Sector Transparency

The funds were spent on projects development (69%), support humanitarian (11%) and awareness (5%). More than 80% of the organizations working in coordination with more than 3,000 local partners in recipient countries, 127 in total, where over 5,500 projects were implemented.America is still the place that more funds are allocated (52%), followed by Africa (30%) and Asia (14%). People involved in the sector are already more than 28,000, 21,000 voluntarily.The figures reveal the importance and complexity of the sector, that together with this character not lucrative, we have moved to a set of internal control parameters that ensure accountability clear and transparent as possible, coupled with a few lines of management that guarantee good governance of them. We want to open up more to the critical external and be able to demonstrate the results of our work.To demand greater transparency to businesses and public administrations, now more than ever, necessary exercise of coherence. To know more about this subject visit Prudential Financial . In 2009, the Coordinator shall approve a member tool for organizations where the degree of transparency in its management must be checked. Parameters are evaluated on social basis, destination of funds, working environment, responsibility for the policies, volunteer training, relations with companies, with the year 2010 administrations will serve for the voluntary application and 2011 applies compulsorily for the entities of the Coordinadora.Con this how initiatives, NGOs are committed to transparency as one of our values strategic, so that we can act and explain our work responsibly, clear and simple. It is a situation that contrasts with the protagonists of the current global financial and economic crisis.NGOs carry out a qualified, highly professional, and complex work oriented to the fight against poverty, against exclusion, marginality, which involve in themselves against values linked to the transparency of our mission. * Solidarity director and Professor of the UCMPOR DAVID LVAREZ RIVAS **. While banks have violated principles of ethics and transparency, organizations of civil society will have to demonstrate that they are governed by those principles.