Olivepage wrote:Perhaps we should suspend the debate waiting for the auditor's report.
RNLI 2007
The free reserves (what windy refers to as capable of supporting the RNLI for 2 yrs with zero income) are at 12 months, not 2 yrs.
The capital reserve including the free reserve is £280m of which £160m is directed reserve ie it comes from a donation for which the giver has specified how the legacy will be spent.
The £280m is invested £121m in equity, £14m in property, £52m in fixed interest, £13m in cash and £81m in real/absolute return fund. Taking a weighted average, the total loss on these investments *could* be £32m as at this morning.
If you then reduce the free reserve proportionately, the reserve stands at 10months. Earlier this decade the RNLI did some sums under the scrutiny of the government & Charity Commissioners and restated their free assets requirement from 1 to 3 years free assets to 8 to 16months. Some vehemently objected to this because it was part of this governments assumption that, to put it crudely, the good times would continue ad infinitum. It was the same strategy that forced pension funds to divest their surpluses. What the strategy did was to increase expenditure in the UK economy at the expense of the holders long term security.
The suggestion earlier by another that the RNLI was not a business and that "you don't get it" is an utterly abysmal misunderstanding of what the RNLI are engaged in.