The Vatican Bank donated some $70 million to charities in 2012, according to a Vatican statement released Thursday.
“The Members of the Council expressed their deep gratitude for the
support given, often anonymously, to the Holy Father’s universal
ministry in spite of moments of economic crisis, and encouraged
perseverance in this good work,” said the statement of the
Council for Cardinals for the Study of Organisational and Economic
Problems of the Holy See.
The Vatican Bank, officially called the Institute for the Works of Religion,
distributed its charitable funds among the Amazon Fund; the
Pro-Orantibus Fund, which supports cloistered monasteries; the San
Sergio Fund, which supports the Church in the former Soviet Union; and
the Commission for Latin America, as well as other Catholic charities.
The cardinals' council had met July 2-3 to review the 2012 fiscal year.
The meeting was presided over by Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, Vatican
Secretary of State, and was attended by 12 other cardinals.
These included Cardinals Angelo Scola of Milan, Joachim Meisner of
Cologne, George Pell of Sydney, John Hon of Hong Kong, and Odilo Scherer
of Sao Paulo.
The 2012 financial statement for the Holy See closed with a profit of $2.8 million, due mainly to good performance in financial management.
In 2012, Catholics offered nearly $66 million through Peter's Pence, a
voluntary second collection for the Church. This represented a drop off
from the nearly $70 million offered in 2011.
The Vatican revealed that one of the most significant categories of
expenditure are those regarding the cost of personnel; the Holy See had
2,800 staff in 2012.
Two other areas of great expenditure included new means of social
communication and new property taxes, which saw an increased expenditure
of $6.5 million.
The Vatican City State's Governorate, which has
autonomous administration independent from contributions of the Holy
See, increased its profit from 2011 to 2012 by around $1 million, with a
total of $30 million. The governorate employees nearly 2,000 people.
During the meeting, Peter Sutherland, a consultor with the
Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See, which manages the
properties owned by the Holy See so as to provide the funding necessary
for the Roman Curia to function, explained the Vatican's current
macroeconomic situation and the Administration's investment policies.
Ernst Von Freyberg, president of the Vatican Bank, told the cardinals of
the bank's current situation, and Father Luigi Mistò, secretary of the
Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See, spoke about the
problem of safeguarding and appraising the patrimony of ecclesiastical
entities.
Just ahead of the council's meeting, the Vatican Bank's director and deputy director both resigned, “in the best interest of the Institute and the Holy See.”
Italian media have connected the resignations with scandals surrounding the Vatican Bank, which has been working towards reform.