COVID-19)’ thinks it is likely that more companies will disclose ‘material uncertainties’ to going concern in current circumstances. The impact of the coronavirus outbreak will require all entities, including charities, to reassess their financial position and their ability to continue to operate as a going concern. This may require considering a number of factors but probably key will be to update the charity’s budgets and forecasts and also to consider whether the charity might fail to comply with any external covenants.

Put simply, where boards identify possible events or scenarios, other than those with a remote probability of occurring, that could lead to failure, then these should be disclosed. Boards may take account of potential responses open to them to mitigate such events or scenarios although would need to consider the likely success of any response.

As part of our audit fieldwork we have reviewed the budgets that have been prepared for the year ended 31 March 2022 and 2023. We understand from management that they have been informed of funding of $5m per year for 5 years from The Ford Foundation to fund WIEGO and the networks. Management do not believe that there is any material uncertainty around going concern for the organisation.

We will be seeking representations that the Board has considered the forecasts and is satisfied that the Going Concern basis is appropriate.

2.2 Covid-19 and the financial statements

The measures put in place by the Government to limit the spread of Covid-19 will have a broad range of implications for all organisations and their operations, and will going forward impact on financial results.

WIEGO has been facing unexpected challenges which will impact on the charity going forward, both in its operations and financially. It is therefore important that the Financial Statement adequately disclose the impact on any significant estimates and judgements made in the financial statements. The trustees should also provide a comprehensive explanation of the challenges within the narrative reporting in the Trustees’ Report.

We have discussed the draft of the proposed additional disclosures with the charity’s management and how these fit in with the charity SORP requirements as well as the needs of the charity. However, due to the continually changing environment, the trustees will need to review and monitor these disclosures and update them as necessary before finalising the Report and Financial Statements

To assist our charity clients to identify the key reporting implications we have published a report “Coronavirus: financial reporting issues for charities” which is available on our website - https://www.crowe.com/uk/croweuk/insights/covid-19-financial-reportingcharities .

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2.3 Income recognition

The key risks in this area have been identified as follows.

We are also required to presume that there may be risks of fraud in the recognition of income in the financial statements and to conduct our audit testing accordingly.

Our testing on income was completed as outlined in our audit planning report. During our testing we have noted that management have deferred a $2m grant from The Hewlett Foundation on the basis that it is to be used in the year ended 31 March 2022. We have reviewed the grant documentation provided and have noted that the grant documentation whilst signed by WIEGO on 1 April 2020 was dated 22 March 2020 and says that the funds should be used within the period 23 March 2020 to 23 March 2022. Under the Charities SORP this income should not be deferred but should be carried forward in the restricted fund.

The accounts have been adjusted to include the grant in this year’s income.

2.4 Management override of controls

Auditing standards require us to consider as a significant audit risk areas of potential or actual management override of controls. In completing our audit we have therefore considered the following matters.

Significant accounting estimates and judgements

A revised auditing standard, ISA (UK) 540 (Revised) Auditing Accounting Estimates and Related Disclosures, effective for accounting periods commencing on or after 15 December 2019, is applicable for the current year, and required additional audit focus over management’s estimates, including undertaking separate risk assessments for both inherent and control risks. In

respect of the former, consideration is given to the estimation uncertainty, the subjectivity and the complexity of the estimate. We are also required to consider whether the disclosures made in the financial statements are reasonable.

Management have made a number of necessary significant accounting estimates and judgements which impact the financial statements. We identified the following for specific audit review:

This point is addressed in section 2.3 above.

It is important that you are satisfied that the assumptions used by management are appropriate and we will ask you to provide a written representation to us to confirm this.

Controls around journal entries and the financial reporting process

We reviewed and carried out sample testing on the charity’s controls around the processing of journal adjustments (how journals are initiated, authorised and processed) and the preparation of the annual financial statements. We also considered the risk of potential manipulation by journal entry to mask fraud.

We did not identify any instances of management override of controls or other issues from our sample testing of WIEGO journals. However, we note that journal processing can be an area of potential risk and it is good practice to include consideration of this within the overall WIEGO risk assessment.

Significant transactions outside the normal course of business

We are required to consider the impact on the financial statements if there are any significant transactions occurring outside of the normal course of the charity’s business.

No such transactions were notified to us by management, nor did any such transactions come to our attention during the course of our work.

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3. Other matters from our audit

In addition to matters relating to the key areas of accounting and audit focus as reported in Section 2, we have also noted the following matters from our audit work which we should bring to your attention.

3.1 Harvard debtor

We understand that during the year management received a final statement from Harvard covering the period June 2007 to June 2020 which stated that there was a nil balance between WIEGO and Harvard whereas WIEGO have a debtor balance owed by Harvard at the year end of $48k. The Harvard balance has formed part of the audited accounts since WIEGO’s inception. The Harvard statements are often multiple for different income streams and not always co-terminus with WIEGO’s year end.

We understand that Jacqui Fendall has gone back and checked all the transactions over the past few years and also tried to discuss this with Harvard but has been unable to determine where the difference has arisen. It has been agreed with management that the benefit to be gained of trying to go back further into the charity’s old accounting system Quickbooks is not a good use of staff time and as it is unlikely that the amount would be recovered from Harvard even if it could be proved that the amount was owing it has been agreed that this balance should be written off in the financial statements.

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4. Fraud and irregularities and our audit reporting

There has been an update to ISA (UK) 700 for accounting periods beginning on or after 15 December 2019, requiring the audit report to include an additional comment to explain to what extent the audit was considered capable of detecting irregularities, including fraud.

Irregularities are acts of omission or commission which are contrary to the prevailing laws or regulations. Fraud includes both fraudulent financial reporting and misstatements resulting from misappropriation of assets.

The primary responsibility for the prevention and detection of both irregularities and fraud rests with the directors and management of the organisation. It is important that management, with oversight of those charged with governance, place a strong emphasis on fraud prevention and fraud deterrence. This involves a commitment to creating a culture of honest and ethical behaviours which can be reinforced by an active oversight by those charged with governance.

Our responsibility under ISAs (UK) is to obtain reasonable assurance that the financial statements taken as a whole are free from material misstatement, whether caused by fraud or error. The addition this year to our reporting requirements placed increased emphasis on our understanding of the risks to WIEGO from fraud and irregularities and our audit included discussions with management to obtain their assessment of the risk that fraud may cause a significant account balance to contain a material misstatement, as well as other procedures to obtain sufficient appropriate audit evidence.

Owing to the inherent limitations of an audit, there is an unavoidable risk that some material misstatements of the financial statements may not be detected even though the audit is properly planned and performed in accordance with the ISAs (UK).

WIEGO has systems in place for review and authorisation of expenditure and journals by management, including dual authorisation and segregation of duties between those posting transactions and those approving payments.

We obtained an understanding of the legal and regulatory frameworks within which the charity and group operates, focusing on those laws and regulations that have a direct effect on the determination of material amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. The laws and regulations we considered

in this context were the Charities Act 2011 together with the Charities SORP (FRS102). We assessed the required compliance with these laws and regulations as part of our audit procedures on the related financial statement items.

In addition, we considered provisions of other laws and regulations that do not have a direct effect on the financial statements but compliance with which might be fundamental to the charity’s ability to operate or to avoid a material penalty. We also considered the opportunities and incentives that may exist within the charity and the group for fraud. The laws and regulations we considered in this context for the UK operations were those contained with the Charities Act.

We identified the greatest risk of material impact on the financial statements from irregularities, including fraud, to be within the timing of recognition of income and the override of controls by management. Our audit procedures to respond to these risks included enquiries of management about their own identification and assessment of the risks of irregularities, sample testing on the posting of journals, reviewing accounting estimates for biases, reviewing regulatory correspondence with the Charity Commission, and reading minutes of meetings of those charged with governance.

In our Audit Planning Report, we explained that the responsibility for safeguarding the assets and for the prevention and detection of error and irregularities, including fraud and non-compliance with law or regulations rests with the directors of WIEGO.

In accordance with International Auditing Standards, we planned our audit so that we have a reasonable expectation of detecting material misstatements in the financial statements or accounting records (including any material misstatements resulting from fraud, error or non-compliance with law or regulations).

However, no internal control structure, no matter how effective, can eliminate the possibility that errors or irregularities may occur and remain undetected. In addition, because we use selective testing in our audit, we cannot guarantee that errors or irregularities, if present, will be detected. Accordingly, our audit should not be relied upon to disclose all such misstatements or frauds, errors or instances of non-compliance as may exist.

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Fraud and irregularities and our audit reporting

As part of our audit procedures we made enquiries of management to obtain their assessment of the risk that fraud may cause a significant account balance to contain a material misstatement. Usually fraud in the charity sector is not carried out by falsifying the financial statements. Falsifying statutory financial statements usually provides little financial benefit, as compared to say a plc where showing a higher profit could lead to artificial share prices or unearned bonuses. However, falsifying financial statements can be used to permit a fraud or to avoid detection. As a generality, charities represented by its management and its trustees do not actively try to falsify financial statements as there are not the same incentives to do so. In the charity world fraud is usually carried out through misappropriation or theft.

We have reviewed and discussed the accounting and internal controls systems management has put in place to address these risks and to prevent and detect error. However, we emphasise that the directors, Finance Committee and management should ensure that these matters are considered and reviewed on a regular basis.

We have included the following statements in the letter of representation which we require from the directors when the financial statements are approved.

We draw your attention to bullet point 2 above which presupposes that an assessment has been made. We have not been made aware of any actual or potential frauds which could affect the 2021 financial statements, or in the period since the previous year end.

We emphasise that this section is provided to explain our approach to fraud and error, but the responsibility to make and consider your own assessment rests with yourselves.

The trustees should be aware that the Charity Commission provides guidance (updated in October 2019) on how to protect your charity from fraud including information about fraud, how to spot it and what you can do to protect against it - https://www.gov.uk/guidance/protect-your-charity-from-fraud.

The Charity Commission’s first guiding principle recognises that fraud will always happen. It is therefore important that, as part of setting their overall risk appetite, the directors consider fraud within their tolerance for the risks associated with the management of the organisation’s (and group’s) funds. The development and continued assurance of a robust counter fraud control framework should then contribute to the organisation matching the risk appetite and tolerance agreed by the directors.

We have shared with management our guidance and a framework on conducting fraud risk assessments. A fraud risk assessment is an objective review of the fraud risks facing an organisation to ensure they are fully identified and understood. This includes ensuring:

Good practice suggests that to be most effective the risk assessment should be undertaken at a number of levels within the organisation:

Any fraud risk assessment should not be seen as a standalone exercise but rather an ongoing process that is refreshed on a regular basis. Carrying out the fraud risk assessment may reveal instances of actual or suspected fraud.

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Should this happen next steps will be determined on circumstances, the existing control framework (including any response plan(s)), and in consultation with the key members of the organisation’s management team.

Considering risks of fraud

There is evidence that during times of economic instability there is an increased risk of fraud. This may be because resource constraints can reduce internal controls and over sight and also because individuals facing hardship may be more likely to consider fraudulent practices.

The following provides further information on the three kinds of fraud that charities such as WIEGO should consider.

a) Frauds of extraction

This is where funds or assets in possession of the charity are misappropriated. Such frauds can involve own staff, intermediaries or partner organisations since they require assets that are already in the possession of the entity being extracted fraudulently. This could be by false invoices, overcharging or making unauthorised grant payments.

Essentially such frauds are carried out due to weaknesses in physical controls over assets and system weaknesses in the purchases, creditors and payments cycle. The cycle can be evaluated by considering questions such as who authorises incurring a liability and making a payment. On what evidence? Who records liabilities and payments? Who pays them and who checks them?

The close monitoring of management accounts, ledger entries and strict budgetary controls are also generally seen as an effective way of detecting and deterring frauds in this area.

Staff should be made aware of the increasing use of mandate fraud. This is where when the fraudster gets the organisation to change a direct debit, standing order or bank transfer mandate by purporting to be a supplier or organisation to which the charity make regular payments.

Insufficient due diligence around requests to amend supplier or payroll details has led to payments to unauthorised individuals so sufficient checks in these areas is of increasing importance.

Some charities have also been victims of what is being termed CEO fraud, although it does not involve the CEO. In this case cyber criminals spoof

company email accounts and impersonate executives to try and fool an employee in accounting or HR into executing unauthorised wire transfers or sending out confidential information.

This type of phishing scam is a sophisticated scam targeting businesses working with foreign suppliers and/or businesses that regularly perform wire transfer payments. The scam is carried out by compromising legitimate business e-mail accounts through social engineering or computer intrusion techniques to conduct unauthorised transfers of funds. Action Fraud, the UK’s national fraud and cyber-crime reporting centre has reported an increase in fraud and scams relating to COVID-19, including a rise in phishing emails where the fraudster attempts to trick people into opening malicious attachments which could lead to fraudsters stealing people’s personal information, email logins and passwords, and banking details.

Charities should therefore ensure that they reiterate their procedures to employees and raise awareness of fraud preventions across their organisations. All employees should exercise real scepticism and not make any payments which are not properly supported and outside the normal payment mechanisms. To paraphrase Action Fraud’s recommendations, which are particularly significant as staff are working remotely and some working different hours in order to manage the challenges of working from home:

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All employees should exercise real scepticism and not make any payments which are not properly supported and / or outside the normal payment mechanisms.

b) Backhanders and inducements

There is also an inherent risk that individuals who are able to authorise expenditure or influence the selection of suppliers can receive inducements to select one supplier over the other. This risk can be mitigated by robust supplier selection and tendering procedures.

There is also the risk that once a donation of money or aid has been authorised and released in the UK, this could be diverted, probably into the underground economy, as a result of inducements paid in the destination country. Charities should be aware of the requirements and extent of the UK Bribery Act 2010, as this extends their liability to actions beyond the shores of the UK and to cover the actions of their intermediaries and agents.

Organisations are required to put in place proportionate measures to prevent backhanders and inducements from being paid, either by their workers, agents or intermediaries or to their workers, agents or intermediaries.

c) Frauds of diversion

This is where income or other assets due to WIEGO are diverted before they are entered into the accounting records or control data. Essentially, it is easy to check what is there but very difficult to establish that it is all there. Therefore, ensuring the completeness of income provided to a charity becomes difficult.

It is important to consider the different income streams and when and how they are received. So income received directly into the charity’s bank account will be a lower risk than income being received by home based fundraisers.

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Fraud and irregularities and our audit reporting

5. Managing in uncertain times

Threats arising from certain crises can be existential and circumstances are unprecedented and the scale and impact of risks and challenges make them different to routine challenges. For example, with the current pandemic the speed at which events unfold, change and impact does not allow time to interpret risks using the usual approaches. The only certainty is that there will be even more change in the future and that this will continue to impact in a number of ways many of which will be new and unprecedented. This means that whilst the immediate need may be issues such as protecting people and survival of the organisation there will be need to consider both the near term as organisations develop coping and stabilisation strategies and also longerterm strategies to optimise their position post recovery.

Many organisations learned how to adapt and manage turbulent times during the downturn in 2008 to 2009. There was recognition that emotional stress had to be factored in and this is even more important now.

The continued uncertainty and volatility of income, instability in markets along with new cost considerations has dramatically increased the exposure to liquidity risk; underlining how vital it is to have robust assumptions behind forecasts. When it is unclear how long a cash crisis may last it is important to consider needs for both now and later. When times get hard charities that have free reserves will need to consider if, when and how they use them. How much to use reserves, what for and when and how will need careful consideration.

The extent of uncertainty differs, at one end many of the perceived unknowns are in fact “knowable” and at the other there can be massive almost total uncertainty. In between lies the more common state of uncertainty where there are a number of possible alternatives that can be planned for.

Strategy must be able to deal with uncertainty and at a time when predicting the probable is difficult to say the least, strategies and tactics have to be developed on the premise that several different outcomes are possible. If there is total uncertainty which can happen when many issues interact it becomes virtually impossible to predict or even identify all the possible outcomes. In such cases strategy and planning is focused on recognising that this stage of total uncertainty is often transitory and that whilst firefighting and

dealing with the present it is also important to try to identify triggers and trends and be ready to act decisively at the right time.

In times of existential threats there is need to review and perhaps change plans at very short notice – sometimes daily. Whilst the short term is important it is also important to consider the longer term and to think hard indirect and direct implications of unfolding events. Thinking both beyond the typical planning horizon and about matters that are unfolding in real time is vital.to develop action plans for different scenarios to monitoring trigger points. This make it possible for the organisation to decide when plan A or plan B needs to be implemented. For example, ‘if income looks like it is going to drop by X we will do Y…’

A focus on high impact risk is important, but one should not forget how a lower significance risk can escalate to a very high impact risk because of risk dependencies. An isolated concentration on value at risk can sometimes result in not spotting ‘risk contagion’ – in other words where one low impact risk leads to another and another so that the cumulative impact is catastrophic. Many studies have shown that most business failures are the result of a series of small, linked events rather than a single large event. If organisations only look at the big risks they can often end up lethally illprepared to face the interaction of separate adverse events.

Since risks invariably interact it is important to think about them in clusters rather than individual risks. This is particularly relevant in times of uncertainty. Some risks are obvious as possibly having a direct and often immediate impact whilst others have and indirect impact and it is important not to dismiss these.

Traditional risk registers and heat maps have less relevance in times of great uncertainty and it is important for decision makers to carefully consider implications and actions and what estimates and assumptions are being used, their limitations and how they might need to change. There needs to be discussion about triggers and early warnings, how actions need to be prioritised, what risks can be mitigated, which need to be accepted and how they will be managed.

Many think that, in times of grave uncertainty where the risks are too difficult to identify, risk management has little value. They refer to the unknown

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Managing in uncertain times

unknowns but in reality there are many known unknowns and effective risk management helps organisations manage the known unknowns whilst recognising that there are unknown unknowns. It also puts organisations into a better position to manage the unknown when it becomes known and should also help earlier identification of direct and indirect risks.

There is always benefit in taking a good hard look at how efficiently activities are carried out and services are delivered. Ways of working have necessarily changed and will continue to evolve. The question is are leaders acting as catalysts for change when it is needed?

Organisations often do all these things but seem to be averse to looking at the fundamental business model and considering how fit for purpose it is. As income streams change and cost structures evolve it is important to consider whether the fundamental operating model can be improved. Strategic alliances, collaborative working and mergers need to be on the agenda. There are no stereotype answers but try and avoid dismissing things based on previous and sometimes biased analyses. New times require new responses. Organisations need to avoid knee jerk reactions whilst recognising that change is inevitable. It is important to act decisively balancing the need to consider hypotheses and options with the urgency that may be required. There is a need to ensure that the response is flexible enough and can be adapted as the environment changes whilst also recognising that responses may need to be urgent and immediate. There are a number of steps before launching into responses. Simplistically this can be broken into three key areas:

interpretation of the choices that are available and the resources needed to make them.

Taking action – As the organisation implements its plan and tactics there will be need to have in place a strong change enablement framework that considers both the organisational and people transitions that may be necessary. There is a need to remain nimble and flexible and recognise that the first two stages may not have come up with the right answers and that the options and actions may need to change accordingly. As organisations have their resilience tested they will focus on what is nice to have and what they must have. Areas seen as discretionary spend such as training, marketing and service development are often the first to be cut but it is important not to forget the importance of ensuring that organisations are well positioned for the period of recovery and to recognise that there will be yet another new normal.

As difficult as it may seem during a crisis – situations improve and the organisations that will be best placed are those that make the right decisions through the periods of uncertainty. The key is to think carefully about the future and be ready to face challenges and respond to the opportunities as they arise.

More information can be found on our website https://www.crowe.com/uk/croweuk/insights/non-profits-managing-inuncertain-times .

Early and quick-thinking stage – This requires identifying the right people to think about the key uncertainties that can impact the organisation. We have seen organisations set up effective “nerve centres” that consider what is needed to keep on track. Remember to consider direct and indirect drivers and short and long term implications. Avoid group think and be ready to look beyond the obvious identifying both risks and opportunities.

Consider the strategic choices – This requires revisiting earlier strategic plans and tactics. Consider the different scenarios and the strategic choices and options for action. Are the right structures, resources and procedures in place to first make the right choices and then to capitalise on them? There need to be triggers for actions as scenarios become reality and ways of identifying warning signs and alerts. This stage requires analyses and

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Managing in uncertain times

6. Controls in remote working and into the new normal

As set out in our Audit Planning Report, the outbreak of Covid-19 caused significant disruption to most organisations, with charities being no exception. As auditors, we are required to consider the changes to the control environment insofar as this impacted on the key controls over significant audit risk areas or where the changes created new significant risks of material misstatement in the financial statements.

As part of our audit we have gained an understanding of how WIEGO’s control environment has changed over time and considered the impacts of those changes. This was considered over three distinct phases:

  1. Transition to a remote environment at pace;

  2. Operating in a remote environment; and

  3. Establishing business as usual in the new normal.

Two of these involved looking back at what has been done and the last is forward looking and about understanding what the control environment can and should look like in the months and years ahead.

With this framework in mind we asked management to provide us with details of how systems and controls have developed as a result of the move to remote working across the following areas:

We reviewed the assessment performed by management and revisited our notes on the charity’s systems and processes relevant to the audit, including performing walkthroughs on processes and controls over significant audit risk areas.

Management identified minimal changes to the established control processes.

Many organisations continue to adapt to the new working environment, and further adaptation will be needed as we move back to a more mixed environment, combining remote and in person working. We recommend structured reporting of changes of operational controls to Directors, to allow appropriate oversight of the control environment, and that this is considered alongside the organisational risk register to ensure consistency.

Controls in remote working and into the new normal

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Appendix 1 - Systems and controls issues

We have set out below certain potential improvements to the charity’s processes and controls which we noted during our audit work and which we believe merit being reported to you.

Our evaluation of the systems of control at WIEGO was carried out for the purposes of our audit and accordingly it is not intended to be a comprehensive review of your business processes. It would not necessarily reveal all weaknesses in accounting practice or internal controls which a special investigation might highlight, nor irregularities or errors not material in relation to the financial statements.

In order to provide you with a clearer picture of the significance of issues raised, we have graded the issues raised by significance/priority before any corrective actions are taken:

High These findings are significant and require urgent action. (0 comments in this category)
Medium These findings are of a less urgent nature, but still require reasonably prompt action. (0 comments in this category)
Low These findings merit attention within an agreed timescale. (0 comments in this category)

We are pleased to report that we have no systems or controls issues to bring to your attention.

Systems and controls issues

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Appendix 2 - Reporting audit adjustments

International Standards on Auditing (UK) require that we report to you all misstatements which we identified as a result of the audit process but which were not adjusted by management, unless those matters are clearly trivial in size or nature.

Our audit approach is based on consideration of audit materiality as explained in section 1 of this report. We determine materiality for the purposes of the charity’s statutory reporting by our judgement as to what adjustments would influence the readers’ perceptions of the financial statements. We do not therefore seek to review all immaterial amounts.

For the purpose of reporting non-trivial items identified as a result of our audit work which have not been adjusted in the financial statements we set out in our Audit Planning Report that we would report unadjusted misstatements greater than $3,900 unless they are qualitatively material at a lower amount.

We have reported in section 2 above significant matters from our audit and the potential financial impact. In addition to these items we identified certain other items which have not been adjusted in the draft financial statements. Both the potential adjustment listed below were brought to our attention by the finance team after the first draft accounts had been produced for audit.

We have summarised below the potential overall impact of these items on the financial statements.

----- Start of picture text -----
Net income Assets Liabilities Opening reserves
increase /(decrease) increase /(decrease) increase /(decrease)
$ $ $ $
Net results / funds per financial statements presented to the 4,344,364
trustees
To accrue for post year end invoice which relates to 2020/21 5,000 5,000
To account for returned payment (8,041) 8,041
Total potential adjustments (3,041) 5,000 8,041
Potential revised results / funds per the financial statements 4,341,323
----- End of picture text -----

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Reporting audit adjustments

Appendix 3 - External developments

We have summarised below some of the developments and changes in the charity sector over the recent period which we believe may be of interest and relevant to you. Please note that this information is provided as a summary only and that you should seek further advice if you believe that you have any specific related issues or intend to take or not take action based on any of the comments below.

We issue a regular technical briefing for charities by email. If you would like to receive this please email your details to nonprofits@crowecw.co.uk . Alternatively, these briefings are available in the resource library on our website.

Governance

Charity Commission new “5-minute guides”

The Charity Commission in November 2020 launched a new set of simple, easy to understand guides to help trustees to access the information they need.

The Commission stresses that whilst the guides may be basic, they are designed to serve the needs of experienced trustees as well as those new to the role. It says that years of experience cannot immunise even the very best trustees from running into questions or problems.

Helen Stephenson CBE, Chief Executive of the Charity Commission, commented “ Our 5-minute guides are designed with real trustees and real situations in mind. They recognise that good governance is not a bureaucratic detail – it underpins the delivery of a charity’s purposes to the high standards expected by the public – and is all the more important in the midst of this pandemic which is impacting civil society so heavily. I hope trustees, both new and experienced, read and use them to help them fulfil their charity’s purpose for the public benefit.

The guides explain the basics of:

 what to file with the Commission and what support is available

Coronavirus (COVID-19) guidance for the charity sector

The Charity Commission has published its responses to the most commonly asked questions about running charities during the COVID-19 outbreak and have provided links to various guidance, both from the Commission and other sources. The initial guidance issued in April has been regularly updated with the latest update being published in November 2020.

The Commission recognises that charities will be concerned about what to do during the coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak and have sought to assure charities that their approach to regulation during this uncertain period will be as flexible and pragmatic as possible in the public interest.

They also note that trustees need to be aware of and think about the wider or longer impact of their decisions on their charity. The guidance is split into 16 key areas which include:

The guidance can be found on the gov.uk website - https://www.gov.uk/guidance/coronavirus-covid-19-guidance-for-the-charitysector#contents .

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External developments

Charity Commission: “Regulating in the public interest”

For the Charity Commission increasing resilience in the charity sector means bringing the public interest to the fore. The Commission has set out to be more responsive and inclusive in the way it listens and responds to different parts of the public, including volunteers and charity supporters, up and down the country.

As part of this the Commission has over the past two years conducted several research studies among the public and charity trustees. In May 2020 the Commission, with Populus, published a report which draws together the main findings of that research to offer a better understanding of the public in whose interest the Charity Commission regulates, of the views of trustees and of the contemporary world in which everyone must operate.

The report recognises that, while there are distinct groups within public opinion based on different perspectives, certain expectations about charities transcend those differences, expectations which, because they are held by such large numbers of people across the population, are most important in defining the relationship between charities and public trust. These shared expectations are:

  1. That a high proportion of charities’ money is used for charitable activity

  2. That charities are making the impact they promise to make

  3. That the way they go about making that impact is consistent with the spirit of ‘charity’

  4. That all charities show a collective responsibility to each other in adhering to the above

The report looks at these expectations in more detail and also at how well charities are meeting the expectations. The report is available on the gov.uk website

https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/ attachment_data/file/891221/Regulating_in_the_public_interest_research_rep ort.pdf

Going concern – what should Boards be considering

Trustees of charities, either as directors of incorporated charities or as Trustees of unincorporated charities, have a legal responsibility to ensure that the charity operates as a going concern and is able to meet its liabilities as they fall due. While this is a continuing responsibility, it is formalised each year in the preparation of the charity’s annual report and financial statements.

Many charities will have experienced significant changes to their operating environment as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic and this will require Trustees to reassess their financial position and the ability of their charity to continue to operate as a going concern. This may require considering a number of factors, including updating the charity’s budgets and forecasts, and should cover any changes up to the date of sign off of the financial statements. Where Trustees identify possible events or scenarios, other than those with a remote probability of occurring, that could lead to failure, then these should be disclosed in the financial statements.

The Charity Commission guidance “Managing financial difficulties & insolvency in charities” (CC12) stresses the importance for “a Trustee body to have a good knowledge and understanding of the charity and its finances so that, as far as possible, the continued viability of the charity and its charitable activities can be assured.”. This is a theme that runs through the Charity Commission’s updates and alerts including its guidance on whether charities can use reserves and restricted funds to help the charity through the crisis.

To assist Trustees to meet their responsibilities in relation to going concern, we have have prepared a series of questions Trustees should be considering together with a checklist of the disclosure requirements. A copy of this checklist can be obtained here: https://www.crowe.com/uk/croweuk/insights/charities-going-concern

Fundraising Regulator COVID-19 - Fundraising key principles guidance

In response to the COVID-19 emergency the Fundraising Regulator has published, and subsequently updated, guidance which aims to support charities and other fundraising organisations to be able to return to fundraising activities in a responsible way.

The guidance sets out a framework to aid good decision making and ensure responsible fundraising. It is intended to supplement existing government

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guidance and highlights the key issues and areas that fundraising organisations need to consider as they plan their return to fundraising.

The guidance covers

The guidance notes that it is the responsibility of individual organisations to apply the guidance in their fundraising activity so that the safety and wellbeing of fundraisers and the public are protected. Part of acting responsibly will also include fundraising organisations properly documenting their decisions, undertaking risk assessments, and being prepared to explain and justify these if necessary.

The full guidance can be seen on the Fundraising Regulator website - Coronavirus (COVID 19): Fundraising key principles guidance | Fundraising Regulator .

Compliance

Reporting serious incidents to the Charity Commission

The Charity Commission has recently updated its guidance on Serious Incident Reporting, reflecting the extremely demanding and ever-changing challenges arising from the coronavirus pandemic.

The update guidance includes supplementary examples to aid Trustees in their decision making as to whether an incident that is related to the pandemic is reportable.

The guidance can be obtained from the Gov.uk website here - https://www.gov.uk/guidance/reporting-serious-incidents-to-the-charitycommission-during-the-coronavirus-pandemic

Online Register of Charities – new and improving

In September 2020 the Charity Commission launched a new version of the online register of charities to make more information about individual charities available at the click of a button.

Each charity’s register entry will now display more clearly whether the charity has been subject to regulatory action or is of ongoing concern. And following changes to the annual return, charities’ entries will now show how many staff members receive pay packages of £60,000 and above. It also notes where trustees are remunerated for their work, and lists the policies a charity has in place, from safeguarding to conflicts of interest and investments.

The new register display is also designed with the needs of charities in mind. Improved functionality makes it easier for Trustees to access and update their own charity’s information with the Commission.

The Commission are encouraging the public, charities, and those with an interest in the sector, to use the new register and let the Commission know what is working and what could be improved. A feedback form has been provided so users can pass comment back to the Commission.

The register can be accessed on the government website https://register-ofcharities.charitycommission.gov.uk/

UK charity sector’s use of tracking technologies

A group of 38 academics and privacy campaigners have called on charities to remove advertising trackers from their most sensitive web pages.

In an open letter to the UK charity sector they have expressed their extreme concern with the UK charity sector’s use of tracking technologies, specifically those belonging to data brokers and programmatic advertising platforms.

The letter refers to the report published by ProPrivacy in September 2020 highlighting the widespread use of programmatic advertising in the charity sector and the potential impact this could be having on the privacy of users of charity websites. The research found that many charity pages dealing with extremely sensitive issues such as mental health, debt, end-of-life care, and disability contained various trackers belonging to AdTech services, including data brokers.

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The letter calls on top charities in the UK to conduct audits of their websites for third-party elements belonging to those in the AdTech space and to exclude them entirely from any support or advice pages dealing with sensitive topics.

Financial and other reporting

Consultation on Responsible Investment Guidance

The Charity Commission has issued draft revised guidance on responsible investment. This is to understand if the guidance will provide greater clarity about the discretion trustees have to make responsible investments, and reassure trustees that they can decide to adopt a responsible investment policy in most circumstances. The consultation questions seek to test the clarity of the new guidance and its treatment of responsible investment.

This follows a listening exercise undertaken by the regulator last year, which found that the way responsible investment is outlined in its current guidance is not giving some trustees sufficient confidence that they can consider, or that the Commission supports, this approach to investment.

The consultation closes on 20 May 2021 with the final updated responsible investments guidance expected this summer.

The consultation can be seen on the Charity Commission website - https://www.gov.uk/government/consultations/charity-responsible-investmentguidance

Coronavirus: financial reporting issues for Charities

It is difficult to predict the financial or operational implications of the outbreak of COVID-19 on the UK economy or the organisations which operate within it.

The measures put in place by the government to limit the spread of the virus have been changing on a regular basis. It is expected, at least in the shorter term, that the limiting of the movement of people by restricting flights and other travel, cancelling events, and closing venues, various business activities and schools will continue and may even increase.

The government has also implemented a number of business support schemes, including the staff furlough scheme (CJRS), some of which have been available to charities and / or their trading subsidiaries depending on their circumstances. This support continues to change as do the details of

entitlement and how any claims will be settled. However, if a charity has been able to benefit from any of these support schemes Trustees will need to determine when and how any such benefit should be reported in the financial statements.

All of these developments and measures may have a broad range of implications for charities. How the impact on individual charities will depend on a number of factors including the charity’s key sources of income, areas of charitable activity, staffing models, contractual relationships, the nature of the charity’s assets and liabilities and the charity’s underlying funds structure.

Charity Trustees will already be facing unexpected challenges to their charities and it will be important that these are reflected into the necessary decisions that have to be made when reporting on the charity’s activities and financial position.

We have produced guidance which considers the potential impact of the COVID-19 (coronavirus) on the yet to be published annual reports and financial statements of charities.

The key areas of focus of the guidance are as follows, being mindful that charities are diverse in their activities and their income generation and therefore, there may be some areas of focus not specifically addressed.

Management and Trustees will need to carefully consider the impact of coronavirus on the charity’s report and financial statements to ensure that these continue to reflect the financial activities and position of the charity in accordance with the Charities SORP.

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The full report can be found on our website -

https://www.crowe.com/uk/croweuk/insights/covid-19-financial-reportingcharities.

Fundraising reporting requirements guidance

The Fundraising Regulator in September 2020 issued additional guidance on the Fundraising reporting requirements guidance under the Charities (Protection and Social Investment) Act 2016.

This Act requires charities to provide statements in their annual report on key aspects of charities’ fundraising activity including the approach taken, regulation, complaint numbers and how the charity ensures vulnerable people are protected. This reporting is a legal requirement for all charities where their gross income is over £1 million in a year.

In June 2020 the Regulator conducted a second review of a sample of charity’s annual reports and found that only 21% of reports included a statement on all of the Act’s requirements and 15% reported on none of them. Of particular concern, many charities did not report on what they are doing to protect vulnerable people and the public when fundraising.

It is ultimately the responsibility of Trustees to ensure compliance with the Act. The report pulls together advice on how can a charity report against the requirements and how Trustees might approach the writing of their charity’s statement.

The full guidance can be seen on the Fundraising Regulator website https://www.fundraisingregulator.org.uk/more-from-us/resources/charities-act2016-fundraising-reporting-requirements-guidance .

New guidance for charities carrying out public fundraising and retail

As part of Step 2 of the Government’s coronavirus roadmap out of locked, the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport announced that public fundraising is permitted to return from 12 April 2021, which includes door-todoor, street and private site fundraising.

A statement has been published by the Fundraising Regulator and the Chartered Institute of Fundraising which links to updated guidance to assist charities and fundraising organisations as they resume these activities.

The updated guidance can be found here: https://www.fundraisingregulator.org.uk/guidance/coronavirus

Step 2 of the roadmap also allows for the reopening of charity shops, and the Charity Retail Association has updated its Covid-19 operation guidance to include new information on issues such as spot checks and ventilation,

Streamlined Energy and Carbon Reporting (SECR) / SORP Update Bulletin 5

SECR is a mandatory reporting requirement for all large companies, including charities, other non-profits and LLPs, which is designed to:

Exemption is available for entities with under 40,000 kWh of emissions per year. There is also a ‘seriously prejudicial’ exemption, although this is expected to be used in exceptional circumstances only, for example in the lead up to a major restructuring or acquisition.

If financial reporting is on a group basis, reporting of emissions will also be on a group basis, unless any of the subsidiaries fall under the 40,000 kWh per year threshold, in which case their figures can be excluded.

Reporting starts with periods commencing on or after 1 April 2019. So for companies reporting on a standard financial year the first reports affected will be for the year ended 31 March 2020.

We have summarised information in the regulations and accompanying guidance and added our own insights to aid those preparing and reviewing the new disclosures, which can be found on our website - https://www.crowe.com/uk/croweuk/insights/streamlined-energy-and-carbonreporting.

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Pension liabilities – RPI or CPI

For a number of years, the question as to whether pension increases should be based on the Retail Price Index (RPI) or the Consumer Price Index (CPI) has caused a high amount of uncertainty for pension schemes. RPI is the oldest measure of inflation in the UK, introduced in 1956, and is widely used across the economy and in financial contracts. However, there are a number of shortcomings which has meant that at times the index has over or under estimated the rate of inflation.

The CPI was introduced in 1997 and does not suffer from the same shortcomings as RPI, and in 2003 the government set the CPI as the basis for the Bank of England’s inflation target. However, the CPI does not include a measure of owner-occupiers’ housing costs. In 2013 CPIH was introduced to address this issue.

In March 2019, the UK Statistics Authority made a recommendation to the Chancellor to address the shortcomings in the RPI, and a consultation was published in March 2020 setting out HM Treasury and the UK Statistics Authority’s intention to bring the two indices together by aligning RPI with CPIH.

Many pension schemes, depending on the specific scheme rules, already provide pension increases on a CPI basis. However, there are other areas which may be impacted by any changes, such as investments linked to RPI. The Association of British Insurers estimates the potential impact of the proposed alignment to be a £96bn to £122bn reduction in the value of indexlinked gilts.

The consultation closed on 21 August 2020 and a response was issued by the UK Statistics Authority and HM Treasury on 25 November 2020. The summary conclusion is that, while the Chancellor has announced that he sees the statistical arguments of the Authority’s intended approach to reform, in order to minimise the impact of reform on the holders of index-linked gilts he will be unable to offer his consent to the implementation of such a proposal before the maturity of the final specific index-linked gilt in 2030.

High Court rules on GMP equalisation of transfers

A new ruling issued on 20 November by the High Court means that trustees of defined benefit (DB) pension schemes must revisit and equalise guaranteed minimum pensions (GMP) for historic transfers. The new judgement ruled that

Lloyds Banking Group pension scheme trustees are legally responsible for equalising the GMPs for the employees who transferred out of one of its DB pension schemes.

The ruling means that organisations should revisit historic cash equivalent transfer values (CETV) that were previously not equalised, and top up where necessary. Unlike the previous ruling, no time bar applies which means that schemes are unable to rely on provisions within the rules that would normally limit claims to a six year period.

A copy of the judgement can be seen here: https://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2020/3135.html

Taxation

New HMRC guidance on claiming Gift Aid on Waived Refunds and Loan Repayments

HMRC has issued guidance confirming that Gift Aid can be claimed on Waived Refunds and Loan Repayments. Previously a waiver of debt was not regarded as permissible for Gift Aid, without funds being returned to a donor first, as Gift Aid requires a “payment of a sum of money”.

In response to the cancellation of many charity events as a result of COVID19, HMRC introduced a temporary concession in April 2020 that allowed donors to convert their tickets to donations that could have Gift Aid applied.

HMRC has now confirmed that it will be making this change in view permanent, so that any such waivers of refunds, including waivers of loans to charities, can count as donations to which Gift Aid can apply, provided the agreement to waive the loan/right to a refund is clear and irrevocable.

The guidance can be seen here:

https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/charities-detailed-guidancenotes/chapter-3-gift-aid#chapter-345-claiming-gift-aid-on-waived-refunds-andloan-repayments

VAT - INGOs: VAT implications for funding and grants

We have for some years now been ensuring that our clients are aware that, under a concession, there is a long-standing arrangement between HMRC and the Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO). This means

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that contracts with overseas governments, paid for by FCDO, are viewed under this concession as FCDO procuring and paying for services provided to an overseas customer by UK suppliers. The supplies are treated as outside the scope of UK VAT and also allow VAT on associated costs to be recovered in full. These contracts have also enhanced charities’ overhead recovery on general expenditure as well.

Recent guidance issued by HMRC might impact your organisations, in particular charities who are involved with:

There has been much correspondence with HMRC in respect of the VAT treatment of humanitarian and associated funding, including FCDO funding and UK Global Challenges Research Funding (GCRF).

The main findings are summarised on our website - https://www.crowe.com/uk/croweuk/insights/vat-ingos.

VAT - Extra payments from local authorities to care providers

We are aware that local authorities are making extra payments to care providers as a result of the COVID-19 outbreak. This is clearly good news for the sector but how should the extra be treated from a VAT perspective and what, if any effect, does this have on VAT recovery?

Treatment of Income

The VAT treatment applicable to income received will depend on whether the payment is structured as extra consideration for the supply of services or as a grant.

Treatment of Expenditure

Further funding by way of grant does not change the nature or value of the services provided under the contract and so VAT recovery would not be affected. However, under the standard method of partial exemption, where the payment is extra consideration under a contract the VAT recovery of overhead costs would be increased if the contract was taxable but reduced if it is exempt.

https://www.crowe.com/uk/croweuk/insights/payment-care-providers

VAT - HMRC issues update on zero rated online advertising

HMRC has released its guidance covering the VAT treatment of digital advertising services to charities in Business Brief 13 (2020).

In this guidance HMRC has also stated that ‘location services’ can be treated as zero rated, where previously it has considered these to be standard rated on the basis that the adverts were directly targeted to individuals. This is good news for the charities that acquire services from suppliers such as Facebook and GoogleAds

HMRC has recently reviewed its policy in relation to the application of the zero rate relief to digital advertising provided to charities. In HMRC’s last correspondence with the Charity Tax Group, HMRC conceded that VAT relief could apply to a number of digital advertising services on the basis that the advertising processes involve the targeting of aggregated audiences and not individuals. In Brief 12 (2020) ‘location advertising’ is clearly on the list of services capable of being zero-rated when supplied to a charity.

Some charities have accounted for reverse charge VAT on invoices received covering ALL digital advertising services acquired from companies outside of the UK (e.g. Facebook) and UK based providers have applied UK VAT to these services. Now that HMRC has released the finalised guidance it is possible to recover the overpaid VAT, as the only supplies that should have been subject to a standard rated reverse charge are:

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 natural hits

Charities who have accounted for VAT under the reverse charge on digital advertising should review the services received to quantify a claim to be made directly to HMRC. Where suppliers are based in the UK, charities should approach the suppliers to seek credit for any VAT that has been incorrectly charged.

In both of the above cases, overpaid or overcharged VAT should be claimed going back the statutory four years. Crowe can assist with identifying potential claims of overpaid VAT for the last four years and in submitting those claims to HMRC and/ or suppliers.

VAT - Changes to COVID-19 VAT measures

The Chancellor recently announced two VAT measures as part of the ongoing COVID-19 support package. The first is the extension of the reduced rate of VAT applicable to the hospitality and tourism sectors, until 31 March 2021. The second measure is an extension to the time by when organisations have to settle the VAT payments they deferred earlier this year.

Extension to the reduced VAT rate for hospitality and tourism sector

In July 2020, the government introduced a temporary 5% VAT rate that is still in effect today. This reduced rate applies to food and non-alcoholic drinks served in restaurants, cafes, pubs and similar venues. It also applies to takeaway orders of hot food and hot, non-alcoholic drinks.

Supplies of hotel and holiday accommodation and entry to attractions also qualify for the reduced 5% rate of VAT. Hotels, bed and breakfasts and campsites are able to benefit from this when people stay with them while theme parks, zoos and cinemas will enjoy a lower rate of VAT on their entry fees. Our original client alert is available here.

The recent announcement extends the period of time over when the temporary 5% reduced VAT rate applies to 30 September 2021, a near ninemonth extension. The rate will then increase to 12.5% until 30 April 2022.

While the temporary reduced rate was a welcome development for many organisations, it did give rise to system and practical challenges for organisations in ensuring that they could maximise the benefits of the VAT savings.

Further deferral to the due date for paying deferred VAT

In March 2020 the government announced an immediate deferral of VAT payments falling due between 20 March 2020 and 30 June 2020. All organisations were able to automatically defer the VAT payments due to be made between these dates until 31 March 2021. Our original alert is available here.

Today’s announcement introduced a New Payment Scheme, whereby deferred VAT payment amounts can be made in instalments, rather than as a single lump sum falling due on 31 March 2021. The details released so far by HMRC say that the amount owing can be split across 11 months, and no interest will be charged on the deferral. All organisations are eligible for this deferral and will need to opt-in using HMRC’s opt-in system, which HMRC hope to launch in early 2021.

It should be noted that the measures do not apply to VAT payments falling due from 1 July 2020 onwards. If organisations have difficulties in making these VAT payments, they should be able to agree a “time to pay” arrangement with HMRC and Crowe can support you in applying for this.

Business Rates Review

A fundamental review of business rates was announced by the Chancellor in the 2020 Budget, with a call for evidence published in July 2020 to seek stakeholders’ views on key issues, such as reliefs and exemptions including charitable rate relief. The call for evidence closed in October 2020.

An interim report was published on 23 March summarising responses received, and whilst there is no immediate indication that charitable rates relief is under threat, some respondents commented on the potentially distortive effect and disadvantage for other tenants.

The final report is expected to be published in Autumn 2021.

A copy of the interim report can be found here: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/ attachment_data/file/971681/Fundamental_Review_Interim_Report.pdf

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Appendix 4 - Non Profits events, courses and briefings

We believe it is important to keep our clients up to date on the issues that affect them and, as a part of our ongoing communication, we regularly hold seminars and courses. Unfortunately, due to the current Covid-19 restrictions, we have necessarily had to suspend our face to face courses and seminars.

Although we hope to be able to return to our seminars and courses in the not too distant future, we are currently working to replace some of these as webinars. We have a number of webinars currently in development and will make these available as soon as we can.

As a result the webinar sessions are likely to be put out with relatively short notice and we therefore encourage you to visit our website

(https://www.crowe.com/uk/croweuk/industries/webinars).or register to our mailing list (nonprofits@crowe.co.uk) to stay updated on these. Any webinars which you have missed remain available on demand on our website.

Past and planned webinars

These sessions are run by experts from our Non-Profits team on topical issues. Full details of timing and how to register are on our website.

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 Risk management in a post pandemic world  Planning for recovery
 The evolving role of the Audit Committee  COVID-19 and cybercrime
 Emerging updates virtual conference  COVID-19 and fraud
 Governance for non-profits in a VUCA world  Making Tax Digital for VAT 2020
 Demonstrating your charity’s impact  Charity VAT update
 COVID-19 financial reporting issues for charities  VAT bitesize webinars
 Bite sized Trustee Essential: Reserves, going concern and reporting  Managing your cashflow with CBILS and CJRS
 Bite sized Trustee Essentials: Trustee responsibilities  Off payroll working
 Understanding and managing reserves
 Improving efficiency and productivity
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For further information please visit our website https://www.crowe.com/uk/croweuk/industries/non-profits or email nonprofits@crowe.co.uk.

Non Profits events, courses and briefings

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www.crowe.co.uk

Crowe U.K. LLP is a limited liability partnership registered in England and Wales with registered number OC307043. The registered office is at 2[nd] Floor, 55 Ludgate Hill, London EC4M 7JW. A list of the LLP’s members is available at the registered office. Crowe U.K. LLP is registered to carry on audit work in the UK by the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales and is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority. All insolvency practitioners in the firm are licensed in the UK by the Insolvency Practitioners Association. Crowe U.K. LLP is a member of Crowe Global, a Swiss verein. Each member firm of Crowe Global is a separate and independent legal entity. Crowe U.K. LLP and its affiliates are not responsible or liable for any acts or omissions of Crowe Global or any other member of Crowe Global. This material is for informational purposes only and should not be construed as financial or legal advice. Please seek guidance specific to your organisation from qualified advisors in your jurisdiction. © 2020 Crowe U.K. LLP