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care2team 3 min read

The Increasing Value of Volunteer Time

volunteer-time.jpgRecent research from Independent Sector shows that the value of volunteer time has consistantly increased over the years; however, the percentage of the population that volunteered and the total number of volunteer hours that Americans gave declined between 1989 and 2000.

Researchers estimated that the dollar value of volunteer time in the United States was $18.04 per hour in 2005. Assuming that the same number of volunteer hours were served in 2005 as in 2000, volunteer time was worth an estimated $280 billion. The value of volunteer time was only an estimated $7.46 per hour in 1980, but its value has increased steadily over the past 25 years and the 2005 estimate marks an increase of $0.49 per hour over the 2004 estimate.

The value of volunteer time is not easily quantifiable because volunteers oftern provide many intangibles, but Indpendent Sector was able to generate their estimates using the average wage of non-management, non-agricultural workers. State by state estimates are also available.

Although the value of volunteer time has increased, the proportion of the adult population that volunteered, the number of volunteers, and the total number of hours volunteered dropped considerably from 1989 to 2000. In 1989, 54.4% of the population, 98.4 million people, formally served 15.7 billion volunteer hours. However, in 2000, only 44% of the population, 83.9 million people, volunteered, serving 15.5 billion volunteer hours.

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