Thinking Anglicans

Church Commissioners announce annual results for 2011

The Church Commissioners have today announced their annual results for 2011 with a lengthy press release starting “The Church Commissioners have today published their full Annual Report and Accounts for 2011, announcing a 2.9 per cent total return on their investments during 2011 and confirming the fund’s strong long-term performance.”

Also available for download are

The full reports from two previous years are also available: 2010 and 2009.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest

6 Comments
Oldest
Newest
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Mark Bennet
Mark Bennet
12 years ago

It is good to see the annual report out. The quarterly reports, which used to be provided – and this would be the cycle for the corporate sector – seem to have been discontinued. I don’t want CC to spend lots of money on extra reporting, nor do I want them to be under undue pressure for short term performance – but accountability, and up-to-date figures on a cycle for general synod meetings would give a chance to tell their story a little more regularly.

Peter Owen
12 years ago

There are quarterly reports available here.

http://www.churchofengland.org/about-us/structure/churchcommissioners/annual-and-quarterly-reports/first-commissioner%27s-quarterly-update.aspx

I’ve sampled a few and they appear to be two to three pages long.

Robert Ian Williams
Robert Ian Williams
12 years ago

Can I state for the record…these finances and assets are the real reason why there will not be a split in the Church of England, resulting in large numbers of clergy leaving.

Mark Bennet
Mark Bennet
12 years ago

Peter – the last one was March 2011 published 1 June 2011. The series appears to have stopped.

Feria
Feria
12 years ago

Mark,

By the look of the interim report of the Kay Review of equity markets, there’s a strong move afoot to abolish quarterly financial reporting in the corporate sector, because apparently it encourages short-termism. Who knew?

David Keen
David Keen
12 years ago

There are some positive statements about mission and growth in the report, but I notice that overall spending on parish mission and ministry funding has dropped 20% from 2010, whilst spending on bishops has risen 10%. There doesn’t seem to be anything in the report which explains this.

6
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x