Vatican Cuts Monthly Allowances of Curia Cardinals

| 10/26/2024

By: Our Sunday Visitor

The Vatican will now pay only their salaries and no longer provide allowances to help cover personal secretarial expenses and other costs

Pope Francis smiles at Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re, dean of the College of Cardinals, as he arrives in the Vatican's Hall of Blessings on December 21, 2023, to give his Christmas greetings to cardinals and top officials of the Roman Curia.
Pope Francis smiles at Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re, dean of the College of Cardinals, as he arrives in the Vatican's Hall of Blessings on December 21, 2023, to give his Christmas greetings to cardinals and top officials of the Roman Curia. (CNS photo/Vatican Media)

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — The 18 cardinals who head Vatican offices will find a little less in their pay envelopes starting November 1.

Maximino Caballero Ledo, a layman who heads the Dicastery for the Economy, informed the cardinals on October 18 that the Vatican would pay only their salaries and no longer provide allowances to help cover personal secretarial expenses and other costs.

According to the Italian news agency ANSA, the amount the cardinals will receive each month will be reduced by just over 10%. The base pay of a cardinal who heads a Vatican dicastery is just over 5,000 euros per month (about $5,400) and the allowances were just over 500 euros ($540).

A cardinal who heads a dicastery told Catholic News Service on October 23 that the ANSA article was accurate.

Pope Francis already reduced the salaries of cardinals by 10% in March 2021 as part of a package of Vatican cost-cutting measures.

In September, the pope had written to all the world’s cardinals asking them to help reduce the Vatican’s budget deficit.

“The economic resources at the service of the mission are limited and must be managed with rigor and seriousness so that the efforts of those who have contributed to the patrimony of the Holy See are not lost,” the pope wrote in the letter to cardinals dated Sept. 16 and released by the Vatican Sept. 20.

“Additional effort is now needed on everyone’s part so that a ‘zero deficit’ may not only be a theoretically, but effectively achievable goal,” the pope said.

According to a July report in the Italian newspaper La Repubblica, the approved operating deficit for the Holy See in 2023 was just over 83 million euros ($92.6 million). The Vatican has been using contributions to Peter’s Pence and investment income to cover the deficit.

The Vatican will now pay only their salaries and no longer provide allowances to help cover personal secretarial expenses and other costs.

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