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relatively low and their job is demanding in every sense...they are

satisfied because they get other rewards that substitute for pay and

[this] reduces their perception of what their pay should be". Later he

quotes Penner as reporting a relationship between the nonmonetary out-

comes received and pay satisfaction, and also with the degree of

autonomy on the job, and with relationship with the boss (both points

which emerged similarly from the Consumers Association study).

         This theme of levels of clergy remuneration has been treated at

length because it is of such increasing importance (see Figure 1) that

it is the one feature which any financial structure must be capable of

handling. With that in view we may note that whilst presently available

data is insufficient, steps are being taken to remedy that weakness, and

that if sufficiently sensitive methods could be evolved, there might also

be a field here for further academic research.


2.3
Parochial Accounting


2.3.1
The essential foundation


         Notwithstanding that it falls beyond the control - in fact to a

large degree even beyond the influence - of diocesan management, the

quality of parochial accounting will determine both the efficacy and

the equitability of any allocation system adopted for the diocesan

share. It is the essential foundation on which any such system must

rest. Indeed the introduction of potential income in 1974 seems to have

been motivated at least partly by dissatisfaction with actual income

being determined by differing parishes in differing ways.


2.3.2
"It passeth all understanding"


         The law on parochial accounts is both brief and vague. They are

the responsibility of the Parochial Church Council, which may, but is

not required, to appoint "anyone it chooses"
(B26)
to be a treasurer who

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