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The world’s first coin with a call to action


2 September 2020 at 5:54 pm
Wendy Williams
“If every Australian donated a Donation Dollar just once a month, it has the potential to raise an additional $300 million annually”


Wendy Williams | 2 September 2020 at 5:54 pm


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The world’s first coin with a call to action
2 September 2020 at 5:54 pm

“If every Australian donated a Donation Dollar just once a month, it has the potential to raise an additional $300 million annually”

The Royal Australian Mint has launched the world’s first Donation Dollar – a one dollar coin designed to be donated – that advocates believe has the potential to deliver millions of dollars in additional funding to the charities sector each year. 

From Wednesday, Australians can find one of the coins in their change, with a first run of 3 million coins released into circulation ahead of International Day of Charity on Saturday.

The Mint intends to distribute 25 million of these $1 coins, which are legal tender, over the coming years – one for every Australian. 

According to new research, three in five Australians say they would be likely to donate this coin if found in their change.

Advocates hope the Donation Dollar – which features a green centre with a gold ripple design symbolising the ongoing impact each donation makes to those who need it most – will serve as a “daily reminder to give” and could shift thinking on how Australians donate.

the donation dollarRoyal Australian Mint CEO, Ross MacDiarmid, said they were extremely proud to introduce the world’s first Donation Dollar and tap into the Australian spirit of generosity. 

“Like any other one dollar coin, the cycle of a Donation Dollar is ongoing, as is its potential for positive impact,” MacDiarmid said.

“If every Australian donated a Donation Dollar just once a month, it has the potential to raise an additional $300 million annually for those who need it most. So with Australia’s support, we believe Donation Dollar has the power to make a real difference.”

The Community Council for Australia and the Charities Crisis Cabinet (CCC) have thrown their support behind the initiative, which they say ties in closely with the priority work of CCA and the CCC to support and elevate the value of the charities sector in Australia.

CCA chair and former World Vision Australia CEO, Tim Costello, said he believed the initiative, created in partnership with Saatchi and Saatchi Melbourne, could make a real difference.

“Our immediate reaction when presented with the Donation Dollar was ‘finally an idea that unites every Australian charity, but also every Australian, in a common good’,” Costello said.

“With research showing almost one in five Australians, who don’t currently give to charity at all, [say] the coin would lead to them giving more to charity, there’s no doubt in my mind this is a gift that will benefit those who are most vulnerable in our nation, starting now – a time when many need this kind of helping hand the most.”

According to new findings in the Australian Generosity Report, one in five Australians say they’ll require some degree of charitable aid over the next 12 months, either for themselves or family. 

Meanwhile COVID-19 has also pushed the charity sector to the brink. Recent modelling suggested almost one in five charities could be at risk of financial failure.

Costello told Pro Bono News that the dollar was coming at the right time.

“Twenty per cent of charities are at risk of going under, right at the time we need them most,” he said.

“Everybody is hurting, understandably saying ‘I’m not sure I can give’, ‘I’m not sure what will happen when JobKeeper ends for me’, so that means the ripples of distress through the community and the heavy lifting that charities do is getting challenged, so that’s why this is good timing.”

When asked about how the Donation Dollar fits with the idea of a cashless society after coronavirus, Costello conceded it would have been great for the coin to have been around five years ago when cash and coins were in more use. But he said he still believed it could encourage people, who may typically donate money once a year, or not at all, to think about giving.

“I still think enough people will see the donation dollar and will say I’ll keep that and I’ll keep a record, go online and donate when there are 100 or 200 of them, to my charity. I think that is the message we need to communicate to people, it is a prompt,” he said.

He said the attitudinal and behavioural change that could result from the Donation Dollar was very significant, with every coin offering a chance to spark new conversations about generosity.  

“It might be a small coin, but it will circulate as a constant reminder to give, and that can make a big difference,” Costello said.

“No longer is money just a measurement of economic value, it is now a measure of what am I doing with my life. It is a unit of compassion and a sense of generosity. I think that is a powerful shift.”

For more information visit www.donationdollar.com.au.


Wendy Williams  |  Editor  |  @WendyAnWilliams

Wendy Williams is a journalist specialising in the not-for-profit sector and broader social economy. She has been the editor of Pro Bono News since 2018.


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