VATICAN CITY — The Vatican reported the Roman Curia had a $78 million deficit in 2020, and on the same day, the Administration of the Patrimony of the Holy See, which administers Vatican properties and investments, made a summary of its annual budget public for the first time.
Releasing both reports July 24, the Vatican said the coronavirus pandemic had a serious negative impact on the Vatican’s financial situation, including the 66.3 million euros ($78 million) deficit in the consolidated budget report for 2020.
In an interview with Vatican media, Bishop Nunzio Galantino, president of the Administration of the Patrimony of the Holy See, known by its Italian initials APSA, said making the budget synthesis public was “a step forward in the direction of transparency and sharing.”
“The release of the balance sheet is a sign of great respect for all those who, with trust and generosity, have placed and continue to place part of their resources in the hands of the Catholic Church,” Galantino said.
“I harbor a secret hope: I hope that the publication and reading of the numbers and the important notes that accompany them will foster more correct and complete information,” he added.
In 2019, Italian journalist and author Gianluigi Nuzzi claimed in his book “Giudizio Universale” (“Universal Judgment”) that decades of mismanagement of the Vatican’s investment portfolio and real estate holdings by APSA would leave the Vatican no choice but to default by 2023.
APSA directly administers 4,051 properties in Italy and entrusts to outside companies the administration of some 1,200 properties in London, Paris, Geneva and Lausanne, Switzerland, the Vatican report said.
During the 2020 fiscal year, APSA reported a profit of almost 22 million euros ($25.8 million), compared to 73.21 million euros in 2019.
Aside from the economic challenges posed by the pandemic — including a need to reduce the rents of businesses that could not function during lockdown — Galantino told Vatican media the drop in its income was largely due to the “changing behavior of the securities market.”
Jesuit Father Juan Antonio Guerrero Alves, prefect of the Secretariat for the Economy, told Vatican News his office was committed to providing as much detailed information as possible.
“We come from a culture of secrecy, but we have learned that in economic matters transparency protects us more than secrecy,” he said.
While 2020 was not a good year, he said, the Roman Curia’s budget deficit was “better than what we expected.”
Before the pandemic, he explained, the Vatican projected a budget deficit of 53 million euros. However, in the midst of the pandemic, the office figured the best-case scenario would be a deficit of 68 million euros while the worst case would a deficit of 146 million euros.
“Instead, with a deficit of 66.3 million euros, the end result was slightly better than the projected best-case scenario, and decisively better than what we had projected in the revised budget in March,” Guerrero said.
While most Vatican offices reduced costs during the year, Guerrero also noted that in 2019 the Peter’s Pence collection was used to subsidize 32% of Vatican dicasteries’ expenses, while in 2020 it was used to cover only 24%.
Furthermore, despite the economic difficulties and orders to Vatican offices to reduce spending, the congregations for Eastern Churches and for the Evangelization of Peoples increased the aid sent to local churches experiencing even greater difficulty.
The coronavirus pandemic “has given us the possibility of being able to provide additional help at a difficult moment for all humanity, thus making the church present in areas with fewer resources to deal with the pandemic,” Guerrero said.
“The economic situation was worse, but the mission expanded. This is further proof that the criteria driving the church are not economic,” he said.
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