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2022-03-31-accounts

Report of the Trustees and Financial Statements For the year ended 31 March 2022

Catholic Agency for Overseas Development Report of the Trustees and Financial Statements – for the year ended 31 March 2022

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Front cover: Tigist joined a CAFOD supported Women’s Empowerment program in Ethiopia. Since completing the training and starting a business, she feels that her opinions are listened to more and her husband respects her as a businessperson. She uses the profits from her business to clothe and educate her children, and provide the whole family with three meals a day.

Principal and registered address

Principal professional advisers

Auditor: Crowe UK LLP, 55 Ludgate Hill, London EC4M 7JW Solicitors: Bates Wells Braithwaite, 10 Queen Street Place, London EC4R 1BE Bankers: Royal Bank of Scotland, 28 Cavendish Square, London W1G 0DB

Romero House, 55 Westminster Bridge Road, London SE1 7JB www.cafod.org.uk

Member Trustees

Rt Rev John Arnold (Chair) Dominic Jermey OBE CVO Catherine Newman QC (until 30/06/2021) Dame Mary Ney Rt Rev Stephen Wright

CAFOD Executive Team

Rt Rev Stephen Wright Christine Allen[] Executive Director Jo Kitterick Fundraising and Participation Trustees Director Karen Livingstone[] Director of People, Charlotte Bray Culture and Change John Darley (Vice-Chair) (from 11/01/2022) Gabriela Flores Zavala Geoff O’Donoghue[] International Dr John Guy OBE Programmes Rosanne Kay Director Professor Karen Kilby Neil Thorns Director of Fr Mark Odion Advocacy, Communications, Christopher Perry (Honorary Treasurer) Campaigns and Fr George Sigamoney Education Mary Ward Jan Wilkinson[] Director of Finance, Information and Infrastructure

* Responsible for the Board of Trustees, RemCo, Strategy and Performance Committee, Finance Legal Audit and Risk committees respectively.

Contents

1. Strategic Report ................................................................................................... 04 2. Structure, governance and management ............................... 40 3. Statement of Trustees’ responsibilities ...................................... 49 4. Independent Auditor’s Report ............................................................. 50 5. Statement of Financial Activities ...................................................... 54

The Catholic Agency for Overseas Development (CAFOD) is the official aid agency of the Catholic Church in England and Wales and part of Caritas Internationalis. Charity no 1160384 and a company limited by guarantee no 09387398.

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Joint letter Christine Allen and Bishop John Arnold

Christine Allen CAFOD Director

The Right Reverend John Arnold

Bishop of Salford and CAFOD Chair of Trustees

The work outlined in this report is a witness of the Catholic community in action. Here in England and Wales, people stand for compassion, seek solidarity and justice. Parishes and schools continue to stand alongside our local partners who are responding to need around the world despite the many challenges.

As church buildings began to re-open, people took time to readjust to face-to-face worship. Many school schedules remained interrupted. In this context it would have been difficult for the Catholic community to find space for CAFOD. Yet they did. At the beginning of the year we had concerns about CAFOD’s financial sustainability because of the continuing impacts of COVID. However, everyone worked together and we ended the year positively. The generosity of the Catholic community enabled CAFOD to give out more than £27million in grants, as well as work with more than 300 organisations in over 43 countries. You will read examples of dedication and commitment from those local experts throughout this report.

The UK hosted the G7 and COP26 global climate negotiations in 2021. The Catholic community joined with others demanding urgent action on climate justice, vaccine access and a sustainable recovery. The outcomes of the negotiations were not all we had hoped for, but the message to care for our common home was clear! We were proud to enable local experts to have their voices heard and to provide a platform for young supporters.

The need for solidarity and practical help continues and nowhere is this seen more clearly than in the scale and complexity of crises, not all of which are visible in the media. As well as general fundraising, CAFOD ran emergency appeals in response to COVID and for Afghanistan; with an appeal for Ukraine coming at the end of the period covered in this report. The generous response was deeply humbling and this report shows how we have spent those funds.

The effects of the war in Ukraine will be felt for some time across Europe and globally. It is the poorest who will be hit hardest. Huge price rises for essentials such as food and fuel have contributed to millions experiencing severe hunger, a global food crisis. In the context of such need it was very disappointing to see the UK government cutting the aid budget.

At CAFOD we have never been about creating dependency. We help local partners to raise money themselves – almost £3million this year, an important shift in our strategy to increase the capacity of our partners. This partner strength could be seen in Zambia where we exited after three decades. We were sad, but also encouraged, by the testimonies of change and are pleased that so many of our Zambian partners have found ways to sustain their important work.

This year we marked sixty years of CAFOD. The first Family Fast Days were so successful that the Catholic Bishops Conference formed CAFOD to manage and distribute the funds raised. We celebrate and honour the commitment of our founding mothers, whose dedication is a living legacy across all that CAFOD does today and particularly our support for women’s leadership.

As the Church has had its Synodal process, CAFOD too has deepened its culture of encounter through conversations and listening. CAFOD supports fantastic work and we have a strong bond with those who make it happen. We pay tribute to all who have worked so hard in very challenging circumstances and say thank you to those who have contributed to CAFOD – your time, your voice, your money and your prayers.

We simply could not do it without you.

God bless,

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1. Strategic report Our Year in Numbers

“�Love,�overflowing�with�small�gestures�of�mutual�care,�is�also� civic and political, and it makes itself felt in every action that seeks�to�build�a�better�world.” Laudato Si’ 231

The support of the Catholic Community in England and Wales was tremendous:

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1,716 87,000+ 817 1,000
parishes individuals schools institutions
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Small acts of love helped make big things happen:

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CAFOD’s partners around the world are reaching and working with poor and vulnerable communities

CAFOD Vision, Mission and Values

Our common home is transformed to reflect God’s Kingdom, where all people, communities and the earth may flourish, and no one is beyond reach of the love and support they need to fulfil their potential.

Inspired by Gospel values and as part of the Catholic community of England and Wales, we come together in partnership with others, locally and globally:

Our Values

HOPE / COMPASSION / DIGNITY / SOLIDARITY

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CAFOD Values in action

Zarafsahn with her sewing maching

Hope…

…transforms despair, feeds love and fuels our work, including in Afghanistan. “Previously we believed that people could not learn well in adulthood. But my last two years life experience ensured me that this belief is not true.” Aged 43, Zarafsahn received training and a sewing start up kit. “I wanted to work and earn money, because my family has nine members with only one worker who had no regular income.” Now she and her two daughters sew clothes for the local community, earning an income. Life is hard for many in Afghanistan, but despite the crisis last year and restrictions faced particularly by women, our local partners continue their work. Since the Taliban takeover, the international sanctions regime has restricted the work that CAFOD can support to humanitarian as well as basic human needs provision. Our current projects are focused on vital food security including support to household incomes and to ensuring women and girls are able to participate fully in all our programmes.

Jahanara grows vegetables to provide to support her family

Dignity…

…is intrinsic to every person, regardless of their characteristics. In Bangladesh, Jahanara’s family have always been poor and in 2018 she made the difficult decision to leave her sons behind as she sought work in Saudi Arabia as a maid. But she was tricked, and instead was forced to work 19 hours a day in a field, unpaid, and her employer abused her. After a two-year ordeal Jahanara returned to Bangladesh traumatised. “I could do nothing.” She was put in touch with CAFOD’s partner OKUP who supported her with life skills training and meeting others with similar stories. With the training and some financial support, she is now growing vegetables and can support her sons. “I am happy with my family now. I am aware of my position in society and I dream of living anew.” Following research on the government referral mechanism for returnee migrants, particularly survivors of abuse and exploitation, OKUP has been invited by the Government of Bangladesh to draft the official referral guideline for returnee migrant workers.

March for climate justice on the Global Day of Action for the Climate

Compassion…

…draws us near to those in need, compels us to act and to stand together - It is rooted in love and deep respect for people and earth. Lifelong friends Gemma Pacquette, 71 and Erma Richards, 71 travelled in from Kilburn in North London to join fellow CAFOD supporters winding their way through the City of London. Fighting for climate justice, is close to Erma’s heart – she discovered a beloved river that she learned to swim in as a child, in St Lucia, has dried up: “I feel very strongly about climate change. I was born in St Lucia. The river where I learnt to swim – I went back home ten years ago, and that river has dried up, its gone! That river meant so much to me. I would love my great grandchildren to be able to swim in rivers, like I did. I want them to be able to have the freedom I had experienced as a child. “I’m hoping and really praying that our government (and other world leaders) will act so that our children, they’ll be able to breathe. They’ll be able to have a life.”

Patchwork wall hanging from St. George’s parish in Norwich

Solidarity…

…is rooted in our belief in community and the preferential option for the poor and oppressed. A women’s group in Magdalena Medio, Colombia, recently received a patchwork wall hanging from St. George’s parish in Norwich, who supported CAFOD’s Hands On peacebuilding project. The wall hanging was designed by young people from the parish Scout groups and Notre Dame High school students and sown by a group of women in St George’s parish who all wanted to express their solidarity with the people of Colombia. Gloria, a member of the parish group, said: “We wish our sisters and brothers

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in Colombia peace, prayers, love – and more love. We will not forget you.” Receiving the quilt, the women’s group in Colombia said: “The strength that you are transmitting internationally is giving us strength to continue another 50 years. “

Volunteers

CAFOD was born when a team of Catholic women led by Jacquie Stuyt, including Evelyn White, Nora Warmington and Eslpeth Orchard, came together to organise the first Family Fast Day in 1960. They raised an unprecedented amount of money. Two years later, in 1962, the Bishop’s Conference of England and Wales registered CAFOD as an official charity. In our anniversary year we celebrated over 60 years of people sharing their time, through CAFOD, to make the world a better place. A big thank you to every single person who has contributed of their talents so generously over those years!

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3,290
parish-based
assignments
…the services of 3,647 746 other assignments in a range of
volunteers who carried 1,468 volunteer roles such as campaigning,
out a total of 5,444 school-based fundraising, media, office support and
assignments including; assignments youth work.
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There are many ways in which volunteers make a difference. Monica is a CAFOD parish volunteer coordinator in Portsmouth. She recalls her mother, then a member of the National Board of Catholic Women, raising £200 for Dominica as part of that very first Fast Day. Today Monica raises funds, including by knitting cardigans and selling jam. “My main aim now is to encourage the young to take over and carry on the work started by the likes of my mother all those years ago.” CAFOD’s Step into the Gap programme is supported by CAFOD volunteer Sister Anne Stewart from the Society of the Holy Child Jesus, who has been a lynchpin and a driving force in supporting young adults to learn, grow and thrive. The programme is a full-time year of volunteering in a UK placement, with immersive and interactive experiences of learning about global justice. In partnership with our UK placements, this offers 18- 30 year olds opportunities to gain experience, develop leadership skills and spend a year in service or others. Enabling them to influence and inspire a generation of younger people and others to make the link between faith and acting for the poorest and most marginalised.

Whether CAFOD volunteers are helping children learn about global justice in school like Innocent from Leeds or sharing hygiene tips with their local communities like Caroline from Liberia, or spreading CAFOD’s calls to action on social media like Jessica, in every country and community CAFOD works in, volunteers of different ages and backgrounds are making a big difference. Last year, inspired by Pope Francis’ invitation to the whole Catholic Church to engage in a process of collective discernment - a synod - we endeavoured to listen closely to our volunteers, bringing together all the Parish Volunteer Coordinators to reflect about the parish community and inform our parish strategy. We also ran several online workshops looking at the synodal process where volunteers and supporters reflected on how they and their parish communities and networks could be involved.

Despite Covid restrictions remaining in place across England and Wales for much of the year, we continued to connect volunteers with each other, international staff and local partners online.

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Campaigns volunteers Alex (left) and Innocent (right) pictured here at CAFOD’s annual supporter Parliamentary reception, have been very generous with their time for CAFOD. Alex started as a CAFOD social media ambassador, joined the COP26 CAFOD delegation and wrote an article for our supporter magazine. Innocent ran a Parliament in your Parish meeting on behalf of CAFOD, represented CAFOD at a sustainability camp in Portugal in May and continues to speak at events.

Volunteers in Liverpool established the CAFOD Support shop 30 years ago. After raising hundreds of thousands of pounds for CAFOD and providing a presence in the community, the shop closed this year. The volunteers have done wonderful work and we are deeply grateful.

Dominic is a parish volunteer in Wellingborough. Growing up his parents were active with Caritas Goa and he saw first-hand the difference their work made. He appreciates the community spirit social events like soup lunches bring to his parish. “The best thing about volunteering with CAFOD is knowing that what you do has a significant impact on the lives of those living in poverty around the world.”

Sister Furaha volunteers in CAFOD’s office in Democratic Republic Congo (DRC), remotely supporting partners working on a Mining Protection Project, specifically supporting girls. The presence of Sister Furaha has strengthened the Catholic spirit in the Kinshasa office and the team really appreciates her contribution.

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Income and Expenditure summary

This year we were thankful to record total income of £50.5 million, of which a wonderful £35.6 million (70 per cent) came from the unwavering support of the Catholic community in England and Wales; made up of general and emergency appeal donations, including the continuation of our Coronavirus appeal, the Afghanistan appeal and, most recently, our Ukraine appeal. Once again, we were also blessed to receive very generous legacies.

We are so appreciative and respectful of this level of continued support, during another difficult year for all. Our supporters and volunteers have adapted and continued to engage with us and our partners online. Despite the ongoing impact of the pandemic supporters have continued to give so generously and raise funds tirelessly for CAFOD’s work.

Chart 1: Income / expenditure

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£6.3m Raising funds
£23.6m International Development
Donations and legacies
£35.6m
Income Expenditure
£50.5m £49.8m
Disasters Emergency Committee
£2.4m
£16.2m Disaster Relief
Government and Institutions £6.8m
Caritas and Other £5.6m £1.7m UK Development education
Other Income £0.1m £2m Advocacy and campaigning
----- End of picture text -----

We spent £49.8 million in total; with £6.3 million (13 per cent) on raising income and £43.5 million (87 per cent) on delivery of our mission through charitable activities. Both these figures include allocated support, administration and governance costs of £5.1 million (10 per cent of our total spending).

These resources entrusted to us allowed us to cover a wide and diverse range of issues, reflecting the contexts in which we operate, the needs identified by our partners, and our analysis of how we can achieve the greatest impact in our programmes. We made 559 grants to partners, including £2.4 million of programme payments made by CAFOD in direct support of partners for programme activities and, with foreign exchange adjustments, this totalled £27.2 million, covering these main themes:

Chart 2: grant making

£12.5m £7.7m Emergency Livelihoods preparedness, resilience and response and recovery environment

Figures exclude foreign exchange gain adjustment

----- Start of picture text -----
£4.5m £1.6m £1.4m
Governance Building Peace and
accountability and capacity reconciliation
transparency
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Catholic Agency for Overseas Development Report of the Trustees and Financial Statements – for the year ended 31 March 2022

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CAFOD�works�in�partnership�with� local experts

The value of partnership, present throughout Catholic Social Teaching, is central to CAFOD’s work. We rely on and respect the expertise and knowledge of local organisations. Because they are part of their communities, they are best placed to listen and work with communities and respond to needs. Through our partnership model and grant-making criteria we ensure that vital aid and funds reach those who need it the most and helps strengthen local organisations for the future.

The majority of CAFOD’s charitable work is carried out by making grants to partner organisations, 559 totalling £27.2 million last year, including programme payments. Grants are usually made within mutually agreed strategies. Before grants are made, project proposals are subject to formal assessment and approval. All projects are systematically monitored for the duration of their existence, and bigger projects are subject to a final formal evaluation review.

CAFOD works with a wide range of partners or different sizes and capabilities. Last year we financially supported 307 partners. Around two thirds are Catholic, some are faithbased of other denominations and some are secular, but we all share a commitment to transforming the lives of the poorest and supporting the earth to thrive. CAFOD is committed to supporting partners to grow their own technical capacity and to share their learning with others, so that together we can make a bigger, long-lasting impact.

Last year this included…

Focus on Partner Direct Funding

In Our Common Home, we have clear ambitions on supporting the agency of our partners. We supported 6 partners to apply directly for funding from institutional donors. Last year, in a really difficult funding environment, three partner direct funding applications were

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successful, generating over £2.8M for our partners’ work; money which might in the past have passed through CAFOD as income:

Elders meet The total grants made to partners last year was £27.2 million. This partner direct funding with Isacko Jirma secured the equivalent of an additional 10 per cent of that figure for partner contracted Molu, Director work, which also helps to strengthen the local organisations and support local experts of Caritas bringing about positive change in their communities. Marsabit, Kenya.

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Network,�Membership�and�Standards

CAFOD is a member of a number of organisations that help us to collaborate, learn and deliver our work more effectively. Among others, these include the British Overseas Network of Development Agencies BOND, the START Network, the Disasters Emergency Committee DEC and DEC Cymru, CIDSE and the Climate Coalition and Stop Climate Chaos Wales. We are a member of Caritas Internationalis, a global Catholic Church network with a presence in 165 countries. In the most dangerous countries, distant regions and marginalised communities, the local Church is often a trusted and steady presence, able to help many who are truly in need and many of CAFOD’s partners are part of the Caritas family.

As a charity registered in England, CAFOD is regulated by and accountable to a number of bodies, including the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of England and Wales, Companies House, the Charity Commission and of course we have to comply with local and international laws. As a Catholic agency we also comply with Canon Law, the law of the Catholic Church.

As an organisation, we have chosen to sign or support some external standards and measures of accountability. Below are some of the most significant ones:

CAFOD upholds values and high standards of organisational, professional and personal conduct, outlined in our Code of Conduct which all representatives must sign. We welcome feedback and complaints. Should our values and commitments ever not be upheld to the standard expected, we want to be informed. There is clear information available on the CAFOD website that explains how to raise concerns, including anonymously.

The rebuilt bridge, Sierra Leone

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A celebration of over 30 years of CAFOD’s�work�in�Zambia�–�Working� together�for�long-term�flourishing��

Reflection by Mwila Mulumbi, CAFOD Programme manager

Communities celebrating with song and dance, years of partnership with CAFOD

For over 30 years, CAFOD worked with more than 34 partners across Zambia and reached extremely poor households, especially women and vulnerable smallholder farmers, people living with HIV and with disabilities, orphans, survivors of gender-based violence and the elderly. After over three decades of partnership with the Church in Zambia, CAFOD decided to close its country programme in March 2022. This decision was part of a larger global review process made in line with our strategic framework, Our Common Home, and in response to our rapidly changing world. In this time Zambia had moved from a low-income country to a lower-middle income country and as CAFOD’s funding situation changed, priority shifted to more fragile and conflict affected states.

In 1989, CAFOD representatives visited Zambia and observed negative trends in the economy and the emerging of HIV/AIDS. In the early 1990s, in a context of worsening economy, widespread malnutrition, droughts and floods, in dialogue with the Zambian Church it was agreed that CAFOD could make valuable contributions to the HIV/AIDS situation which had worsened rapidly. CAFOD provided grants to partners to support different aspects of HIV/AIDS ranging from healthcare facilities and provision, youth training, women empowerment, emergency and livelihoods programmes among other areas. Over a decade, CAFOD’s efforts continued to expand and CAFOD became known and recognised for championing a more holistic response to HIV/AIDS with its partners. By 2012, 82.2 per cent of Zambians living with HIV had improved quality of life.

CAFOD is committed to strengthening local community structures and the capacities of partners. Capacity strengthening support was provided to partners in Zambia in disability mainstreaming, advocacy, resource mobilisation, safeguarding, financial management, and monitoring and evaluation systems among other areas. At the time of CAFOD’s exit, about 40 per cent of the partners were able to secure funding by other donors, diversifying their income. A further 40 per cent of partners developed social enterprises to support continuity of existing projects. As a result, some projects such as the support group clinics for mental health care run by St. Francis will continue.

Despite the hard decision to exit CAFOD’s partnerships in Zambia, there was a commitment to exit in a dignified and responsible way and to celebrate the successes

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of the last three decades. At ‘celebration ceremonies’ CAFOD colleagues met and heard testimonies from many people of how their lives had significantly changed. Many came along with their 20-25 years old children, some born with HIV, and who from birth had benefited from CAFOD’s holistic support and had gone on to become successful. There were middle-aged women and men who in their 20s had received livestock through a livestock pass-on scheme and over the years had significantly multiplied and generated income from their livestock and had come out of poverty. Through this and other resilience livelihoods work, Colleagues estimate that they reached 735,000 people in the last 10 years alone. There were communities, who were provided with skills, knowledge and advocacy capacity to defend their human rights, particularly the rights of people with disabilities. Through sustained advocacy they contributed to the enactment of the Mental Health Bill in April 2019. There were testimonies from households on how gender justice and equality interventions had deconstructed harmful cultural practices in their homes. Colleagues met communities supported with water, sanitation and hygiene support, estimating that in the more recent projects alone, 27,000 people had access to clean and safe water with CAFOD support. Over the last couple of years, CAFOD provided COVID-19 support to the Zambian Church, estimating a reach of more than 2 million Zambians.

As they said farewell to partners, the one question that lingered CAFOD colleagues’ minds was whether all the support that went into different programmes over three decades had created the desired change? Their answer is yes. It was not always easy but through the generous donations, prayers and acts of solidarity from the Catholic community from England and Wales, CAFOD has left behind a legacy for many generations.

UK Aid Match

UK Aid Match is a programme funded by the UK government’s Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office. By matching contributions made during an appeal – for every £1 donated, the government also contributes £1 up to an agreed target –it allows British taxpayers to have a say in how UK foreign aid is spent, helping to double the good that donations to CAFOD achieve and providing an opportunity to engage with international development issues.

In 2018, CAFOD’s Lent Appeal secured £4.3millionof Match Funds to run projects in Eritrea, Zambia and Zimbabwe. The aim was to build community resilience to climatic shocks, improving food security, caring practices for vulnerable groups, and sanitation and hygiene practices, to enhance the nutritional status of rural communities. After three years, the project concluded in September 2021 and we are delighted that overall, 299,842 people benefited from the scheme, tripling the number of households meeting standards on food access and food diversity.

Thanks to the kindness and generosity of CAFOD supporters and the UK government, led by the help of the hardworking Sisters and staff at Mtora Mission Hospital in, there is now additional shelter for expectant mothers in Gokwe, Zimbabwe. It opened in July 2021 and provides a safe place for women to come when they are nearing their due date. The hospital now has a ward for pregnant mothers with lots of well-spaced beds and solar lights. Two thirds of the mothers involved in this project have also been supported to breastfeed their babies.

Similar stories of hope have been playing out across Zimbabwe, Zambia and Eritrea in the past three years thanks to CAFOD supporters. Acts of kindness during Lent 2018, acted out time and again in parishes, schools and homes up and down the country, added up to something big.

Over the last financial year, coronavirus continued to impact the programme. Activities had to be postponed, cancelled, or adapted to ensure that they could be carried out safely and in compliance with national restrictions. In addition, the programme delivered emergency support to mitigate both the immediate health risks to people and communities as well as the unintended outcomes of lockdown restrictions, such as severe

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food shortages. Despite these challenges, the achievements of our Caritas partners in all three countries have been truly impressive. Here are just some of the ways the generosity of CAFOD supporters and the UK Aid Match scheme made a difference:

When CAFOD receives funding from institutions such as the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office FCDO, there are stringent administrative requirements, accounting for funds and evidencing work undertaken. Following the final evaluation, we received feedback from Mannion Daniels (who are the management agent for Match Funding on behalf of the FCDO). Their report highlighted how CAFOD “used an adaptive management approach, enabling effective action to be taken to ensure project continuation in the face of these challenges, and to maximise opportunities to accelerate progress, such as the mobilisation around WASH [water, sanitation and hygiene] practices caused by COVID-19 responses”. CAFOD colleagues are really proud that the project scored an A overall. Mannion Daniels highlighted that “the project significantly exceeded its beneficiary reach,” scoring an A+ at outcome level.” Outcomes are evidence that the interventions undertaken by the projects have actually made a difference. This achievement was all the more impressive given the difficult operating environment in which the project was conducted.

UK Aid Match fund money paid for three shelters for expectant mothers at the Mtora Mision Hospital in Gokwe, Zimbabwe.

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Making�progress�towards� our commitments

CAFOD’s work builds on 60 years of organisational history, working for and achieving local and global change together with the Catholic community in England and Wales and our partners across the world. All work is guided by our strategy “Our Common Home” (2020) to deliver against four commitments and key areas of change. These are used as a framework to report back on last year’s work in this report.

1. Positive impacts for people, communities and the environment

Against the backdrop of the global Coronavirus pandemic, we achieved the aims that we had set ourselves: To continue CAFOD’s full range of work with adaptions and to support partners in their advocacy for healthcare and vaccines; to maintain support in protracted crisis and be able to respond to new emergencies if needed; and to embed greater environmental stewardship and gender justice in CAFOD’s ways of working.

Focus on reaching the most vulnerable and excluded, to support their�survival�and�long-term�flourishing,�and�doing�so�in�ways� that help protect and regenerate the planet.

CAFOD supports local experts to help some of the most difficult-to-reach people in Africa, Asia, Latin America, Middle East and now again in Europe. Local needs and contexts determine the shape of our international programmes. Our distinctive approach is found in how we do what we do: investing in local agency, partnership and capacity, in women’s empowerment, intergenerational dialogue, regeneration of the environment and systemic structural change: ‘Doing with’, not ‘doing to’.

Last year CAFOD supported partners to deliver project work worth £7.7 million focusing on livelihoods, resilience and the environment and £1.4 million on peace and reconciliation work. These funds facilitated local partners to keep working within their communities, many impacted by increased violence and economic and social instability as well as continued coronavirus restrictions. Despite these challenges, partners adjusted their work to continue to reach out to those who suffered the most.

In Sierra Leone, CAFOD supports partner projects run in Pendembu including the installation of a hand water pump and its protective wall. The bridge leading to the village of Waima Ngeiya had collapsed, so vehicles could not get in or out. CAFOD provided funds to get the bridge re-built so that the drilling trucks could get through and the well began to provide safe water to the village which has a population of 1,200 people. Foday, a local technician shared their joy with CAFOD supporters: “As the water is coming out, the people are jubilating. Over 100 years, they have not seen a pump in their community like this one.” The video is available on the CAFOD website. The video itself was created following a training session led by CAFOD’s communications team in 2021, in which CAFOD’s staff in Sierra Leone and those of partner organisations learned how to safely create and share good quality images and videos about our work, which respect the dignity of those featured. This initiative to equip the local team in content gathering established a dialogue and sense of equality between the country office, local partners and CAFOD colleagues in the UK, embodying the culture of encounter that we aim to foster, even in the most remote locations.

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----- Start of picture text -----
PROTECTING
OUR COMMON
HOME:
Land and environmental
human rights defenders
in Latin America
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Increasingly the protection and regeneration of the environment is incorporated into our international programmes as we respond to the cry of the earth and the cry of the poor. For example, in South Sudan, CAFOD worked with a local partner to design a project that focuses on improving communities’ resilience by introducing alternative solutions to deforestation. This included distributing and encouraging communities to use fuel efficient stoves. This has helped reduce the quantities of firewood and charcoal in the short term. If widely adopted this will ease the pressure on forests and woodlands while decreasing the pace of deforestation and soil erosion in the medium to long terms. At the same time, the stoves help to protect women and girls against the risk of sexual and gender-based violence associated with collecting firewood. Whether it is advocating for organic farming laws in Sri Lanka; promoting diverse indigenous seed varieties in Bolivia; or seeking to install solar panels in CAFOD’s country offices, human flourishing depends on a caring for our common home.

Many CAFOD partners’ lives and work are threatened as they speak out boldly to protect their culture, livelihoods and the environment. Human rights defenders help to keep governments and businesses in check, ensure that models of development put people ahead of profit, and protect our planet. Yet, for their work, they face criminalisation, harassment and violence – even death. Based on our own research, CAFOD published a report on ‘Our Common Home: Defending Land, and Environmental human rights defenders in Latin America’, co-funded by the European Union. To raise awareness, local launches were held Latin America. In the UK, we held a CAFOD supporter event on Human Rights Day as well as a launch with MPs. The report highlights patterns of abuse across Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Guatemala, Honduras and Peru, often affecting already under-represented groups – indigenous, Afro-descendant and campesino (small-farmer) communities, and women – the most. It shares learning on the different strategies and approaches being used to push for change and recommends ways that the UK and all governments, businesses and investors can protect human rights defenders from the attacks they face, and to tackle the drivers of this abuse.

A school in the Jordan Valley (oPt) saved from demolition through the legal aid work of a CAFOD partner.

Another region where lives are affected by conflict is the Middle East. CAFOD has worked with Christian, Jewish, Muslim and secular partners in the occupied Palestinian territory and Israel for almost 40 years. CAFOD’s partners work to provide protection to vulnerable Palestinian communities, to promote youth agency and leadership and to lobby for social and political change to address the causes of conflict. In 2021/22 over 80,000 Palestinians received protection from forced displacement and human

rights violations. A CAFOD Israeli partner that works with Palestinian victims of Israeli offences in the West Bank documented 151 incidents of violence, collected 187 testimonies and filed 99 complaints with the police. A Palestinian partner provided legal aid and services to 6,415 Palestinian families. CAFOD partners continue to demonstrate strength and commitment in their advocacy work to local diplomats and delegations – a tangible impact of CAFOD’s previous support and in the UK, CAFOD seeks to contribute to a critical mass pushing the UK government to support the rule of law.

Peacebuilding is an important element of our work as violence continues to disrupt communities. In Colombia, a CAFOD Hands On project in Magdalena Medio reached 7,013 young people as well as their parents, teachers in 34 schools, and members of local authorities. One such group that is standing up to the violence is TamboArte - a youth dance group for young men to come together, share ideas and feelings and to learn to understand one another. Many of these young men received no formal education and without resources and support, they are at great risk of being swept up in the cycle of violence. By celebrating their culture together through traditional dance, they are now on a different path – a path to peace. As the project came to a close, an external evaluation highlighted CAFOD’s role in organising peacebuilding knowledge exchanges and

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TamboArte – a youth dance group for young men in the Magdalena Medio region of Colombia

supporting monitoring and evaluation and effective implementation. A local partner sent this message to CAFOD staff and volunteers: “To all those who have supported CAFOD, many thanks for standing with us. I would like to thank the CAFOD team for the trust they have given us, for the sense of belonging, for the processes, for putting on your backpack and walking with us on this journey.”

Whether it is an issue of poverty, climate change, inequality or conflict, local aid workers can use the support provided by CAFOD to continue reaching those that are most excluded over long periods of time through help that goes beyond ‘standard’ two- or three-year projects.

Emergencies

Responding to humanitarian emergencies is integral to CAFOD’s work, but the number, scale, and complexity of the crises that our partners encountered last year, was unprecedented. Support from CAFOD supporters and institutional funders such as the DEC, the European Union and CARITAS sister agencies, enabled local experts to support communities in crisis in Afghanistan, Syria, Ethiopia, Sudan, India, Nigeria, DR Congo, Haiti, Yemen, Bangladesh and Lebanon. From March 2022, CAFOD mobilised partners to provide emergency assistance to vulnerable populations inside Ukraine and to those who fled to neighbouring countries as a result of the war.

CAFOD and its partners also continued to respond to smaller scale emergencies that do not register in the UK media, but still have a devastating impact. For example, partners in Lebanon responded to snowstorms that impacted the already worn-out infrastructure of informal settlements, collapsing tents of Syrian refugees and leaving tens of thousands stranded. With our local partners in Mozambique, we were able to provide 1,000 tarpaulins (shelter kits) and bring relief to 1,000 affected families, most (97 per cent) within 72 hours of Cyclone Gombe hitting. CAFOD supported communities affected by the Nyiragongo volcano eruption in DR Congo; the drought in Kenya in the Diocese of Marsabit; and floods in Bahia and Minas Gerais in Brazil.

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The House of Peace, Lebanon.

The COVID centre constructed with support from major donors and CAFOD in Masiti, Zambia.

The House of Peace is a grassroots peacebuilding organisation in Lebanon. With CAFOD support they established a ‘self-care’ hub following the Beirut blasts in 2020 to improve the wellbeing of traumatised frontline workers. The self-care hub provided them with tools to ensure their own wellbeing and created a space for dialogue and for the establishment of networks of support within their organisations.

Afghanistan

A generous £1.7 million was raised by CAFOD supporters for the people of Afghanistan. From this, CAFOD and our partners have provided vital support to over 52,000 individuals so far, including Emergency food packages, cash for food, hygiene kits and winterization support. But the crisis is not over. CAFOD staff have been supporting local partners to build their capacity to respond, whilst also ensuring that CAFOD’s response was fully compliant with UK and international financial sanctions that were imposed on Afghanistan and mindful of security concerns. Through joint advocacy with other organisations, we contributed to keeping the plight of the people of Afghanistan in the public eye.

COVID-19

COVID-19 still created debilitating health and socio-economic impacts on communities last year and the global picture remains mixed with inequitable access to or uptake of vaccinations. It was the most vulnerable who suffered the most. Thanks to the generosity of CAFOD supporters we could fund 27 projects across 15 countries, releasing a further £1.32 million in 21/22 for COVID-specific response and recovery projects. Below are just some examples:

Victoria, Bolivia.

Feedback from Victoria, who participated in a CAFOD partner indigenous communities project in Bolivia: “For me the project has been very good. I didn’t know how to grow vegetables at all. Now I have my tent [greenhouse], where I have everything for the family… When the illness came [COVID-19], we couldn’t go out to the city to buy anything and at that time these vegetables helped me a lot… Before, I didn’t pay much attention to looking at the climate prediction signs… I am teaching my children how to do it, that has been very important.”

CAFOD is committed to support affected communities to help people to survive, rebuild and live with dignity. This support to CAFOD’s International programmes could not have happened without the incredibly generous community of England and Wales. Thank you!

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COP26

Fossil fuels are part of the problem that fuel the climate crisis which has a disproportionate impact on the poorest around the world. CAFOD has been part of UK and global coalitions advocating for an end to fossil fuel investment for nearly 10 years. The UK hosting the G7 meeting in Truro in July 2021 and the COP26 in November 2021 in Glasgow, offered CAFOD a unique opportunity to influence the global recovery from the pandemic, the cancellation of unfair debt and commitments to mitigate the climate crisis. How the UK government as host of these two meetings responded, was key to tackling the climate crisis, poverty and inequality that affect millions around the world.

In the run-up to these two key meetings hosted by the UK government, we worked hard to amplify the voices of our partners and the communities we work with who are facing the climate crisis. People like Claudelice, whose story you can read on page 21, as well as partners from Colombia who were COP delegates and advocated for the recognition of the role communities play in counteracting the climate emergency. CAFOD is part of a global Catholic movement and closely liaised with the Holy See to influence the debate by world leaders and their advisers. CAFOD’s chair of Trustees Bishop John Arnold, as environment lead for the Catholic Bishops Conference England and Wales, observed the climate negotiations first-hand and joined marches, discussions and vigils for greater climate action. We are so grateful to our partners and supporters for raising their voices, demanding action from our leaders on the climate crisis, and for continuing the journey of reclaiming our common home.

G7

The G7 ‘Group of Seven’ Summit took place in Cornwall in June 2021 and brought together government leaders from some of the richest nations. While the leaders of the summit failed to discuss the cancellation of debts and to deliver much of the action around COVID and climate change – CAFOD supporters ensured that these issues were not completely forgotten. This included a group of inspiring young climate campaigners who gathered at the G7 Summit in Carbis Bay and raised awareness through social media and media coverage and the children of St. Mary’s, Falmouth. The world of eyes in the picture (above) has about 3000 eyes on it, from almost every Catholic school in Cornwall, Devon and Dorset. One pupil said: “My message to G7 leaders is that the eyes of the world are watching them, so are all the young people, to make sure they make the right decisions.”

Later in the year, drawing on the experience of the G7, CAFOD supporters were determined to have their voices heard at COP26 in Glasgow. ‘COP’ means ‘conference of parties’, a Climate Change Conference organised by the United Nations where governments and negotiators from across the world discuss how to keep temperature rises below dangerous levels and prevent the climate crisis from causing even worse catastrophes for the world’s poorest and most vulnerable people. Thousands of CAFOD supporters campaigned at COP26 to encourage leaders to slow down global warming, provide money they had already pledged to countries on the frontline of the crisis, and to commit to ending the use of fossil fuels.

CAFOD was called to give evidence before the International Development Select Committee to highlight the loopholes in the UK government’s fossil fuel policy. The G20 includes all of the G7 nations but also countries such as China, Russia and South Africa. We coordinated a letter and media action to ‘consign fossil fuels to history’ to G20 leaders from faith leaders in those countries.

We followed up with the CAFOD ‘climate babies’, children first featured in the Observer newspaper on the eve of the 2009 Copenhagen climate talks, and again ahead of Paris 2015. We asked Maria from Bangladesh, Olomaina from Kenya, and Denislania from Brazil what impact the climate crisis might have on their future and their stories were again published in the Observer newspaper in November 2021. Their experiences show the devastating effects changing weather patterns, increased droughts and floods are having on their daily lives. Working with partners, these children’s stories were featured prominently in the Observer ahead of the COP26 meeting. The call from Denislania to the political leaders was clear: “They need to preserve the planet, to look after it.”

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School children’s ‘Eyes of the World’ art installation sends powerful message to G7 leaders – G7 summit, Cornwall

The groundswell of support for climate action from the Catholic community was amazing! We are grateful to all the volunteers, teachers, parish priests and CAFOD supporters who lent their voices.

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The ‘Eyes of the World’ are watching banner UK tour – Oxford

Whilst the G7 and COP26 did not deliver all that was hoped for, 197 countries did sign the Glasgow Climate Pact. The Glasgow Climate Pact is the first COP agreement, or ‘cover decision’, to explicitly reference fossil fuels. Countries have made progress on some aspects of a plan to tackle climate change, but still have significant work to do. COP26 might have drawn to a close, but we know that the work to care for our common home goes on. We will push for clear, concrete and ambitious 2030 greenhouse gas reductions under the Paris Agreement. CAFOD’s focus is on people who are on the frontline of the crisis: those who work to defend our common home and face growing threats every day.

Claudelice Silva dos Santos

Claudelice Silva dos Santos is an Amazon and Human Rights Defender from Nova Ipixuna, Brazil. She has become known for her tireless struggle for justice for her environmentalist brother and sisterin-law who were murdered in 2011 on orders of illegal logging interests. Since then, Claudelice has faced numerous death threats for her brave work to stand up for communities’ rights and keep the forest standing.

CAFOD supported Claudelice and other Amazon leaders to attend COP26 so that indigenous and forest communities’ voices would be heard during the climate meeting. The pressures faced were dramatically highlighted on day one of the COP, when that night armed men and local ranchers burnt neighbours’ homes in Nova Ipixuna and beat people to force them off their lands. Claudelice was soon combining COP advocacy and participation in the March for Climate Justice while remotely coordinating an emergency response. Following the COP, Claudelice travelled to London and St Albans,

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sharing experiences with secondary schools and a local Justice and Peace Network. In parliament, Claudelice, CAFOD and Global Witness jointly lobbied MPs to ensure that Human Rights and deforestation were included in Environmental Bill implementation guidance. Reflecting on COP26 to Lords and MPs, Claudelice’s message is that future COPs must provide greater recognition of those indigenous and traditional communities who have been the stewards of creation and the climate.

Transforming the humanitarian aid system

In times of crisis, it is local community-based organisations and networks that are the first responders helping people to survive and cope with the impacts of natural disasters and conflict. All too often, there is an inconsistent and inadequate support to local nongovernmental organisations (NGOs) for their core costs, including for example maintaining staff health insurance, safety and security systems, administration of safeguarding and other important aspects of sustaining their staff and organisation beyond individual project delivery costs. CAFOD is committed to challenging and changing the global humanitarian aid system so that local civil society groups, rooted in crisis-affected communities, are actively shaping the response to crises that affect them. This is a part of localisation. The past year CAFOD has seen a radical increase in the level of political and technical attention to localisation in the humanitarian system; following critical reflection about racism and colonial legacies in aid at the highest levels of donors, UN agencies and NGOs, in the wake of Black Lives Matter, and a recognition of the central roles played – for better or for worse – by states and local actors in Covid19 response. CAFOD conducted further research in this area last year, and advocacy on this topic is gaining traction with institutional donors. The main policy forum in which ‘localisation’ policy is reviewed at global level is called the Grand Bargain, where CAFOD was one of the original signatories. At the last Annual Review meeting, four large global donors made statements about adopting new, more generous overheads policies. CAFOD played a lead role in supporting our local partners to influence the humanitarian sector both in the UK and globally to secure these new commitments by donors, UN agencies and INGOs on empowering local civil society in crisis response.

In order to achieve meaningful change for people, communities and the environment, their voices need to be heard by decision-makers. CAFOD is well placed to open doors for dialogue to take place. Last year this included:

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2. Amplifying local voice, agency and leadership

Promote�the�leadership,�proactive�involvement�and�influence� of�women�in�all�levels�of�decision-making�to�achieve�better� community engagement and development outcomes, and to celebrate�their�inherent�power.

Our vision is of a world where women are safe and respected and where women and men share equally in shaping their societies. Globally, over 2.7 billion women are legally restricted from having the same choice of jobs as men and gender-based violence is commonplace. Tackling gender inequality is not just an issue for women - everyone suffers when so many people are prevented from realising their full potential. Equality is essential to tackle poverty; both men and women need to be part of the solution. CAFOD was founded by women and we are proud to support the leadership of women in our work, to support national partners organisation in research, analysis and advocacy, to lift up women’s voices to have influence in-country and at global levels.

Eufracia speaking on a radio programme.

Throughout the pandemic, radio and podcasts have been a vital lifeline for isolated communities to get the information they need to stay safe. In Peru, indigenous women took the lead in broadcasting life-saving information to their communities in local languages. One show, produced for women, by women, was one of several radio programmes created to dispel myths and share accurate information on COVID-19 with

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indigenous people living in the Amazon region. Eufracia, speaking from the High Andes on another programme, explained that there are older people in the community who do not speak Spanish. And Lucy from CAFOD’s Andes team, adds: “The main issue was that messages weren’t reaching indigenous and rural communities and weren’t being shared in a way that was accessible to them – in their local languages, as well as with respect for their cultures,” Often radio is all that people have in very rural areas so it’s a crucial tool for any kind of communication.”

CAFOD staff with a group whilst on a monitoring visit of the project.

Supported by CAFOD, local partners in Goma, DR Congo are empowering women to earn a secure and sustainable living. Most of the project participants are women who have been displaced or have lost their husbands or children due to ongoing conflicts and are unable to access loans from banks and face extreme poverty. A Microcredit Project in North Kivu has been so successful that, with the significant savings made by beneficiaries, the project has become

self-sustaining, and many organizations are coming to learn the model from CAFOD’s partners. All project participants have been incorporated into the banking system and can now access credits.

3. Creating a culture of encounter for transformative change

Using more creative channels of engagement to inspire a younger and more diverse Catholic community in England and Wales�to�participate�in�leading,�resourcing�and�making�real�our� shared vision

Small acts of love make big things happen. This was the theme for CAFOD’s Lent 2022 appeal. CAFOD supporters were introduced to Lombeh in Sierra Leone, who as a baby was at risk of dying due to malnutrition. With the unceasing determination of her mum and the help of the Handmaid Sisters supported by CAFOD, Lombeh is now thriving. Lombeh’s mum trains and advises new mums on child nutrition. The Catholic community responded through prayer, action and raising more than £1.2 million to support CAFOD’s work around the globe. 1,432 people – family, friends, parish groups, schools, staff from our Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and Nigeria teams and CAFOD Trustee Bishop Stephen Wright – took part in the Walk Against Hunger challenge raising over £343,000 so far. Children and young people from 518 schools walked, an amazing 170,844KM! That’s equivalent to walking around the world four times!

We also built on the success of online supporter engagement and held a national virtual meeting ahead of Lent for the first time. Sarah Hampel and Sr Frances Orchard (daughters of our founding mother Elspeth Orchard), CAFOD Director Christine Allen, CAFOD Chair of Trustees Bishop John Arnold, and the presidents of National Board of Catholic Women, Union of Catholic Mothers, and the Catholic Women’s League reflected on CAFOD’s roots in local volunteer activists who saw a need for change and encouraged others to join them. The event was attended by over 350 volunteers and the feedback was very positive.

Given the pandemic, much of our engagement with supporters was online. We had a record 1.8 million website visitors, two thirds of whom were new visitors – up 18 per cent

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Lombeh, left, and her family

from the previous year! In addition to this, traffic from our email marketing and social media channels increased 51 per cent in in the last year. As a Catholic agency, faith and spirituality are central to CAFOD and important to many of our supporters. Our prayer pages continue to be very popular with 971,573 views (representing 30 per cent of all pages viewed) and during Lent 2022, 6,500 individuals subscribed to receive daily reflection emails. We have had particular success with our new family prayer resources to support people to pray at home with their children (11,236 views throughout 21/22) and our brandnew rosary audio resource, which allows people to pray and reflect with us while on the move (1,800 downloads during September 2021 alone). CAFOD colleagues organised over 214 online events: 14 Masses, 152 online talks with staff and partners and 9 national school assemblies. The school assemblies had 23,232 views – and we know that in several cases one view equalled 30 children and their teacher! We learned that virtual encounters with CAFOD’s work and partners can be really effective and are one way in which we can engage younger audiences.

As COVID restrictions eased, we could be increasingly flexible in our engagement with parishes, schools and volunteers, blending the online with the physical, the virtual with the face-to-face. With parish life resuming in all its creativity, our weekly online children’s liturgy sessions came to an end in December 2021 after 21 months and 84 online children’s liturgies. As always, our Gospel reflections, prayers, songs and activities continue to be hugely popular and supportive for catechists and parents alike. From April 2021 to December 2021, 2,140 people participated in these liturgies with up to 119 people tuning in at any one time.

With schools facing significant challenges due to COVID, we have found new and supportive ways to reach out to school chaplains, teachers and young people. 134 school chaplains choose to receive regular communications from us, and over 200 more receive termly emails. Funded by the British Council, CAFOD provided professional development training for teachers in the UK as part of Connecting Classrooms through Global Learning. Over three years, schools from each of the 19 English dioceses attended at least one of the courses and over 400 schools have taken part through the course of the whole programme. At the end of the three-year project, 1,219 teachers participated in training with CAFOD and 25 new schools have started supporting our work through fundraising.

It is clear that the effects of climate change threaten to undo decades of work to alleviate global poverty. To raise awareness given the public media profile of environmental issues in the run up to COP26 in Glasgow, our focus in Harvest was the Climate Crisis and its effect in the Amazon. Harvest Fast Day saw an increase in parish participation compared to the previous year, with 469 parishes inviting CAFOD speakers and an amazing 1,764 parishes participating. Parishes raised almost £712,000, an impressive amount, given that many parishioners were only starting to return to church. In total, the Catholic community of England and Wales raised £1,106,613 for CAFOD’s Climate Crisis Fast Day focus.

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Together with the work for COP26 and Harvest appeal, CAFOD supporters are bringing about collective change to tackle the climate crisis through action. In Laudato Si’ Pope Francis’ invites us to “work with generosity and tenderness in protecting this world which God has entrusted to us”. The LiveSimply Award is an opportunity for Catholic communities - parishes, schools, religious orders and chaplaincies - to respond to do just that. The award is earned by communities demonstrating how they have been living simply, in solidarity with people in poverty and sustainably with creation. 328 schools signed up during 2021-2022 to working towards the award, joining schools like Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic Primary School in Birkdale (Archdiocese of Liverpool), the very first school to achieve the award.

Throughout the last 12 months, CAFOD supporters have continued to be as committed as ever. Despite the continued effect of the pandemic and caution around gathering together in person, we have found creative ways of partnering together. In the face of the many challenges, through small, often hidden acts of love, the Catholic community have continued to find ways to bring about our shared vision.

Construction of school in Uganda

Sister Celia’s family owned a commercial property in central London for almost a hundred years. When her mother passed away over thirty years ago, Sister Celia gifted her share of the profits from the property to CAFOD. We received a generous share of the rental income for many years and, when the property was sold in 2021, proceeds of the sale went to supporting work with children in Uganda that was so close to Sister Celia’s heart and to other essential work of partners around the world.

Leaving a gift in your will to charity is a special way to reach out to future generations, helping CAFOD to commit to communities for the long run, so people can overcome poverty and injustice.

St Edwards parish, Lees in Oldham, Walk against Hunger raising over £2,000. “We were blessed with sunny weather, a great turnout - 77 walkers, from babies in prams to ‘almost’ 80-year-olds, parishioners and friends of St Edward’s and dogs too!”

Benedictine monks from Douai Abbey who took part in walk Against Hunger and raised £1,205. The monks combined their miles, with each one walking every day as far as they are able to as some of them are over 80! They also invited guests, visitors, and parishioners to join them each Saturday during Lent for a walk around the Abbey.

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Ka-Yee has been a parish volunteer for four years and is part of a CAFOD group at St Augustine’s parish in Milton Keynes in the Diocese of Northampton. She is an artist and has been using her artistic skills to promote CAFOD’s World Gifts in her parish.

There has been great support by members of the Welsh parliament and the Ukrainian community for the launch of the Ukraine DEC appeal.

A group of 21 runners and walkers from St Joseph and Holy Family Parish Sale (Shrewsbury Diocese) took part in the Liverpool Fun Run at Christmas. Some of our group have been doing the Fun Run for over 30 years.”

Mervyn continues to celebrate his late wife Elsie’s life with a Candlelight Fund and their love story is featured in a CAFOD video. “I think there is no better way of honouring the life of a loved one. Elsie would be more than delighted to know that I have set up this Candlelight Fund in her memory – knowing that all the money raised is going to so many deserving causes – causes that were so close to her heart.”

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St Chad’s Catholic Primary School in Croydon have an active and exciting CAFOD club. “We try to raise awareness in our school community and in our parish about our global neighbours who need our help, support, and love. We do this by leading assemblies to our school about the termly CAFOD projects we take on. We want to try and help our global neighbours, we are all part of God’s family, and all families take care of each other. “Demonstrating their commitment to building a better world, the children of the CAFOD Club attended the CAFOD supporters’ parliamentary event where they shared their CAFOD Club song, expressing their desire for: “A world that is more fair, where we can all share, everyone’s welcome here.”

4. Our ecological conversion to transform ourselves

We must look at how we do things, why they are done and whether they are the best way to provide value for money and efficiency in a dignified and inclusive way. We believe that through our own organisational transformation we can live out the commitments set out in ‘Our Common Home’ in ways that might influence and inspire others to action.

We have reflected on how our International Programmes can best contribute to achieving the vision, mission, and commitments of Our Common Home. The resulting changes to ways of working will simplify the necessary due diligence checks and change our ways of delivering programmes, keeping people, relationships and local partners at the heart of CAFOD’s work. We call this the Integral Ecology Programme model. The approach and key processes have been agreed. As part of refocusing our work within the Our Common Home strategy, we took the hard decision to exit some of our partners and programmes including Niger and Zambia in 2022. This is to help ensure impact through deeper focus on the root causes of problems facing the communities that we support in a rapidly changing world. As we begin to pilot our Integral Ecology Programme model, we are focused on building on the best of what we already do and doing things differently as we seek to contribute to a new economic model and political order that enables all people, communities, and the environment to flourish.

The need for effective digital workspaces, communication solutions and information sharing across all areas of our work to enhance our relationships and partnerships has continued to grow. The rapid pace of change in technological solutions and the cybersecurity landscape has provided both challenges and new opportunities. Last year we incorporated new digital payment methods and security checks, to deal with the growth in online giving and changing external regulations.

Our international programmes meet the highest quality standards, minimising the risk of harm and fraud. The Taliban takeover in Afghanistan and the war in Ukraine in particular required flexible responses by CAFOD teams to ensure adequate checks and due diligence support for new partners and projects both in those countries and in neighbouring countries. Across all programmes, colleagues undertook 583 screenings against sanctions lists, were involved in 17 audits and supported 27 partner financial health check verifications.

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The global situation of coronavirus continued to impact our ability to travel internationally. Whilst this creates some challenges, it provided useful insights in how relationships and due diligence requirements can be supported remotely, saving cost, time and carbon emissions. We undertook a learning review to determine how we can embed a more permanent change to our travel culture to achieve our commitment to keep international flight numbers below 50 per cent of pre-pandemic (2019/20) levels. This is part of a CAFOD-wide approach to exemplifying environmental stewardship that covers our own operations, programmes and work with the Catholic community.

Throughout the year, CAFOD colleagues worked together to evolve ways of working in focused and pragmatic ways, translating the Our Common Home strategy into meaningful action and practical steps.

Ensure�our�ways�of�working�are�safe,� dignified,�diverse�and�inclusive�

The personal dignity and rights of all people are central to our faith and to CAFOD. CAFOD is committed to upholding professional conduct in all areas of our work and creating an organisational culture that ensures a safe and trusted environment for all who come into contact with us.

Minimising the risk of abuse or exploitation within CAFOD programmes

We have a particular concern to ensure children, young people and vulnerable adults are safeguarded and recognise we have a special duty of care and respect towards them.

The vulnerability of many participants in our international activities heightens the need to ensure our programmes are safe and that participants, partners and staff know how to reduce risk and respond if problems arise. Over the past year CAFOD has provided a wide range of support to partners on safeguarding and safe and dignified programming in the form of training, policy development and review, sharing tools, and funding specific initiatives to strengthen local capacity. This has minimised the risk of abuse or exploitation within our programmes and has emphasised that all engagement with communities is undertaken in a safe and dignified manner. Last year…

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Steps towards becoming an anti-racist organisation

CAFOD acknowledges that racism is part of society and is committed to the journey to become an anti-racist organisation.

Over the last year we celebrated the diversity of all our people and took steps in addressing issues that had been identified in the prior year. Actions taken last year included

Transformation comes through awareness of ourselves in relationship with our neighbours, with our faith and with the earth. CAFOD is committed to deepening those relationships through what we call a Culture of Encounter. The work CAFOD colleagues have and will be doing ties in with Pope Francis’ encyclical ‘Fratelli Tutti’, inviting us to recognise the intrinsic dignity of every human being and to work to promote a culture of encounter. Work underway now will allow us to better understand what anti-racism is and what we can do better. Our focus on anti-racism is not at the exclusion of equity, diversity and inclusion or other forms of discrimination, rather it is a key foundation that should be identified and addressed to allow us to meaningfully advance our mission to create a culture of encounter for transformative change. We are called to address the underlying causes of hurt and damage in our society and within the CAFOD community, looking at the structures and systems that may cause continued disenfranchisement of particular peoples.

The wide reporting of the Ukraine crisis raised comparisons with other existing humanitarian emergencies. We resolutely stand in solidarity with the people of Ukraine. Our partners are working tirelessly to support those impacted by the conflict. But is sad to see that there are too many examples of crises and acute suffering around the world that simply go unreported. We will challenge ourselves to do all we can and continue to respond to humanitarian crises in Afghanistan, Ethiopia, Nigeria, South Sudan, Syria, Yemen, including those crises which may be hidden from public view.

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Our plans for the future

“The�fallow�ground�of�the�poor�would�yield�much�food,�but�it�is� swept�away�through�injustice” (Proverbs 13:23, ESV)

CAFOD’s work is aligned to make further progress against our commitments in Our Common Home. We will support our partners to deliver programmes internationally that make a difference to the lives of some of the most vulnerable and marginalised people and communities.

The way we grow and distribute food is broken. There needs to be a shift in the focus of our advocacy efforts towards food and food systems. People go hungry while the planet suffers, and the climate crisis makes the situation even worse. Pope Francis urges us to tackle the causes, not just the symptoms, of hunger. The issues of food and land are a lens through which we will continue CAFOD’s environmental focus in a way that continues to seek benefit for those poorest in our world. We will invite CAFOD supporters to help, by looking after creation when we support people; by challenging those in power to change the way the world grows and distributes food; and by praying for our sisters and brothers facing hunger.

Focusing on reaching the most vulnerable and excluded, to support their survival and long-term flourishing, and doing so in ways that help protect and regenerate the environment, we will…

Focusing on the interconnected causes of the social and environmental crisis, amplifying the voices of those most affected and speaking out boldly when it is right to do so, to more appropriately influence the required system changes from local through to global levels, we will…

Using more creative channels of engagement to inspire a younger and more diverse Catholic community in England and Wales to participate in leading, resourcing and making real our shared vision, we will…

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So that our ways of working are safe, dignified, diverse and inclusive, we will…

To ensure CAFOD’s continued organisational health, we will...

Key risks and uncertainties

Risks are all the factors that could prevent us from delivering our plans or achieving our objectives; they can be financial, political, regulatory or operational. While we strive to limit the impact of risks, we cannot always prevent events from occurring. This is why we ensure that we have sound risk mitigating actions and controls in place to reduce any negative impact. Risk management is incorporated into our planning, organisational decisionmaking and management procedures. CAFOD Trustees review CAFOD’s corporate risk register at least annually, ensuring that significant risks are managed appropriately. We have agreed crisis management protocols in place and any serious incidents are reported to external authorities where required. Serious incidents are reviewed quarterly by Trustees ensuring oversight and learning. CAFOD’s principal risks and uncertainties are:

Safeguarding

Risk: The vulnerability of many participants in our international activities heightens the need to ensure our programmes, including work with supporters and volunteers in the

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UK, are safe and that participants, partners and staff know how to reduce risk and respond if problems arise., Safeguarding incidents can have a deeply negative impact on people’s lives; whether at CAFOD or in the wider Catholic Church. Safeguarding incidents can also negatively affect CAFOD’s credibility and the trust of our networks and supporters.

Mitigations: All aspects of our work embody good safeguarding practice, including addressing issues of safe working culture and discrimination and how we keep data safe. This holistic view is being further embedded into our programmatic work, as part of developing the Integral Ecology approach. All CAFOD staff and representatives are aware of our commitments and expectations through our Code of Behaviour, Safeguarding Policy and Complaints Policy, which are reviewed regularly. All staff undergo mandatory training, and some roles require additional vetting under the UK DBS scheme or equivalent checks internationally. CAFOD works to ensure that all our programmes are Safe, Accessible, Dignified and Inclusive, that our partners understand expectations, welcome feedback locally and are able to respond adequately to any cases that may arise. The Board of Trustees receive quarterly reports on safeguarding, with additional review meetings held with the Trustee Safeguarding lead, prompting learning at governance and leadership level.

Programmatic reach and impact

Risk: CAFOD may fail to reach those most vulnerable and excluded and provide quality programmes that support their survival and long-term flourishing, in ways that also help protect and regenerate the environment. Equally, CAFOD’S work could fail to focus on the interconnected causes of the social and environmental crisis, and to influence required system changes from local to global levels.

Mitigations: CAFOD’s development and implementation of the Integral Ecology Programme Model (IEPM) will help to ensure that our work is focused on addressing the root causes of the problems faced by the communities and individuals we support, within the particular contexts in which they live. All aspects of programme planning, evaluation and evidencing will be aligned with the fulfilment of the commitments made in Our Common Home strategy. We ensure that CAFOD’s Programme Quality Standards are aligned with our Integral Ecology Characteristics and that our Programme Strategies support the survival and flourishing of the most vulnerable and identify how environmental stewardship is addressed throughout the programme, with negative environmental impacts mitigated at all levels. We use KPI reporting under IEPM (with appropriate trustee oversight) to demonstrate our effectiveness and impact. The programmatic management, Partner engagement and community participation confirms that we reach those who are most vulnerable and excluded and support their survival and long-term flourishing in ways that help protect and regenerate the environment.

Local Agency, Voice and Leadership

Risk: CAFOD may fail to strengthen its accountability, or to engage with and listen to the voice of people and communities. Closing civil society space could lead to silencing of our partners. Equally, we must not fail to speak out in true witness to the situations our partners and communities face, and we must ensure that CAFOD systems, practices and culture do not perpetuate post-colonial dynamics in our partnerships and programmes.

Mitigations: We maintain close links between advocacy and programme staff with Country representatives notifying any changes in national government attitudes, using clear decision-making and communications sign-off processes for our advocacy work. We support partners to influence nationally and monitor their own security. We work to influence FCDO and the European Union to press nationally and internationally for change. Under IEPM our Programme Strategies include ‘localisation’ / local leadership plans. We are focusing on humanitarian aid reform and engaging with our sister agencies (Caritas Europa / Caritas Internationalis / CIDSE) to promote learning and increase our own knowledge. We have good crisis management/reputational management systems in place and ensure the engagement of our Trustees in sensitive areas. In the contexts of closing

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civil society space, we have to balance the risks of speaking out with protecting the lives of partners and being able to continue with programmes that deliver vital support. Serious incidents are reported to Trustees.

Adjusting to societal shifts in England and Wales

Risk: CAFOD fails to respond to the needs and expectations of younger and more diverse Catholic audiences, which may result in reduced participation and income in the longer term. The rapid progress in a multichannel digital environment that our supporters experience in their daily lives creates a risk of CAFOD missing income, awareness raising and campaigning potential if we don’t respond quickly enough.

Mitigations: We are more agile and sufficiently resourced to respond to the needs and expectations of younger and more diverse Catholic audiences, to increase awareness, relevance and participation for the longer term. We have refreshed our brand and offering, we are focusing on engaging a younger more diverse audience and have key measures in place to assess progress re agreed income, recruitment and engagement each year. Examples of engagement are webinars, online Masses, Children’s Liturgy, school assemblies and social media promotion to reach these audiences. We are placing greater focus on digital income and digital delivery – shifting to a digital first approach, enabled by strengthened capacity to scan supporter digital developments and project manage adoption; testing and learning as we go. We have supporter and income technology strategy groups in place to ensure development prioritisation and that spending matches with areas of income potential. Supporter income, feedback, participation and trust are monitored closely by management and CAFOD’s Board of Trustees.

Economic uncertainty affecting income and mission delivery due to ongoing impacts of the pandemic and recent conflicts

Risk: There is a risk that our programmes and responses are disrupted leading to additional costs, or other unforeseen impacts of the pandemic and the global effect of the war in Ukraine, and that income is impacted by the ongoing economic uncertainties affecting our supporters and donors.

Mitigations: CAFOD has a fully funded contingency reserve to allow us time to adjust our operations to respond to further economic impacts of the pandemic and to the effects of the Ukrainian conflict on food and fuel supplies (in the UK on income and costs or in our international programmes with partners facing inflation pressures that make our grants worth less). We are constantly monitoring our programmes and working with partners and donors to continue adapting our work, so that we can continue to benefit those that are the most vulnerable, particularly where long-standing problems have been exacerbated by the impact of the pandemic and the recent surge in food and fuel prices.

Environmental impact of CAFOD

Risk: Insufficient action taken on organisational climate and environmental impact and the embedding of new practices, is a failure in delivering Our Common Home and could lead to reputational damage and loss of credibility.

Mitigations: Work is being done on IEPM to embed environmental considerations into our entire programmatic approach, including the use of our Environmental Stewardship Tool to support partners and staff in identifying environmentally beneficial approaches across our programmes. Periodic statutory Environmental Audits are reported publicly. We work to ensure that our partners are better resourced to access and use technology for new ways of working, to optimise the international travel involved in developing and managing programmes. An Environmental Stewardship Group is in place reporting to Executive team and KPI reporting to Trustees demonstrates outcomes in line with the Our Common Home commitments.

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Wellbeing

Risk: The pace of change needed to respond to external events and deliver on Our Common Home objectives, whilst complying with regulations, can put strain on our people’s and partners’ capacity to deliver all that is expected of them. The closing down of civil society space and other external factors could lead to increased stress and low morale in our staff. Should CAFOD fail to address issues related to wellbeing, and ensure a safe and inclusive working culture, there could be a negative impact on individuals’ health and morale, potentially leading to reputational issues.

Mitigations: Our corporate wellbeing programme includes support to staff through the Employee Assistance Service and we run occasional well-being related surveys to refine our offering. Managers monitor local workloads and partner security. We provide security advice to some partners and our Security cluster reviews any security incidents. Through our Safe, Accessible and Inclusive Working Culture project we work to build trust through better use of our complaints system and provide awareness training to supporting our managers and staff to become more adaptable. We will maintain focus on a culture of encounter to listen to issues experienced by staff, volunteers and partners and their staff. We aim to maintain the quality of human relationships within CAFOD, while we adjust our ways of working following the pandemic. Progress and challenges are reported regularly to Trustees.

Financial�Review�

Our total income in 2021-22 was £50.5 million, which was just 3.6 per cent lower than last year, when we benefitted from the exceptional response to our Coronavirus appeal. Our income this year was better than we had anticipated, given the ongoing impact of the pandemic on our supporters and volunteers, including the UK economic uncertainties and the challenging environment for securing institutional funding. We had strong income from all sources, helped by the very generous support we received from our emergency appeals and another substantial year for our legacy income.

As in every other year, the majority of our income comes from enormously generous support from the Catholic community of England and Wales. We received £29.6 million (compared with £30.0 million in 2020-21) in general donations and legacies from supporters. Our legacy income was extremely generous once more at £11.0 million. Our general donations from supporters at £18.6 million, was £0.1 million above last year, which is a very positive result given the impact that the ongoing economic effects of the pandemic and the continued impact that lockdown measures had on our community activities, with parishes still disrupted in their fundraising activities for much of this financial year.

We received another £6.0 million from supporters in 2021-22 for our specific emergency appeals. This included further support to the Coronavirus appeal (£0.9 million) earlier in April through July 2021 with significant amounts for Afghanistan (£1.7 million) and Ukraine (£2.7 million) later in 2021 and up to March 2022. This was in addition to £2.4 million which we received through being a member of the Disasters Emergency Committee (in support of our Coronavirus, Afghanistan and Ukraine responses). This total emergency appeal income, at £8.4 million, was even higher than last year’s exceptional total of £7.0 million and is reflected in the increase in our spending on disaster relief in 2021-22.

Our other institutional income, of £12.5 million (compared with £15.3 million in 2020-21), was raised from Caritas and other Catholic agencies £5.6 million (£5.2 million 2020-21), the UK government and other governments £5.1 million (£7.9 million 2020-21) and institutional donors £1.8 million (£2.2 million 2020-21). Income from these sources fell back year on year, with the exception of the support from sister agencies, reflecting the difficult institutional funding environment. Finally, our total income in 2021-22 includes £0.1 million (£0.1 million 2020-21) of other investment and trading income.

In addition to the Coronavirus, Afghanistan and Ukraine appeals, supporter donations to other emergency appeals this year included £0.3m for the 2021 emergency in Haiti, £0.2 million for the crisis in Yemen and £0.1 million for the Emergency food crisis appeal for Africa.

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Grants totalling £5.6 million from Caritas, CIDSE and other Catholic agencies were received to support specific international programmes, including several emergency responses that CAFOD is leading on behalf of Caritas Internationalis. Grants from governments and other institutional donors, totalling a further £6.9 million, included £1.3 million from the UK government, of which £0.8 million was for the UK Aid Match Fund programme, £1.8 million from United Nations agencies and £1.2m from the government of Sweden. We also received £0.8 million from the START Network.

We were able to spend £43.5 million on our programmatic activities to support our mission. Over 47 per cent of our total spending was focused on international development and nearly 33 per cent on our disaster relief work. We also spent £6.3 million on raising funds, this year, reflecting a continued commitment to grow our supporter base and income, including new ways of digital fundraising to inspire existing supporters and better engage with new and younger audiences, bringing the total spending to £49.8 million. Our total expenditure was below our income in 2021-22, with an increase in programmatic reserves in hand for our emergency responses in 2022-23 and the creation of free reserves that are expected to be allocated by Trustees, to release additional funding to respond to the growing food crisis in East Africa and beginning to be felt in other areas badly affected by climate change and economic factors.

As a member of Caritas Internationalis, we operate as part of a worldwide network of Catholic agencies committed to helping those in need. We also work with a wide range of other local and non-faith-based partners. We made 559 grants to our partners (totalling £27.2 million after foreign currency exchange adjustments), including £2.4 million in direct payments in support of partner programmatic activities. This approach enables us to have a truly global impact. We were able to contribute £17.2 million to support work in 15 countries within Africa; £6.4 million for work in 18 countries across Asia, the Middle East and Europe, and £3.6 million for 10 countries in Latin America and the Caribbean. £0.5 million was spent on grants to support global work including advocacy and UK development education.

Financial Performance

We have continued to receive funding from the UK government arising out of past rounds of the FCDO UK Aid Match programme, though the amounts being received are reducing and the scale of the matching opportunities for UK Aid Match remains capped at £2 million going forwards. No new rounds have been announced. None of our last three Lent appeals has benefitted from matched funding. We continue to pursue other possible funding opportunities with FCDO, including smaller commercial contract awards.

We have been carefully monitoring the residual impact on supporter fundraising of the Coronavirus pandemic and the knock-on effect this has had on the UK economic environment. We have seen no significant financial impact as a direct result of Brexit, though we can no longer access European Community Humanitarian Office (ECHO) funds directly; we are having some limited success in accessing this funding as an implementing partner with some of our European Union based sister Caritas/CIDSE agencies. We continue to work within the best practices for fundraising in the UK introduced by the Fundraising Regulator, and within what are now the UK Data General Data Protection Regulations. This has not significantly impacted our fundraising potential and we have been successful in finding new ways to access new donors, with online engagement and digital fundraising activities, whilst maintaining regulatory compliance. This ‘digital first’ work has been invaluable in enabling us to launch our major emergency appeals this year in a timely and effective way, when our parish community fundraising platforms have only been partly operative due to lockdown measures and reduced Mass attendance. Despite the challenges our general supporter income has increased slightly from last year.

The war in Ukraine has added to the general post pandemic economic uncertainty and exacerbated immediate inflationary pressure in the UK and globally. We have a fully funded contingency reserve, to cover the eventuality of any significant income shortfall due to the adverse economic environment or other new factors emerging in the future. This, together with careful management of our costs in 2021-22, gave us the flexibility to cope with general income being maintained, rather than growing, as we had hoped, given

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the additional resources allocated to fundraising. In the event, we experienced no overall income downturn, as appeal income was very strong and contributed (along with cost savings) to increase our unrestricted reserves. (See next section).

Uncertainty remains over a range of issues affecting CAFOD and other UK-based INGOs. Although Sterling ended the year at a relatively good rate to the US dollar, the longerterm depreciation of the pound against the US dollar from a peak in 2014, has reduced the effective value of our Sterling grants to our partners, as they spend in local currencies mostly aligned to the US dollar. This continues to add to our cost base for overseas offices and salary costs in many countries.

We are mindful of this ongoing risk, and we continue to buy forward on US dollars to smooth out currency impacts and practice careful stewardship of our finances. We no longer expect to suffer any significant impact of exiting the European Union. We have seen a reduced level of European Union (EU) direct income. In 2020-21 we received only £23,000 (£0.6 million 2020-21: £1.5 million 2019-20), though we expect to be more successful in 2022-23. UK INGOs do remain eligible for some European Union funding instruments. As noted earlier, we have accessed some European Union and ECHO funding, via our sister agencies based in Europe. We have continued to work on diversifying our institutional income sources, with large grants received from other governments and institutions this financial year and opportunities are being pursued with other donors such as Trusts and Foundations. The institutional funding risks and opportunities will continue to be closely watched.

Financial Position and Reserves

Each year the Trustees set aside sufficient reserves, to ensure a balance between spending to meet the immediate needs of our programmes and protecting our future work; by allowing time to adjust to any unexpected operational challenges in our overseas work or to a large reduction in the amount of income we receive.

At 31st March 2022, we held total funds of £23.1 million: £12.1 million general funds, which the Trustees considered to constitute CAFOD’s reserves (£9 million held as a stabilisation fund and a further £3.1 million, of which £2.2 million has already been allocated to time bound initiatives that will accelerate progress against Our Common Home objectives, with another £0.9m as yet unallocated reserve); £4.1 million designated by the Trustees for specific purposes; £6.2 million restricted funds in hand; and a permanent endowment fund of £0.7 million.

There are potential risks associated with the assets that CAFOD owns and with potential unforeseen costs, however, the Trustees consider the main financial risk to be a downturn in general income. To manage a sudden downturn in general income, without damaging the long-term commitments we make to our partners, we allow two years to adjust our programmes, reduce other costs or recover income levels. Based upon a possible shortfall of 10-15 per cent in the level of general income and the need for two years to adjust our activities, the Trustees have agreed the level of general funds to be held as a stabilisation fund at 20-30 per cent of the planned annual general income for the coming year, which is a range of £6 million to £9 million.

At 31 March 2022, a stabilisation fund of £9 million is available, together with £3.1 million in allocated (£2.1 million) and unallocated (£0.9 million) reserves, so that our target level of £6 million to £9 million for general funds is met. The Trustees will consider setting aside further reserves to fund specific activities in 2022-23 and the next two to three years, as the total of general funds is expected to exceed £9 million throughout 2022-23. We have planned to have a further surplus of unrestricted income over our planned spending on our grants to partners and other operating costs in 2022-23.

We also held £4.1 million designated funds at the balance sheet date: £4.1 million set aside to fund the fixed assets that are required for our operations and another very small balance already assigned by the Trustees to be spent in the next year on specific activities.

Having reviewed the financial position and future plans for the charity, the Trustees have identified no material uncertainties related to events or conditions that cast significant doubt on the charity’s ability to continue its activities for the foreseeable future. CAFOD has coped positively with disruption to some normal activities during the coronavirus pandemic and despite the continued short term and longer-term economic challenges,

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made worse by the terrible situation in Ukraine, and likely to affect our future funding levels, CAFOD has ensured financial sustainability by undertaking a range of measures to compensate for these difficulties. This includes targeted budget reductions, scenario planning, financial modelling, risk analysis and continued cashflow forecasting and monitoring. CAFOD has proven, in the ‘Coronavirus’ financial year of 2020-21 and again in 2021-22, that it has the flexibility to adapt our financial management, and to adjust expenditure in line with forward income projections, as and when needed. We also retain the scope to use some of our contingency reserves, as the future longer-term impacts of the global economic situation and the accelerating effects of climate change on the poorest communities unfold. We continue to review and adapt our programme delivery operating model, to implement our Integral Ecology approach and achieve the objectives we have set within the Our Common Home strategy.

Investment Policy

To ensure continued good stewardship of our resources and maintain the trust of the Catholic community we have a responsible and considered approach to investing. The objective of our investment policy is to maintain high liquidity, whilst remaining in a secure position by avoiding risking our capital. We also ensure that any investment meets the ethical standards we have set ourselves. Within these guidelines, we work to achieve the best possible returns, growing the resources available to help us achieve our charitable aims.

In addition to having Sterling deposits with suitable UK regulated financial institutions and holding transactional balances in Sterling, US dollars and Euros, we have a permanent endowment fund, the capital element of which is held in perpetuity and from which the income is applied to our work. To maintain the capital value of this fund, meet its ethical standards and achieve the best possible return, this fund is invested in an ethical UK common investment fund.

For 2022-23 we are actively considering opportunities to test the deployment of some limited funds into new forms of social investment, which will support agricultural communities in Africa in the first instance. Our investment policy would be reviewed / updated should this opportunity prove fruitful in terms of developing CAFOD’s mission delivery.

Sustainable farming with young people in Kambia district, Sierra Leone

Our investment policy is reviewed by the Finance, Legal, Audit and Risk Committee, acting as an investment sub-committee and is approved by the Trustees annually. The Finance, Legal, Audit and Risk Committee, reporting to the Trustees, monitors investment performance and compliance with investment policy quarterly. The Trustees have confirmed that the objectives of our investment policy were met during the year.

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2. Structure, governance and management

Legal Structure and Governing Document

CAFOD is the official overseas development agency of the Catholic Church in England and Wales. Following the actions of Catholic women’s organisations that held the first ‘Family Fast Day’ in 1960, CAFOD was formally established by the Bishops of England and Wales in 1962 to address the concern of the Catholic community about the needs and problems of developing countries. CAFOD is constituted as a charitable company limited by guarantee (company number 09387398, charity registration number 1160384) and it does not have a share capital. CAFOD’s governing document is the Memorandum and Articles of Association. CAFOD’s charitable objects are:

Board of Trustees

CAFOD is governed by a Board of Trustees which comprises Member Trustees and a wider group of Trustees. Member Trustees are appointed by the existing Member Trustees and their appointment must be ratified by the Standing Committee of the Bishops’ Conference of England and Wales. The Member Trustees hold a limited number of reserved powers, including the appointment of all other Trustees and the power to amend CAFOD’s governing documents, the Memorandum and Articles of Association. All other powers, including the establishment of specialist committees and general responsibility for the running of CAFOD are vested with the full Board of Trustees. There are four committees: The Strategy and Performance Committee (SPC), Remuneration Committee (RemCo), Finance, Legal, Audit and Risk Committee (FLAR). The Governance Committee was disestablished in March 2022 and replaced with a Lead trustee on Governance. The SPC and FLAR committees are supported by external advisors who offer their time and expertise as volunteers. These are Marian Casey-Maslen, Mgr John Dale, Mike Egan, Audrey Nengare, Maveen Pereira, Alicia Ramos, Peter Samengo-Turner, and John Wroe. We are grateful for their contributions and advice.

The CAFOD Board of Trustees composition seeks to reflect the diversity and demographic of the Catholic community in England and Wales whilst ensuring that the necessary skills and competencies are present. Trustees give their time voluntarily and receive no private benefits from CAFOD. Trustees have taken account of the statutory reporting duty to illustrate how, in practice, the activities of CAFOD meet the legal public benefit requirement. Trustees have noted and paid due regard to all the Charity Commission’s statutory guidance that is relevant to CAFOD’s mission and have highlighted in this report examples of its activities which illustrate how its work fulfils that mission and the significant benefits it brings to:

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Charity Governance Code

CAFOD Trustees are the custodians of CAFOD’s mission, vision and values as expressed in the strategic framework, Our Common Home, which Trustees approved in March 2020. Trustees are committed to upholding the high standards that are outlined in the seven principles of the Charity Governance code:

  1. Organisational purpose

  2. Leadership,

  3. Integrity,

  4. Decision-making, risk and control,

  5. Board effectiveness,

  6. Equality, diversity and inclusion,

  7. Openness and accountability.

Through careful agenda setting and regular meetings, Trustees ensure that they exercise leadership that drives CAFOD’s organisational purpose, act with integrity, and make informed decisions. Trustees are mindful of their responsibility to hold the executive to account whilst also creating a supportive environment that models CAFOD’s values.

Last year, significant governance events and decisions included:

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Engagement�with�employees� and volunteers

CAFOD could not do its work without its staff and volunteers. The Trustees take their interests into consideration when making decisions. Some Trustees do additional voluntary work with CAFOD, in a non-governance capacity, so they are able to appreciate the perspective of volunteers. The Executive Team is headed by the Director of CAFOD who is responsible for the day-to-day administration of CAFOD and reports to the Trustees. The CAFOD Director line manages the five CAFOD Directors and together form the Executive Team.[1] The Executive Team is responsible for the management of CAFOD, and the implementation of Trustee decisions. Trustees delegate certain powers to the Executive as agreed in the Scheme of Delegations which is reviewed regularly.

Together with the Executive Team, Trustees seek to raise awareness on organisationwide matters and the vision behind CAFOD’s strategic framework Our Common Home. Employees and volunteers receive governance and financial updates systematically through a monthly Staff and Volunteers Briefing, which has been adapted to a webinar format and is recorded for members of staff in different time zones. The CAFOD Director also circulates information on behalf of the Board via email and we have recorded a video message for all staff, thanking them for their hard work and achievements.

Trustees plan for engagement spaces in Board and Board committees and work with the Executive Team to communicate decisions effectively. Specialist staff members regularly attend Board and committee meetings, sharing their work and seeking input by Trustees and specialist advisers to inform decision-making. The Remuneration Committee and the Board of Trustees have engaged with staff Union representatives twice a year, hearing their views directly and has engaged directly with colleagues from CAFOD’s Black, Asian

1 The CAFOD Director is the most senior paid staff member in CAFOD. For legal purposes, the Trustees are the Directors of CAFOD and are registered as such with the Charity Commission and Companies House.

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and Minority Ethnic network. Governed by the Whistleblowing policy, Trustees can hear staff concerns when formal CAFOD complaints mechanisms have been exhausted, with clear protocols in place to resolve any matters raised in this way.

Remuneration Policies and Gender Pay-gap report

CAFOD staff and Trustees carefully consider their responsibility as stewards of the resources entrusted to us. All employees should be treated with dignity and respect which is why we are a Living Wage employer. Our remuneration packages reflect the skills and experience required in particular roles. The Board of Trustees is responsible for setting the remuneration levels for CAFOD Executive Team members. The CAFOD Executive Team is responsible for setting the remuneration of the CAFOD workforce. However, CAFOD is committed to ensuring that there is a clear relationship between the remuneration policy of the Director and that of CAFOD’s whole workforce. For our UK / International pay scales, the ratio is set at 5:1 although this report shows a ratio of 3,4:1, driven by the Executive’s Director voluntary pay cut during the challenging conditions CAFOD faced during the pandemic. Our remuneration review process is designed to ensure we remain within these parameters. Salary scales are reviewed annually, adjusted if appropriate and published to all staff.

In line with UK government requirements, we track and report on our gender pay gap annually. For April 2022, our gender pay gap was 4.73 per cent (mean) and 6.05 per cent (median) which was below the national average of 17.3 per cent (median). This reflects the increase in male staff at the lower salary levels now standing at 32 per cent compared with 21 per cent last year and an increase of female staff at the Upper level, with female staff now accounting for 53 per cent of that part of our workforce compared with 48 per cent last year. We are not complacent and continue to examine ways in which we can close the gap further. The full gender pay report which includes details of the proportion of women and men in each of the pay quartiles is available on our website.

Statement in relation to Section 172 of the Companies Act 2006

We as Trustees of CAFOD must act in the way we consider, in good faith, would be the most likely to promote the organisations’ success in achieving its charitable purpose through the realisation of its Vision, Mission and Values. As explained in the “Legal Structure and Governing Document” section, we have clear mechanisms to delegate the management of CAFOD to the Director and the Executive Team while we maintain oversight over the progress of the work through the different Board committees. In doing so, we have regard to:

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of our resources. All our fundraisers, volunteers and any fundraising contractors working with us comply with our Fundraising Promise (see Statement on Fundraising for more details). In Our Common Home, we commit to ensuring that our campaigns and education resources reach a younger, more diverse supporter base and examples can be found in this report.

Statement of Safeguarding

The personal dignity and rights of all people are central to our faith and to CAFOD. We are committed to recognising the personal dignity and rights of all people we work with, especially vulnerable groups. We have a particular concern to ensure children, young people and vulnerable adults are safeguarded and recognise we have a special duty of care and respect towards them. We are committed to upholding professional conduct in all areas of our work and creating an organisational culture that prioritises safeguarding and ensures a safe and trusted environment for all who come into contact with us.

Our Safeguarding Policy and the procedures and training that support its implementation provide the framework for preventing and addressing abuses of power that negatively impact our staff or communities we support. In 2021 we updated our Safeguarding Policy to reflect changes in the external environment and learning from its implementation in CAFOD over the past two years. All staff are expected to receive regular training in this area. This year we delivered induction and refresher training to 147 staff so that they understand the revised policy and related codes of behaviour and feel confident, equipped to support our partners and able to report any safeguarding concerns.

We continued to evaluate our approach to safeguarding using both internal and external resources. This included the development of guidelines to help teams apply

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safeguarding to their online activities with children and volunteers, strengthening CAFOD’s safe recruitment policy and implementing the Interagency Misconduct Disclosure Scheme. We were pleased to be assessed as fully compliant with the Caritas Internationalis Management Standard on Safeguarding. This is an important step for CAFOD in demonstrating our commitment to safeguarding in all aspects of our work and contributing to the confederation’s mission to protect and promote the human dignity of every person.

As an organisation working primarily through partnership, we expect our partners to share our commitment to safeguarding and to have in place measures to prevent and respond to all types of abuse and exploitation. Over the past year CAFOD has provided a wide range of support to partner organisations on safeguarding and safe and dignified programming in the form of training, policy development and review, sharing tools, and funding specific initiatives to strengthen local capacity. This has reduced the risk of abuse or exploitation within our programmes and has emphasised that all engagement with communities is undertaken in a safe and dignified manner.

We have enabled CAFOD managers to monitor partner progress towards meeting safeguarding standards through key performance indicators (KPIs) and we have seen improvements across all the regions in which we work. These KPIs are overseen by the Trustee Strategy and Performance Committee. Twice a year, all safeguarding cases are reviewed by the CAFOD Safeguarding lead trustee.

We are committed to a zero-tolerance approach to misconduct that breaches our policies, including abuse, exploitation, intimidation and other acts. CAFOD has a number of channels for staff and representatives to report safeguarding breaches to us, including our online complaints and incident management system.

In the last financial year, CAFOD handled three safeguarding reports involving individuals associated with CAFOD or our partner organisations. The outcome of these reports is outlined below.

Description 2021/22 2021/22
Total safeguarding allegations 3
CAFOD representative 1
Partner representative 2
Allegations investigated 3
Open cases 1
Closed cases 2
Allegation type
Sexual exploitation and abuse 67%
Other safeguarding policy violation 33%
Outcome (closed cases)
Substantiated 0/2 (0%)
Action taken
Terminationofengagement/contractnon-renewal
Other disciplinary corrective action
Non-disciplinary corrective action – such as capacity strengthening through training 2

We commit to supporting any survivors in the way that best meets their needs, such as providing access to specialised support where appropriate. We are committed to being openly accountable for our work and to reporting serious breaches of our code of conduct and safeguarding policy to donors and the Charity Commission.

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We routinely review each case to identify any gaps in safeguarding policy or practice that led to the breach and ensure that these are addressed and additional safeguarding measures applied where necessary. We are committed to improving safeguarding practices that contribute to preventing exploitation or abuse of the people and communities we work with.

Statement on Fundraising

At CAFOD, we have made a Fundraising Promise to our supporters. It outlines how we will behave when we fundraise and ensures our fundraising is legal, honest, open, transparent and accountable.

We do all we can to ensure that fundraisers, volunteers and any fundraising contractors working with us comply with our Fundraising Promise. We are registered with the Fundraising Regulator which sets and maintains the standards for charitable fundraising in the UK. We comply with laws relating to data protection, health and safety and the environment.

We tell the truth and do not exaggerate. We do what we say we are going to do. We welcome and answer questions about our fundraising activities and costs.

We are clear about who we are, what we do and how gifts are used. Where we have a promotional agreement with a commercial company, we make clear how much of the purchase price we receive. We give a clear explanation of how someone can make a gift and amend a regular commitment.

We respect the rights, dignities and privacy of our supporters and beneficiaries. We will not put undue pressure on supporters to make a gift and if a supporter does not want to give, or wishes to cease giving, we respect their decision and act on this. We offer supporters choices about how they wish to be contacted and we respond to requests to end contact.

We deliver most of our fundraising activity directly, with the exception of some payroll giving promotions. The professional payroll giving fundraisers, who act on our behalf, are responsible for responding to invitations by companies to speak to employees about the general benefits of payroll giving. These fundraisers represent a wide range of charities and are not operating only ‘on CAFOD’s behalf’. They are providing a ‘reactive’ service to companies and employees. They are instructed to talk specifically about CAFOD only if an employee first mentions CAFOD’s name and expresses an interest in supporting us. While the risk of these fundraisers applying pressure to give is very low, there is a system in place where employers are surveyed after each visit, so they can report anything they were unhappy with. No issues or complaints have been communicated to us with regard to payroll giving. The agencies we use have a clear vulnerable people policy and meet the standards outlined in the Fundraising Code of Practice.

Our overarching Fundraising policy includes a section which governs our approach to protecting vulnerable people. This is also referenced within our organisational Safeguarding Policy.

With regards to fundraising and set out in our policy, existing principles already in use are:

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We take care not to use images or words that cause unjustifiable distress or offence and try not to cause unreasonable nuisance or disruption. We encourage any feedback from the public and our Trustees regularly review trends in the feedback we receive. We are registered with the Fundraising Regulator, have paid the levy and uphold the code of practice. We continue to develop our policies and practices in line with best practice requirements and our regular detailed return on all fundraising related complaints has been submitted to the Fundraising Regulator for the financial year 2021-22.

The main fundraising activities undertaken by CAFOD for the financial year 2021-22 and the number of items of feedback about each are given below, with the 2020-21 comparative number in [brackets].

A total of 478 [691] complaints, comments and opinions were received from our supporters. We did not receive any fundraising complaints reportable to the Fundraising Regulator, Charity Commission or the Information Commissioner’s Office.

We are pleased to report a 31 per cent decrease in the number of complaints, queries and opinions, we received. This continues to represent a very small proportion of feedback in relation to the fundraising activities we undertook at 0.0035 per cent [0.0022 per cent].

Nearly half of the contacts made by supporters were related to fulfilment issues from our World Gifts scheme (online and by post) such as late delivery, non-receipt of orders, or a missing item. More detail on our main fundraising channels is supplied below:

Online fundraising: 205 [385]. We received significantly fewer comments and complaints about people’s experience of giving online. We have focused on improving the systems and business processes supporting our online fundraising in 21/22 and recognise in an ever-changing online environment that supporter expectations of service will continue to be high. The complaints this year were of a varied nature: the vast majority were about the fulfilment of orders placed online; non-receipt of donation acknowledgements; the clarity of the Gift Aid declaration wording; as well as questions about countries where we do not work and a few about the difficulty seeing text against the background colours we used.

Postal direct mailing: 181 [241]. The majority of these were also related to fulfilment issues, such as late receipt of World Gifts and some missing or damaged items. We continued to experience delivery delays outside of our control, as Royal Mail services were affected by staff shortages, due to the ongoing Coronavirus pandemic. Other complaints related to questions about stewardship, Gift Aid and our levels of administration costs.

The other main fundraising activities to generate feedback were SMS (text giving) 1 [0], and email communications 57 [25]. We received a further 34 [39] items of feedback across the other 12 [9] fundraising channels we use.

Statement on Streamlined Energy and Carbon Reporting (SECR)

Under SECR legislation, we are required to report some of our UK-based greenhouse gas emissions as part of our Annual Report. Specifically, we need to report, as a minimum, our emissions from UK energy use and business vehicle travel.

We are working towards measuring a comprehensive carbon footprint of CAFOD’s global operations that would include significantly more than just UK energy and vehicle emissions. This section summarises our legally obligated emissions as required by SECR, and also gives a brief summary of our progress towards measuring and reducing CAFOD’s overall carbon footprint.

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Emissions reporting for SECR (UK office energy and business travel) for 2021/22[2]

Emissions source Scope Quantity Unit Carbon footprint
(tCO2e) 2021/22
Carbon footprint
(tCO2e) 2020/21
Electricity use, Romero House 2 451,410 KWh 104.3 130.53
Gas use, Romero House 1 64,033 KWh 13 13.9
Electricity use, Volunteer Centres 2 13,025 KWh 3 9.7
Gas use, Volunteer Centres 1 43,755 KWh 8.9 7.85
Business vehicle travel 3 0 vkm 0 3.84
TOTAL 129.2 177.51

This Carbon footprint for UK office energy was 129.2 tCO2e and represents a carbon intensity of 0.52 tCO2e per full time equivalent (FTE) employee at CAFOD in 2021/22. This is reduced from 0.67 tCO2e FTE in 2020/21, mostly due the decarbonising of the electricity grid. We had no data for our business vehicle travel as staff had not claimed for mileage last year. We expect it would be modest as little business travel happened in this period, similar to the 3 per cent of the previous year’s tCO2e.

The rest of our carbon footprint

The global situation of coronavirus throughout 2021/22 meant a shift to homeworking for the majority of UK-based staff and reduced international travel. In this period, the carbon footprint of our international travel from the UK remained below 50 per cent of pre-pandemic levels. CAFOD is undertaking a learning review into our ways of working to determine how we can embed a more permanent change to our travel culture and behaviour once international travel opens up again. For 2022/23 we plan to report a more comprehensive and robust carbon footprint that will include the carbon emissions from our international flights, as well as UK based rail travel, commercial printing, water and waste.

2 All electricity and gas at Romero House, and 8% of the electricity and gas at Volunteer Centres, was purchased from renewable suppliers in 2021/22. However, in compliance with UK government reporting standards, the carbon saving this creates is not included in the standardised carbon footprint reported above.

CAFOD does not own any vehicles in the UK and thus does not purchase any vehicle fuel directly. UK staff and volunteers use their own cars for CAFOD business, and this has been estimated in the table above, based on mileage claims.

These carbon footprints have been calculated using Defra’s 2021 greenhouse gas emissions factors, including Well-to-Tank (WTT) emissions. Business travel has been calculated using the factor for “Average car, unknown fuel”. Energy use data was collected from energy bills in most cases. For some volunteer centres in shared buildings, separately metered bills were not available and so the energy use was estimated based on the average energy use at the metered volunteer centres, and the number of full-time equivalent staff at each centre.

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3. Statement of Trustee’s Responsibilities

The Trustees are responsible for preparing the Trustees’ Report, which incorporates the directors’ report as required by company law, and accounts in accordance with applicable law and United Kingdom Accounting Standards (United Kingdom Generally Accepted Accounting Practice).

The law applicable to charities in England and Wales requires the Trustees to prepare accounts for each financial year which give a true and fair view of the state of affairs of the charitable company and the group as at the end of the financial year of the income and expenditure of the group for that period. In preparing these accounts, the Trustees are required to:

The Trustees are responsible for keeping proper accounting records that disclose with reasonable accuracy at any time the financial position of the charitable company and enable them to ensure that the accounts comply with the Companies Act 2006. They are also responsible for safeguarding the assets of the charitable company and the group and hence for taking reasonable steps for the prevention and detection of fraud and other irregularities.

The Trustees are responsible for the maintenance and integrity of financial information included on the charity’s website. Legislation in the United Kingdom governing the preparation and dissemination of accounts may differ from legislation in other jurisdictions.

Insofar as each of the Trustees of the charity at the date of approval of this report is aware there is no relevant audit information (information needed by the charity’s auditor in connection with preparing the audit report) of which the charity’s auditor is unaware. Each Trustee has taken all of the steps that he/she should have taken as a trustee in order to make himself/herself aware of any relevant audit information and to establish that the charity’s auditor is aware of that information.

The Trustees’ Report, including the Strategic Report, was approved by the Trustees on 12th July 2022 and signed on their behalf by

The Right Reverend John Arnold, Chair of Trustees

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  1. Independent Auditor’s Report to the Members of Catholic Agency for Overseas Development

Opinion

We have audited the financial statements of Catholic Agency for Overseas Development (‘the charitable company’) for the year ended 31 March 2022 which comprise the Statement of Financial Activities, Balance Sheet, 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 trustee’s 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.

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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.

Opinions on other matters prescribed by the Companies Act 2006

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

the information given in the trustees’ report, which includes the directors’ report and the strategic report prepared for the purposes of company law, for the financial year for which the financial statements are prepared is consistent with the financial statements; and

the strategic report and the directors’ report included within the trustees’ report have been prepared in accordance with applicable legal requirements.

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:

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Responsibilities of trustees

As explained more fully in the trustees’ responsibilities statement [set out on page 49], the trustees (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 trustees 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 trustees 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.

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 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.

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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 General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), employment legislations, taxation legislations and anti-fraud, bribery and corruption legislation. We also considered compliance with local legislation for the group’s overseas operating segments.

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, grants made to partners and the override of controls by management. Our audit procedures to respond to these risks included enquiries of management, internal audit and the Trustees 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, review of overseas office audit reports 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 non-compliance 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.

Tim Redwood Senior Statutory Auditor For and on behalf of

Crowe U.K. LLP Statutory Auditor London

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5. Statement of Financial Activities

(incorporating an income and expenditure account)

for the year ended 31 March 2022

for the year ended 31 March 2022 for the year ended 31 March 2022 for the year ended 31 March 2022
Unrest-
Rest-
ricted
ricted
Funds
Funds
Note
£’000
£’000
Total
Unrest-
Rest-
Funds
ricted
ricted
2022
Funds
Funds
£’000
£’000
£’000
Total
Funds
2021
£’000
Income and endowments from:
Donations and legacies
2
26,765
11,197
Charitable activities
3
362
12,112
Other trading activities
22
-
Investments
4
55
21
Other income
8
-
37,962
25,753
11,234
12,474
422
14,871
22
76
-
76
28
20
8
-
-
36,987
15,293
76
48
-
Total
27,212
23,330
50,542
26,279
26,125
52,404
Expenditure on:
Raising funds
5
6,137
189
Charitable activities:
International development
5
14,798
8,752
Disaster relief
5
3,755
12,460
UK development education
5
1,664
95
Advocacyand campaigning
5
1,919
42
6,326
5,703
126
23,550
11,601
13,888
16,215
3,395
10,339
1,759
1,631
148
1,961
2,087
26
5,829
25,489
13,734
1,779
2,113
Total
5
28,273
21,538
49,811
24,417
24,527
48,944
Operating surplus/(deficit)
(1,061)
1,792
Net gain on investments
12
-
56
731
1,862
1,598
56
-
113
3,460
113
Net income /(expenditure)
7
(1,061)
1,848
787
1,862
1,711
3,573
Reconciliation of funds:
Total funds brought forward
18/19
17,245
5,099
22,344
15,383
3,388
18,771
Total funds carried forward
18/19
16,184
6,947
23,131
17,245
5,099
22,344

CAFOD did not change any of its principal activities during the above financial years and there were no gains and losses other than those included above. Restricted funds above include permanent endowment funds with a current value of £724,254 (see note 12). All of the charity’s income and expenditure is derived from continuing operations.

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Balance Sheet as at 31 March 2022

2022 2021
Note £’000 £’000
Fixed assets
Tangible assets 10 9,382 9,474
Intangible assets 11 271 475
Investments 12 4,190 4,134
13,843 14,083
Current assets
Stock 14 14
Debtors 13 4,712 5,133
Short term cash deposits 10,085 8,884
Cash at bank and in hand 7,110 5,066
21,921 19,097
Current liabilities
Creditors: amounts falling due within one year 14 (12,504) (10,363)
Net current assets 9,417 8,734
Total assets less current liabilities 23,260 22,817
Pension scheme liability 17 (129) (473)
Total assets 20 23,131 22,344
The funds of the charity:
Endowment funds 18 724 668
Restricted income funds:
General donations and legacies 18 355 340
Emergency appeals 18 5,903 3,157
Income from charitable activities 18 (41) 914
Interest 18 6 20
Unrestricted funds:
Designated fixed asset fund 19 4,119 4,415
Designated programme fund 19 10 294
General funds 19 12,055 12,536
Total funds 20 23,131 22,344

The financial statements were approved and authorised for issue by the Trustees on 12th July 2022 and signed on their behalf by:

The Right Reverend John Arnold Chair of the Trustees

Chris Perry Honorary Treasurer

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Cash�Flow�Statement for the year ended 31 March 2022

2022 2021
Note £’000 £’000
Cash flows from operating activities
Net cash generated by operating activities 21 3,414 6,411
Cash flows from investing activities
Dividends and interest from investments 4 76 48
Proceeds from sale of fixed assets 19 -
Purchase of tangible fixed assets (264) (135)
Purchase of intangible fixed assets - -
Net cash used in investingactivities (169) (87)
Change in cash and cash equivalents in the reporting period 22 3,245 6,324
Cash and cash equivalents at the beginning of the reporting period 22 13,950 7,626
Cash and cash equivalents at the end of the reporting period 22 17,195 13,950

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Notes to the Financial Statements for the year ended 31 March 2022

1. Accounting policies

(a) Basis of accounting

CAFOD is a charitable company limited by guarantee incorporated in the United Kingdom (company number 9387398, charity registration number 1160384) with the liability of members (four in number) of £1 each. The registered office is: Romero House, 55 Westminster Bridge Road, London SE1 7JB. The nature of the charity’s operations and principal activities is described in the Trustees’ Report accompanying the 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 (FRS 102) (Charities SORP (FRS102)), the Financial Reporting Standard applicable in the UK and Republic of Ireland (FRS102) and applicable company and charity law in the UK.

Having reviewed the financial position and future plans for the charity, the Trustees have identified no material uncertainties related to events or conditions that cast significant doubt on the charity’s ability to continue its activities for the foreseeable future. Following the disruption to some normal activities during the coronavirus pandemic and with the longer-term economic uncertainty arising from the pandemic and the crisis in Ukraine, CAFOD has undertaken a range of measures to ensure financial sustainability. This includes scenario planning, financial modelling, risk analysis and ongoing cashflow forecasting and monitoring. CAFOD has the flexibility to adapt our financial management, including the utilisation of contingency reserves and to adjust expenditure as needed, in response to income levels, as any future longer-term impacts on income levels or inflationary factors unfold.

Accordingly, the Trustees continue to adopt a going concern basis in preparing the financial statements.

The charity is a public benefit entity as defined in FRS102.

(b) Income

Unrestricted income is available for expenditure approved by the Board. Restricted income is available for expenditure in accordance with the purpose specified by the donor. Income is credited to the Statement of Financial Activities when entitlement can be demonstrated, receipt is probable and the amount can be reliably measured.

Donations and legacies:

Donations from supporters are accounted for when received. Pecuniary legacies are recognised on notification provided there is evidence there are sufficient monies in the estate to make a distribution. Other legacies are included in the Statement of Financial Activities at the earlier of receipt and the date the estate accounts are approved, or a distribution authorised by the executors.

Charitable activities:

In respect of income from governments and other institutional donors, entitlement is obtained when only administrative requirements exist, and all disbursement and other entitlement conditions are satisfied.

(c) Expenditure

Expenditure is included in the Statement of Financial Activities when incurred and includes attributable input VAT which cannot be recovered. Expenditure is categorised both by type (namely grants to partners, activity costs and support costs) and by purpose (namely raising funds and charitable activities); an analysis of total expenditure by type and by purpose is given in note 5.

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Grants and programme payments:

Grants to third parties are charged to the Statement of Financial Activities when they have been approved and where a binding commitment has been made to the partner organisation. Grants represent funds made available to partner programmes and comprise either cash funds transferred to the partners or in-kind provision of goods and services procured on their behalf. Programme grants that have been approved but not yet disbursed at the balance sheet date are carried forward as programme creditors in the balance sheet.

Programme payments are CAFOD managed programme activities made in support of partners.

Activity and support costs:

Activity costs include the costs of all teams in CAFOD, other than Finance, Facilities, the Directorate, Governance, IT and People and Performance functions, which are classified as support costs. Governance costs include the costs of internal and external audit, Board expenses and an apportionment of the salary costs of the senior executive team, relating to time spent by them on the governance of CAFOD’s activities.

Activity costs are attributed directly to expenditure purpose headings. Support costs are allocated to expenditure purpose headings on the basis of the full-time equivalent number of staff contributing towards each purpose. The expenditure purpose headings are:

Raising funds:

Raising funds costs are the costs of generating income for the charitable purposes of the charity;

Charitable activities:

International development: work with poor and disadvantaged communities in the global South to overcome poverty and bring about sustainable development and well-being;

Disaster relief: work to protect lives and relieve suffering during emergencies and reduce the risks to vulnerable communities as a result of conflict and natural disasters;

UK development education: work to raise understanding of the causes of poverty and injustice to inspire a commitment to lasting change;

Advocacy and campaigning: challenging those with power to adopt policies and behaviour that promote social justice and end poverty.

(d) Foreign currency translation

Transactions in foreign currencies are translated at the rate of exchange ruling at the date of the transaction. Financial assets and liabilities denominated in foreign currencies at the balance sheet date are translated at the rate of exchange on that date and any gains/(losses) on exchange are credited/ (debited) to the Statement of Financial Activities. Foreign exchange forward contracts are included on the balance sheet at their fair value and realised and unrealised gains/(losses) are credited/(debited) to the Statement of Financial Activities.

(e) Pensions

CAFOD operates five contributory money purchase pension schemes. Scheme funds are independent of CAFOD’s finances. Three schemes are administered by The Pensions Trust. Two schemes are administered by Fairfield Pension Trustees Limited.

One of the schemes that CAFOD is a member of is the Pensions Trust’s Growth Plan. The Growth Plan is a money purchase pension scheme which also has some historical guarantees. This is a multi-employer pension scheme for which it is not possible to identify separately the assets and liabilities of participating employers and, as such, CAFOD’s regular payments in respect of this plan are charged in the Statement of Financial Activities on a defined contribution basis. A liability is recognised for the present value of agreed additional contributions payable to fund a deficit in this plan related to past service.

(f) Fixed assets

(i) Tangible assets

Tangible assets costing £1,500 or more are capitalised. Depreciation on assets is charged from the date of first usage and provided on the straight-line method at the following annual rates in order to write off each asset over its estimated useful life:

n Leasehold land and buildings (subject to annual impairment review): 1-2% on cost

n Plant and machinery: over 15 years

n Computers, office furniture and equipment and motor vehicles: 20% on cost

Catholic Agency for Overseas Development Report of the Trustees and Financial Statements – for the year ended 31 March 2022

59

Software development costs are recognised as internally generated intangible assets provided that:

Intangible assets costing £50,000 or more are capitalised.

Amortisation on intangible assets is charged from the date of first usage and provided on the straightline basis in order to write off each intangible asset over its estimated useful life of five years.

(g) Investments

Investments are included on the balance sheet at their market value at the end of the financial year. Realised and unrealised gains/(losses) are credited/(debited) to the Statement of Financial Activities in the year in which they arise.

(h)�Cash�and�cash�equivalents

Cash and cash equivalents include deposits repayable on demand without penalty. Short term money market deposits and fixed term cash deposits which do not meet this criterion are held under current assets as short term deposits. Cash and bank deposits are stated at the cash amount.

(i)�Other�financial�assets�and�liabilities

Debtors and creditors are stated at the settlement amount after any applicable discounts.

(j)�Fund�accounting

Designated funds comprise funds set aside out of unrestricted funds for specific future purposes.

General reserves represent those monies that are freely available for application towards achieving any charitable purpose that falls within the charity’s charitable objects.

Restricted funds comprise monies raised for, or their use restricted to, a specific purpose, or contributions subject to conditions imposed by donors.

Endowment funds comprise monies that must be held indefinitely as capital. Income therefrom is credited to general funds and applied for general purposes unless under the terms of the endowment such income must be used for specific purposes, in which case it is credited to restricted funds.

(k) Operating leases

Rentals payable under operating leases are charged to the Statement of Financial Activities on a straight-line basis over the term of the lease.

(l) Financial instruments

The charity has financial assets and financial liabilities of a kind that qualify as basic financial instruments. Financial instruments are initially recognised at transaction value and subsequently measured at the present value of future cash flows (amortised cost). Financial assets held at amortised cost comprise cash at bank and in hand, short term cash deposits and the group’s debtors excluding prepayments. Financial liabilities held at amortised cost comprise the group’s short- and long-term creditors excluding deferred income. Other than the pension scheme liability, no discounting has been applied to these financial instruments on the basis that the periods over which amounts will be settled are such that any discounting would be immaterial. The pension scheme deficit liability will be settled over two years and ten months from the balance sheet date and is discounted appropriately.

(m)�Critical�accounting�judgements�and�key�sources�of�estimation�uncertainty

In the application of the charity’s accounting policies, Trustees are required to make judgements, estimates and assumptions about the carrying values 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.

Catholic Agency for Overseas Development Report of the Trustees and Financial Statements – for the year ended 31 March 2022

60

The items in the accounts that are considered to involve the most significant judgements and sources of uncertainty through estimation, when applying CAFOD’s accounting policies include:

In the view of the Trustees, 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. Income from donations and legacies

Unrestricted Restricted
Total
Unrestricted
Restricted
Total
Funds
Funds
Funds
Funds
Funds
Funds
2022
2021
£’000
£’000
£’000
£’000
£’000
£’000
General donations from supporters
15,374
3,184
18,558
14,227
4,285
18,512
Legacy income from supporters
10,815
181
10,996
11,348
142
11,490
Emergency donations from supporters
514
5,485
5,999
142
6,250
6,392
Emergency donations via DEC
62
2,347
2,409
36
557
593
Income from donations and legacies
26,765
11,197
37,962
25,753
11,234
36,987

Income from donations includes Emergency donations received from the Disasters Emergency Committee (DEC), a group of 14 leading UK aid charities that come together in time of crisis and Emergency appeal donations from supporters.

Catholic Agency for Overseas Development Report of the Trustees and Financial Statements – for the year ended 31 March 2022

61

3. Income from charitable activities

Unrestricted
Restricted
Total
Unrestricted
Restricted
Total
Funds
Funds
Funds
Funds
Funds
Funds
2022
2021
£’000
£’000
£’000
£’000
£’000
£’000
Caritas and other Catholic agencies (a)
137
5,479
5,616
116
5,055
5,171
Government grants (b)
157
4,901
5,058
219
7,703
7,922
Institutional and other grants (c)
68
1,732
1,800
87
2,113
2,200
Income from charitable activities
362
12,112
12,474
~~422~~
~~14,871~~
~~15,293~~
(a) Caritas and other Catholic
agencies:
Caritas Australia
24
567
591
9
551
560
Caritas Austria
-
-
-
1
19
20
Caritas Belgium
-
1,167
1,167
-
9
9
Caritas Denmark
5
56
61
1
19
20
Caritas Finland
-
1
1
5
100
105
Caritas Germany
22
71
93
-
-
-
Caritas Internationalis
-
117
117
-
-
-
Caritas Italy
-
-
-
1
154
155
Caritas Japan
-
-
-
-
11
11
Caritas Korea
-
-
-
-
79
79
Caritas Norway
15
479
494
6
773
779
Caritas Portugal
-
-
-
-
18
18
Caritas Spain
2
305
307
2
252
254
Caritas Taiwan
-
-
-
-
8
8
Catholic Relief Services
36
561
597
54
486
540
Development & Peace
-
-
-
-
409
409
Manos Unidas
-
-
-
1
63
64
Misereor
3
166
169
5
332
337
Scottish Catholic International Aid Fund
-
70
70
5
109
114
Sécours Catholique
29
379
408
19
255
274
Trócaire
-
1,506
1,506
-
1,133
1,133
Vastenaktie
1
34
35
7
271
278
Others
-
-
-
-
4
4
Caritas and other Catholic agencies:
137
5,479
5,616
116
5,055
5,171
560
20
9
20
105
-
-
155
11
79
779
18
254
8
540
409
64
337
114
274
1,133
278
4
5,171
7,922
2,200
116
5,055
219
7,703
87
2,113
14,871
422
15,293
9
551
1
19
-
9
1
19
5
100
-
-
-
-
1
154
-
11
-
79
6
773
-
18
2
252
-
8
54
486
-
409
1
63
5
332
5
109
19
255
-
1,133
7
271
-
4

Catholic Agency for Overseas Development Report of the Trustees and Financial Statements – for the year ended 31 March 2022

62

3. Income from charitable activities (continued)

Unrestricted Restricted
Funds
Funds
£’000
£’000
Total
Unrestricted Restricted
Funds
Funds
Funds
2022
£’000
£’000
£’000
Total
Funds
2021
£’000
(b) Government grants:
UK Government, FCDO:
UK Aid Matched Funding
-
824
Other
31
400
European Union
18
5
Global Fund to End Modern Slavery
22
353
Government of Guernsey
-
(6)
Government of Isle of Man
-
48
Government of Japan
-
-
Government of Jersey
-
380
Government of the Netherlands
-
68
Government of Sweden
46
1,119
United Nations agencies
40
1,652
United Nations agencies (goods in
kind)
-
58
824
-
1,312
431
42
1,017
23
41
597
375
25
403
(6)
-
68
48
-
50
-
-
61
380
-
112
68
6
9
1165
35
2,059
1692
70
1,873
58
-
142
1,312
1,059
638
428
68
50
61
112
15
2,094
1,943
142
Government grants
157
4,901
5,058
219
7,703
7,922
Unrestricted
Restricted
Funds
Funds
£’000
£’000
Total
Unrestricted
Restricted
Funds
Funds
Funds
2022
£’000
£’000
£’000
Funds
2021
£’000
(c) Institutional and other grants:
Christian Aid
-
77
Denise Coates Foundation
5
(5)
Islamic Relief Worldwide
-
214
Latin America Children’s Trust
-
103
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-
day Saints
9
285
Norwegian Church Aid
-
-
START
37
785
Other
17
273
77
-
37
-
(3)
54
214
-
12
103
-
94
294
11
393
-
23
-
822
54
1,436
290
2
87
37
51
12
94
404
23
1,490
89
Institutional and other grants
68
1,732
1,800
87
2113
2,200

There were no unfulfilled conditions or contingencies relating to grants existing at the year end.

4. Income from investments

Unrestricted
Restricted
Total
Unrestricted
Restricted
Total
Funds
Funds
Funds
Funds
Funds
Funds
2022
2021
£’000
£’000
£’000
£’000
£’000
£’000
Interest received/receivable
55
-
55
28
-
28
Dividends received/receivable
-
21
21
-
20
20
Income from investments
55
21
76
28
20
48

Catholic Agency for Overseas Development Report of the Trustees and Financial Statements – for the year ended 31 March 2022

63

5. Expenditure

Grants &
Activity costs
Support costs
Total
programme
staff
non-staff
staff
non-staff
2022
payments
costs
costs
costs
costs
£’000
£’000
£’000
£’000
£’000
£’000
Raising funds
-
3,737
1,809
443
337
6,326
International development
14,841
4,634
1,484
1,474
1,117
23,550
Disaster relief
12,287
2,105
657
663
503
16,215
UK development education
44
1,274
188
144
109
1,759
Advocacy and campaigning
52
1,442
180
163
124
1,961
(
Charitable activities
27,224
9,455
2,509
2,444
1,853
43,485
Total expenditure 2021/22
27,224
13,192
4,318
2,887
2,190
49,811
Grants &
Activity costs
Support costs
Total
programme
staff
non-staff
staff
non-staff
2021
payments
costs
costs
costs
costs
£’000
£’000
£’000
£’000
£’000
£’000
Raising funds
-
3,420
1,624
449
336
5,829
International development
17,067
4,405
1,220
1,601
1,196
25,489
Disaster relief
9,383
2,312
662
788
589
13,734
UK development education
18
1,326
132
173
130
1,779
Advocacy and campaigning
62
1,527
187
193
144
2,113
Charitable activities
26,530
9,570
2,201
2,755
2,059
43,115
Total expenditure 2020/21
26,530
12,990
3,825
3,204
2,395
48,944
2022
2021
£’000
£’000
Information technology
1,921
1,876
HR and organisational development
1,222
1,294
Financial management
682
936
Premises and facilities
710
719
Strategic leadership
156
259
Governance (analysed below)
386
515
Support costs:
5,077
5,599
Senior management
130
219
Legal and professional services
36
56
Internal audit
148
157
External audit
71
83
Board training and meeting costs
1
-
Governance costs:
386
515

Catholic Agency for Overseas Development Report of the Trustees and Financial Statements – for the year ended 31 March 2022

64

6. Grants and programme payments

Grants and programme payments are made up of: 504 grants (2021:505) to third parties totalling £25.329m (2021: £24.475m), plus 55 CAFOD-managed grants (2021: 56) for programme payments made in support of partners for programme activities totalling £2.369m (2021: £1.463m), plus realised and unrealised exchange gains of £0.474m (2021: less realised and unrealised exchange losses of £0.592m).

Details of grants to third parties and partner payments are provided in a Report of Grants for 2021/22 published on CAFOD’s website cafod.org.uk .

2022 2022 2021 2021
Number £’000 Number £’000
Analysed by activity:
Capacity strengthening 129 1,571 122 1,666
Emergency preparedness, response and recovery 139 12,501 172 9,173
Governance accountability and transparency 100 4,527 94 3,066
Livelihoods resilience and environment 146 7,707 121 9,384
Peace and reconciliation 45 1,392 52 2,649
559 27,698 561 25,938
Realised (gains)/ losses on Foreign Currency - (269) - 386
Unrealised (gains) / losses on Foreign Currency contracts - (205) - 206
Totalgrants andprogrammepayments 559 27,244 561 26,530
2022 2022 2021 2021
Number £’000 Number £’000
Analysed by region
Africa (a) 298 17,232 276 17,015
Latin America and Caribbean (b) 111 3,617 130 3,152
Asia and Middle East and Europe (c) 115 6,383 112 5,113
Global, policy and education 35 466 43 658
559 27,698 561 25,938
Realised (gains) / losses on Foreign Currency - (269) - 386
Unrealised (gains) / losses on Foreign Currency contracts - (205) - 206
Totalgrants andprogrammepayments 559 27,224 561 26,530

See note 16 on Forward foreign currency contracts.


(a) Africa
2022
2022
2021
2021
Number
£’000
Number
£’000
Democratic Republic of Congo
53
4,818
44
2,754
Eritrea
9
521
12
1,184
Ethiopia
3
810
3
1,425
Kenya
28
748
15
591
Liberia
5
100
7
199
Mozambique
9
353
16
796
Niger
5
136
9
322
Nigeria
16
682
20
594
Sierra Leone
23
778
17
484
South Sudan
49
3,557
46
3,953
Sudan
24
1,968
24
1,458
Eswatini
3
70
3
51
Uganda
11
514
7
347
Zambia
15
338
17
471
Zimbabwe
40
1,696
35
2,358
Multi-Country
5
143
1
28
Africa
298
17,232
276
17,015

Catholic Agency for Overseas Development Report of the Trustees and Financial Statements – for the year ended 31 March 2022

65

6. Grants and programme payments (continued)

6. Grants and programme payments (continued) 6. Grants and programme payments (continued)
(b) Latin America & Caribbean
2022
2022
2021
2021
Number
£’000
Number
£’000
Bolivia
10
304
15
331
Brazil
24
1,199
26
999
Colombia
17
463
20
498
El Salvador
5
169
4
125
Guatemala
9
249
12
322
Haiti
2
250
9
147
Honduras
6
142
-
-
Nicaragua
8
229
10
243
Peru
13
342
15
233
Venezuela
1
30
1
10
Multi-country
16
240
18
244
Latin America and Caribbean
111
3,617
130
3,152
Ai d Middl Et d E
2022
2022
2021
2021
(c) sa an e as an urope




Number
£’000
Number
£’000
Afghanistan
13
1,579
7
298
Bangladesh
18
1,227
17
1,038
Cambodia
6
240
9
225
India
4
771
1
40
Indonesia
1
10
2
75
Israel
6
125
5
177
Jordan
-
-
3
123
Lebanon
9
348
13
682
Moldova
1
202
-
-
Myanmar
15
333
12
307
Nepal
2
56
1
20
Pakistan
1
80
-
-
Philippines
1
40
1
40
Poland
1
10
-
-
Sri Lanka
13
286
12
289
Syria
8
472
15
1,302
Ukraine
2
67
-
-
Yemen
1
210
2
200
West Bank and Gaza
9
278
8
208
Multi-country
4
49
4
89
Asia and Middle East and Europe
115
6,383
112
5,113

7. Net expenditure

7. Net expenditure
2022
2021
£’000
£’000
Net expenditure is stated after charging/(crediting):
Depreciation of tangible fixed assets
339
361
Depreciation of Intangible Assets
204
204
(Gain)/loss on sale of tangible fixed assets
(2)
25
Operating leases: land and buildings
295
316
Auditors’ remuneration
74
67
Auditors’ remuneration:
Audit of CAFOD
UK (primary auditor, Crowe UK LLP)
33
32
Overseas (secondary auditors)
38
33
71
65
Other non-audit services (UK, Crowe UK LLP)
3
2
Auditors’ remuneration
74
67

Catholic Agency for Overseas Development Report of the Trustees and Financial Statements – for the year ended 31 March 2022

66

8. Taxation

CAFOD is a registered charity and therefore is not liable to income tax or corporation tax on income derived from its charitable activities. All of its income falls within the various exemptions available to registered charities.

9. Employees, Trustees and volunteers

2022
2022
2021
2021
Employees
Employees
Employees
Employees
average
cost
average
cost
full-time
full-time
equivalent
£’000
equivalent
£’000
Raising funds
89
4,180
85
3,869
International development
162
6,108
166
6,006
Disaster relief
73
2,768
82
3,100
UK development education
29
1,418
33
1,499
Advocacy and campaigning
33
1,605
36
1,720
Total
386
16,079
402
16,194
Salaries
13,339
13,469
Employer’s social security contributions
1,270
1,258
Employer’s pension contributions
1,470
1,467
Total
16,079
16,194

The total average number (by headcount) of employees in the year was 401 (2021: 437).

Included in the above are costs relating to redundancy and compensation for loss of office of £185,510 (2021: £125,808) all of which were settled during the year.

The number of employees whose emoluments (excluding employer’s national insurance and pension contributions) amounted to over £60,000 in the year was as follows:

2022
2021
Number
Number
£60,001 - £70,000
7
8
£70,001 - £80,000
4
5
£80,001 - £90,000
1
-
£90,001 - £100,000
-
1

Total remuneration and benefits received during the year by CAFOD’s highest paid member of staff was £83,565 (2021: £90,346) salary, £10,312 (2021: £11,255) employer’s national insurance and £8,499 (2021: £9,996) employer’s pension contribution. This staff person took a voluntary reduction in salary in the context of challenging economic conditions due to COVID-19. The total remuneration and benefits received during the year by the other key management personnel (2 persons) who have delegated responsibility for the Strategy and Performance Committee and the Finance Legal Audit and Risk Committee was £156,308 (2021: £154,411) salary, £19,130 (2021: £18,968) employer’s national insurance and £13,414 (2021: £14,643) employer’s pension contribution.

Trustees

The Trustees do not receive any remuneration for their services. In the year, CAFOD paid £60 for books for trustees, £3,575 for accommodation for a residential meeting, and £473 to facilitate a culture review day. (2021: CAFOD paid £191 of expenses for training on behalf of one Trustee). One residential meeting was held in this financial year. There are no other related party transactions requiring disclosure within the financial statements.

Volunteers

In addition to employed staff and Trustees, CAFOD relied on the services of 3,497 volunteers (2021: 3,755) who carried out a total of 5,444 assignments (2021: 5,657); 3,230 Parish-based assignments (2021: 3,491), 1,468 school-based assignment (2021: 1,404) and 746 other assignments in a range of volunteer roles such as campaigning, fundraising, media, office support and youth work (2021: 762).

Catholic Agency for Overseas Development Report of the Trustees and Financial Statements – for the year ended 31 March 2022

67

10. Tangible fixed assets

Leasehold
Office
Motor
Total
land and
equipment
vehicles
tangible
buildings
fixed assets
£’000
£’000
£’000
£’000
Cost at 1 April 2021
11,141
500
858
12,499
Additions
-
32
232
264
Disposals
-
-
(267)
(267)
Cost at 31 March 2022
11,141
532
823
12,496
Depreciation at 1 April 2021
1,933
411
681
3,025
Charge for the year
213
42
84
339
On disposals
-
-
(250)
(250)
Depreciation at 31 March 2022
2,146
453
515
3,114
Net book value at 31 March 2022
8,995
79
308
9,382
Net book value at 31 March 2021
9,208
89
177
9,474

Leasehold land and buildings held at 31 March 2022 relates to Romero House (net book value at 31 March 2022: £9.0m – being £8.3m for the land and building and £0.7m for the plant and machinery) which is used as CAFOD’s head office.

11. Intangible fixed assets

Software
Total
development
Intangible
fixed assets
£’000
£’000
Cost at 1 April 2021
1,018
1,018
Additions
-
-
Cost at 31 March 2022
1,018
1,018
Amortisation at 1 April 2021
543
543
Charge for theyear
204
204
Amortisation at 31 March 2022
747
747
Net book value at 31 March 2022
271
271
Net book value at 31 March 2021
475
475

Intangible fixed assets relates to the development of CAFOD’s supporter and volunteer relationship management system.

Catholic Agency for Overseas Development Report of the Trustees and Financial Statements – for the year ended 31 March 2022

68

12. Investments held as fixed assets

2022
2021
£’000
£’000
Sterling deposits
3,466
3,466
Permanent endowment fund
724
668
Investments held as fixed assets
4,190
4,134

The sterling deposits corresponds to the amount of the stabilisation fund held in liquid funds. The permanent endowment fund is invested in CCLA Charities Ethical Investment Fund Income Units at a historic cost of £449,024. The movement on investments during the year was:

£’000
Market value at 1 April 2021
668
Unrealisedgains
56
Market value at 31 March 2022
724
£’000
Market value at 1 April 2020
555
Unrealisedgain
113
Market value at 31 March 2021
668

CAFOD, the charity, owns the entire £3 issued share capital of The CAFOD Trading Company Limited (“CAFOD Trading”), registered in England and Wales (company number 989846). The principal activity of CAFOD Trading has been to carry out commercial activities for the benefit of the charity. CAFOD Trading ceased to trade on 28th February 2017 and remains dormant. The registered office is Romero House, 55 Westminster Bridge Road, London SE1 7JB.

13. Debtors

13. Debtors
2022 2021
£’000 £’000
Interest receivable 6 3
Taxation recoverable 1,211 1,396
Accrued income 2,579 3,067
Prepayments 566 502
Other debtors 145 165
Forward foreign currency contracts (note 16) 205 -
Debtors 4,712 5,133

Included in accrued income above is an amount of £709,000 (2021: £677,000) relating to legacies. As at 31 March 2022, CAFOD also has entitlement to a number of legacies from estates for which the administration has yet to be finalised. The future income from these legacies is estimated at £7,676,000 (2021: £10,664,000), though we do not expect all of this to be received in the next financial year.

Catholic Agency for Overseas Development Report of the Trustees and Financial Statements – for the year ended 31 March 2022

69

14. Creditors: amounts falling due within one year

2022 2021
£’000 £’000
Programme creditors 10,773 8,440
Taxation and social security 395 489
Other creditors and accruals 1,308 1,200
Interest free loans from supporters 28 28
Forward foreign currency contracts (note 16) - 206
Creditors 12,504 10,363

Other creditors and accruals include pension contributions of £143,000 (2021: £144,000).

Programme creditors represent grants approved that are yet to be paid to partners. Some grants for partners are approved in principle for two or three years. Second- and third-year grants represent planned future commitments but are not recognised as a liability when they are approved, as payment is conditional upon satisfactory progress. As at 31 March 2022 planned future commitments under formal multi-year funding cycle approvals amounted to £1.0m; £0.7m due within one year and a further £0.3m due within two years (2021: £1.4m; £1.2m due within one year and a further £0.2m within two years).

15. Operating lease commitments

At 31 March 2022, the total future minimum lease payments under non-cancellable operating leases in respect of operating leases for land and buildings were:

2022
2021
£’000
£’000
Within one year
13
13
In the second to fifth years inclusive
-
-
Later than fiveyears
-
-
Operating lease commitments
13
13

16. Forward foreign currency contracts

CAFOD mitigates the risk of having to change or cut planned activities because of the financial implications of a rapid change in the value of Sterling against the US Dollar and other currencies. To achieve this CAFOD purchases a proportion of its US Dollars requirements on forward contracts. The fair value of these contracts is calculated at the balance sheet date by comparison between the rate implicit in the contract and the exchange rate at that date. The unrealised gain on these contracts at 31 March 2022 was £205,000 which has been included in debtors and grant expenditure (2021: unrealised loss included in creditors and grant expenditure was £206,000).

The contracts are to purchase US Dollars (USD) and sell Sterling (GBP) for a period of up to 12 months in duration, at USD/GBP rates between 1.32 and 1.41. At the balance sheet date, a purchase value of USD 8.5 million remained on these contracts representing approximately 50% of the estimated currency exposure on project creditors and salary and expense commitments for the coming year. The actual rate of exchange at 31 March 2022 was 1.31.

Catholic Agency for Overseas Development Report of the Trustees and Financial Statements – for the year ended 31 March 2022

70

17. Pensions

The charity operates five contributory money purchase pension schemes. Scheme funds are independent of the charity and are all administered by independent Trustees. (Three schemes are administered by The Pensions Trust. Two schemes are administered by Fairfield Pension Trustees Limited.)

For all these schemes, CAFOD paid contributions at the basic rate of 10% during the year and members paid contributions at a basic rate of 5% during the year. For members with more than 10 years’ service, CAFOD paid 12.5% and also matched any additional members’ contributions up to a maximum employer’s contribution of 17.5%.

One of the schemes that CAFOD participates in is the Pensions Trust’s Growth Plan, a multi-employer pension plan which also has some historical guarantees. As at the balance sheet date there were 188 active members of the Growth Plan (31 March 2021: 197). CAFOD intends to continue to offer membership of the Growth Plan (Series 4) to its employees along with the Pensions Trust’s Flexible Retirement Plan.

Contributions paid into the Growth Plan up to and including September 2001 were converted to defined amounts of pension payable from normal retirement date. From October 2001 contributions were invested in personal funds which have a capital guarantee and which are converted to pension on retirement, either within the Growth Plan or by the purchase of an annuity. Current contributions to Series 4 of the Growth Plan are entirely money purchase.

The Trustee of the Growth Plan commissions an actuarial valuation every three years to determine the funding position of the Plan by comparing the assets with the past service liabilities at the valuation date and the rules of the Plan give the Trustee the power to require employers to pay additional contributions in order to ensure that the statutory funding objective under the Pensions Act 2004 is met.

The triennial actuarial valuation results at 30 September 2020 were finalised during the year ended 31 March 2022 and are the most recent results announced. The valuation of the Plan was performed by a professionally qualified actuary. The market value of the Growth Plan’s assets at the valuation date was £799 million and the Plan’s technical provisions (i.e. past service liabilities) were £832 million, which is equivalent to a funding level of 96%. The shortfall in assets compared with the value of liabilities was £32 million (£131.5 million at the 2017 valuation).

Two significant factors in the reduced deficit on the Technical Provisions basis were:

The length of the recovery plan was unchanged from the 2017 valuation recovery planning period and still extends to 31 January 2025. Contribution amounts were also adjusted depending on the Actuary’s calculations of each employer’s relative share of the liabilities. A further change in approach was that deficit contributions were fixed from 1 April 2022, until the end of the recovery plan. There will be no 3% annual increase on deficit contributions. A 3% per annum increase will apply to future scheme expense contributions.

CAFOD’s annual additional deficit contribution amount for the year ending 31 March 2022 was £124,622 and contributions for the following two years and ten months, starting on 1st April 2022, were fixed at £47,347 per annum. CAFOD’s annual ongoing scheme expense contributions, starting on 1st April 2022 will be £52,922 and this sum will increase by 3% compound per year.

CAFOD’s obligation to pay additional deficit contributions over the period of a recovery plan are recognised as a specific balance sheet provision. The movements on this provision are as follows:

2022
2021
£’000
£’000
Provision at start of year
473
579
Payments made during the year
(125)
(121)
Release of provision for future deficit liability
(219)
-
Discount rate adjustment
-
15
Provision at end ofyear
129
473

The Trustees have determined that the appropriate discount rate to apply to the future cash liability is that published by actuaries from time to time for single employer pension schemes. This rate was 2.00% at 31 March 2022 (2.15% at 31 March 2021).

For the year ended 31 March 2023, CAFOD’s regular pension contributions for all its pension arrangements are estimated to be £1,225,000.

Catholic Agency for Overseas Development Report of the Trustees and Financial Statements – for the year ended 31 March 2022

71

18. Restricted funds

Balance
Income
Expenditure
Gains /
Transfers
Balance
Apr-21
(losses)
Mar-22
£’000
£’000
£’000
£’000
£’000
£’000
Endowment funds:
Sr. Laura Tanti Foundation
668
-
-
56
-
724
Restricted income funds:
General donations and legacies
340
3,361
(3,346)
-
-
355
Emergency appeals donations
3,157
7,836
(5,090)
-
-
5,903
Income from charitable activities
914
12,112
(13,067)
-
-
(41)
Investment income
20
21
(35)
-
-
6
Restricted fund movement 2021/22
5,099
23,330
(21,538)
56
-
6,947
Balance
Income
Expenditure
Gains /
Transfers
Balance
Apr-21
(losses)
Mar-22
£’000
£’000
£’000
£’000
£’000
£’000
Endowment funds:
Sr. Laura Tanti Foundation
668
-
-
56
-
724
Restricted income funds:
General donations and legacies
340
3,361
(3,346)
-
-
355
Emergency appeals donations
3,157
7,836
(5,090)
-
-
5,903
Income from charitable activities
914
12,112
(13,067)
-
-
(41)
Investment income
20
21
(35)
-
-
6
Restricted fund movement 2021/22
5,099
23,330
(21,538)
56
-
6,947
Balance
Income
Expenditure
Gains /
Transfers
Apr-20
(losses)
£’000
£’000
£’000
£’000
£’000
Balance
Mar-21
£’000
Endowment funds:
Sr. Laura Tanti Foundation
555
-
-
113
-
Restricted income funds:
General donations and legacies
732
4,427
(4,819)
-
-
Emergency appeals donations
2,374
6,807
(6,024)
-
-
Income from charitable activities
(277)
14,871
(13,680)
-
-
Investment income
4
20
(4)
-
-
668
340
3,157
914
20
Restricted fund movement 2020/21
3,388
26,125
(24,527)
113
-
5,099

The Permanent Endowment relates to the Sister Laura Tanti Foundation for which CAFOD has received cumulative donations as at 31 March 2022 of £421,155 (2021: £421,155) held under trust deeds. The Trustees of CAFOD hold this amount and its income in trust and will apply the income for the benefit of the poor as stipulated.

The balances on restricted funds represent amounts raised for specific purposes less amounts spent on those purposes by the year end. As at 31 March 2022 the balances held were for the following purposes:

2022
2021
£’000
£’000
Africa Programme
249
1,443
Asia, Middle East, and Europe Programme
3,983
838
Latin America Programme
54
(9)
General Programme
1,937
2,159
Permanent endowment
724
668
Restricted funds
6,947
5,099

Some restricted funds are in surplus where amounts already received are yet to be fully spent and some in deficit where amounts already spent on those specific purposes are receivable from the donor after the year end. Restricted fund balances at 31 March 2022, shown net above, comprises:

2022
2021
£’000
£’000
Programme grants in surplus
9,172
7,104
Programmegrants in deficit
(2,225)
(2,005)
Restricted funds
6,947
5,099

Catholic Agency for Overseas Development Report of the Trustees and Financial Statements – for the year ended 31 March 2022

72

19. Unrestricted funds

Balance
Income
Expenditure
Transfers
Apr-21
£’000
£’000
£’000
£’000
Balance
Mar-22
£’000
Designated funds:
Fixed asset fund
4,415
-
-
(296)
Programme fund
294
-
(822)
538
General funds:
Stabilisation fund
9,000
-
-
-
Unallocated reserve
3,536
27,212
(27,451)
(242)
4,119
10
9,000
3,055
Movement on unrestricted 2021/22
17,245
27,212
(28,273)
-
16,184
Balance
Income
Expenditure
Transfers
Apr-20
£’000
£’000
£’000
£’000
Balance
Mar-21
£’000
Designated funds:
Fixed asset fund
4,870
-
-
(455)
Programme fund
527
-
(233)
-
General funds:
Stabilisation fund
9,000
-
-
-
Unallocated reserve
986
26,279
(24,184)
455
4,415
294
9,000
3,536
Movement on unrestricted 2020/21
15,383
26,279
(24,417)
-
17,245

Designated�fixed�assets�fund:

This fund represents unrestricted funds that are not available for current expenditure, as they are tied up in the assets used in day-to-day operation of the charity. The value of the fund held is set at: the net book value at the balance sheet date of unrestricted tangible and intangible fixed assets, less £5.5m – being the amount the Trustees would consider making available by taking a loan mortgaged on Romero House (CAFOD’s head office), or otherwise realise the excess value available in the property, if CAFOD needs to utilise these funds. CAFOD would enter into detailed discussions with our bankers, to provide such a loan, should this be required.

Designated programme fund:

This fund represents available funds which the Trustees have designated for expenditure on specific programme activities within the detailed budget for the coming years.

General funds:

General funds are available unrestricted funds in hand, over and above those set aside for designated purposes and are generated as planned or because more general income has been received than was expected or because budgeted expenditure has not been incurred. General funds are ‘reserves’, as defined in the Charities SORP (FRS 102) and comprise the stabilisation fund plus the unallocated reserve.

The Trustees have established a policy to hold a desired level of general funds in a stabilisation fund, to limit any potential disruption associated with the financial risks CAFOD faces from its operations. Based upon a risk assessed as a shortfall of 10% - 15% in the budgeted general income and the need for two years to adjust programmes, the Trustees have established the target level of the Stabilisation fund at 20% - 30% of the planned annual general income for the coming years, which equates to a range of £6 million to £9 million. At the balance sheet date, the Stabilisation fund stood at £9m with £5.5m held in the value of Romero House (as explained above) and £3.5m held in cash deposit investments.

The Trustees have established a policy to spend any unallocated reserve within general funds in excess of the target level on CAFOD’s programme and partners promptly, taking the opportunity to meet existing needs or invest for the future, whilst ensuring that any further commitments which the expenditure generates are sustainable.

Catholic Agency for Overseas Development Report of the Trustees and Financial Statements – for the year ended 31 March 2022

73

20. Analysis of net assets between funds

Fixed
Investments
Net
Pension
assets
current
provision
assets
£’000
£’000
£’000
£’000
Total
net
assets
£’000
Endowment funds:
Sr. Laura Tanti Foundation
-
724
-
-
Restricted income funds:
General donations
-
-
355
-
Emergency appeals
-
-
5,903
-
Income from charitable activities
-
-
(41)
-
Interest
-
-
6
-
Designated funds:
Fixed asset fund
4,119
-
-
-
Programme fund
-
-
10
-
General funds:
Stabilisation fund
5,534
3,466
-
-
Unallocated reserve
-
-
3,184
(129)
724
355
5,903
(41)
6
4,119
10
9,000
3,055
Total net assets at 31st March 2022
9,653
4,190
9,417
(129)
23,131

Catholic Agency for Overseas Development Report of the Trustees and Financial Statements – for the year ended 31 March 2022

74

21. Reconciliation of net income to net cash provided by operating activities

2022
2021
£’000
£’000
Net income
787
3,573
Depreciation
543
565
(Gain)/loss on disposal of fixed assets
(2)
25
Income from investments
(76)
(48)
(Gain)/loss on investments
(56)
(113)
Decrease in debtors
421
178
(Decrease) in pension scheme liability
(344)
(106)
Increase in creditors
2,141
2,337
Net cashprovided by operating activities
3,414
6,411

22. Analysis of changes in cash and cash equivalents

22. Analysis of changes in cash and cash equivalents
Closing
balance
£’000
10,085
7,110
17,195
Opening
Movement
balance
£’000
£’000
Closing
balance
£’000
Short term cash deposits
8,884
1,201
Cash at bank and in hand
5,066
2,044
10,085
7,110
Cash and cash equivalents
13,950
3,245
17,195

2022 marks 60 years since CAFOD became an official charity following the creation of the first Family Fast Day by CAFOD’s founding mothers. This prayer was written to give thanks for the role of women’s organisations in creating CAFOD and for the support they continue to give.

Loving God,

You created and formed each one of us. You have drawn us with unfailing kindness and lavished us with love. We give you thanks and praise.

For our sisters, the women at the heart of our beginnings and our work, we give you thanks and praise.

For the women who respond to the need for care and compassion both near and far, we give you thanks and praise.

For our sisters who act for justice, stand in solidarity, speak the truth to power and reach out with a loving hand, we give you thanks and praise.

Loving God, source of hope, we ask you to lift the women who face hardship, violence, rejection, and isolation.

Send out your spirit on all women this year. May we remember the wonderful things that they have done, continue to do, and will do from this time forward through your grace.

Amen.

CAFOD, Romero House, 55 Westminster Bridge Road, London SE1 7JB

Tel: 020 7733 7900 Email: cafod@cafod.org.uk

Charity no 1160384 and a company limited by guarantee no 09387398 Photos: Angie Bungeroth, Culture and Free Thought Association, CAFOD, Louise Norton, Joe Savage, Mervyn Maciel, Rosie Heaton, Tendai Muchada, Thom Flint.

Printed on paper from well-managed forests