| viet_mom |
01-05-2005 04:16 PM |
we are stingy
Quote:
Originally posted by Greedy,Greedy,Greedy
If it's a fee (e.g., there is a quid pro quo, like adoption services that lead to a baby), it's not tax deductible either for a US or a foreign orphanage. It no more belongs in a summary of contributions that do medical bills paid to tax exempt hospitals or amounts spent for knick-knacks in museum gift shops.
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The fee (anywhere between $9,500 to 30K) doesn't get itemized, but most of it is supposed to go to the orphanage where your child is adopted from. Not to reimburse the orphanage for its adoption services (the agency does the paperwork, not the orphanage, which merely houses the child and tells the agency that one is available). And caring for a child in these countries wouldn't ever cost the orphanage 9-30K, so the fee isn't meant to reimburse the orphanage for the care provided your child for the one month he/she was there (in my case, that was the length of time there). From an economic standpoint, you are removing an extra mouth to feed and the orphanage is less strained. The fee is supposed to be to improve conditions at the orphanage for the children left behind who may not be adoptable (many have family who visit them there and have not been relinquished), medical supplies, food, etc.
Quote:
If it is a contribution, people should look for a US charity that will accept donations and funnel them to the Vietnamese orphanage. There are a bunch of charities that will do this kind of thing, resulting in the contribution being tax deductible. I don't know who might do it for Vietnamese orphanages, but have seen it in several other contexts. Look for a charity with a footprint in Vietnam, since the charity is responsible for making sure the money is being spent for good purposes.
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True. But a lot of aid is not funnelled through U.S. tax deductible charities. Those charities do not earmark the funds to specific places you want them to go and there are many cases where the givers want the funds to go to specific people or communities.
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