Stipend
A stipend is a form of salary, such as for an internship or apprenticeship.[1] It is often distinct from an income or a salary because it does not necessarily represent payment for work performed; instead it represents a payment that enables somebody to be exempt partly or wholly from waged or salaried employment in order to undertake a role that is normally unpaid (e.g. a magistrate in the United Kingdom) or voluntary, or which cannot be measured in terms of a task (e.g. members of the clergy). [2][3]
Stipends are usually lower than what would be expected as a permanent salary for similar work. This is because the stipend is complemented by other benefits such as accreditation, instruction, food, and/or accommodation. Some University Graduate schools make stipend payments to help students have the time and funds to earn their academic degree (i.e. master's and doctoral degrees). Universities usually refer to money paid to graduate students as a stipend, rather than as wages, to reflect complementary benefits.[4][5] Some schools give stipend for any degree. Stipendiary is to receive a stipend.
Background
Stipends may be used by non-profits or organizations working with oppressed, or other less-represented groups of people such as youth. These organizations may stipend youth at a higher rate than local minimum wage rates, or living wage, to empower them to enter the workforce. This type of stipend normally lasts for less than a year.[7][8]
Church stipends
In some Catholic jurisdictions and parishes, a Mass Stipend is a payment made by members of the church, which is generally nominal, to a priest for saying a Mass, that is a Mass not done in his normal course of work.[9] It is considered simony to demand payment for a sacrament, and thus, stipends are seen as gifts.[10]
Stipend has a specific, different, use in the Church of England, meaning the salary of a stipendiary minister, one who receives payment directly from the diocese (as opposed to other forms of disbursement such as free use of a house in return for clerical duties, known as house-for-duty). A non-stipendiary minister (increasingly being termed a self-supporting minister or an ordained local minister) is therefore one who is licensed to perform clerical duties but without receiving any kind of payment from the diocese — although non-stipendiary ministers often receive reimbursement of expenses incurred in pursuit of their duties, e.g. travel, postage, and telephone costs. Non-stipendiary ministers normally depend on secular employment or pensions for their income and are often unavailable for pastoral duties when they are fulfilling their obligations to their employer. A minister in secular employment, on the other hand, is a minister who exercises a significant ministry in and through their work. This is distinct from chaplaincy.[11][12][13][14]
Criticism
Stipends have also been used to erode employee-employer relationship and to essentially hire junior teaching and research staff with lower pay and worse working conditions.[15]
See also
- Honorarium - sometimes referred to as a stipend in the UK
- Graduate assistant
- Compulsory Rotatory Residential Internship
References
- ↑ Allosaurus Publishers; Phyllis Goldman (1 January 2006). Careers for You!. PigeonLab. p. 15. ISBN 978-1-888325-39-3. Retrieved 21 March 2012.
- ↑ churchofengland.org, The 41st Report of The Central Stipends Authority, Published by the Archbishops’ Council, 2013
- ↑ episcopalarchives.org, The Living Church July 7, 1996 Clergy Salaries by James L. Lowery, Jr. p. 8-9, Clergy Salaries
- ↑ Washington University Graduate School, Stipend Payments
- ↑ Cornell University Graduate School, Stipend Rates 2016-2017 Graduate Student Assistantship and Fellowship Stipend Rates
- ↑ gov.uk, How small stipends from UK aid are helping thousands of girls get an education in Pakistan
- ↑ councilofnonprofits.org, Interns: Employee or Volunteer
- ↑ blueavocado.org, Legalities of Nonprofit Internships, By Ellen Aldridge
- ↑ lms.org.uk, A Guide to ensuring you have the Traditional Mass at your Funeral, The Latin Mass Society, Page 24 and 25
- ↑ Cathy Caridi, J.C.L. "Mass Intentions and Stipends". Catholic Exchange. Retrieved 2013-08-07.
- ↑ churchofengland.org, Your Stipend
- ↑ churchofengland.org, The 43 rd Report of the Central Stipends Authority, The 43rd Report of the Central Stipends Authority Published by the Archbishops’ Council, 2015
- ↑ london.anglican.org, tipend scales, removal grants and fees
- ↑ churchofenglandglossary.co.uk, Stipend
- ↑ Rozenberg, Eyal. "On the erasure of the Technion's junior researcher class". Retrieved 20 November 2016.