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Woods Bowman

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Beschreibung

A complete guide to the financial requirements a nonprofit organization must follow to indefinitely maintain the volume and quality of their services An organization may have plenty of capacity in the long run, but in the short run, donor restrictions and limited financing options are constraining. Here-and-now liquid assets are the only resources available. Finance Fundamentals for Nonprofits: Building Capacity and Sustainability shows how to measure a nonprofit organization's financial capacity in different time frames and how to measure its ability to sustain capacity in each case. * Explains how nonprofits differ from businesses and how they promote values-centered management * Reveals how to improve financial capacity and sustainability * Written by a nonprofit scholar Filled with real-world case studies and actionable advice relating financial health to financial capacity and sustainability, this book is essential reading for every nonprofit professional.

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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2011

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Contents

Cover

Title

Copyright

Dedication

Preface

Acknowledgments

CHAPTER 1: Introduction: How Nonprofits Are (and Are Not) Like Businesses

What Are Nonprofits?

Why Are There Nonprofits?

Nonprofits as Businesses

Advantages and Disadvantages of Being Nonprofit

This Book’s Agenda

Concluding Thoughts

CHAPTER 2: Accounting: Measuring Past Performance

Basis of Accounting and Audits

Statement of Financial Position

Statement of Activities

Other Statements and Notes

What to Look For

IRS Form 990

Concluding Thoughts

CHAPTER 3: Investing: Looking to the Future

Investing

Endowment

Values-Centered Investing

Concluding Thoughts

Appendix

CHAPTER 4: Budgeting: Taking Control of the Present

Budgeting Practices

Budget Structure

Reconciling Budgets and Financial Statements

Reconciling Budgets and IRS Form 990

Concluding Thoughts

CHAPTER 5: Nonprofits in History and Tax Law: Why Nonprofits Do What They Do

Classification

Unrelated Business Income Tax

Intermediate Sanctions

Lobbying and Political Action

State Law

Concluding Thoughts

CHAPTER 6: Ordinary Service Providers: Serving the Public Today

Long-Term Objective: Maintaining Services

Short-Term Objective: Resilience

Current Objective: Paying Bills

Application

Benchmarking

Concluding Thoughts

Appendix

CHAPTER 7: Membership Associations: Serving People with a Common Purpose

Membership Associations

Cooperatives

Capacity and Sustainability

Two Applications

Concluding Thoughts

Appendix: ASAE/ CAL Metrics of Financial Capacity for Membership Associations

CHAPTER 8: Endowed Service Providers: Serving the Next Generation, Too

Introduction

Long-Term Objective: Maintaining Services

Short-Term Objective: Resilience

Current Objective: Paying Bills

Application: Famous University

Building an Endowment

Concluding Thoughts

CHAPTER 9: Grantmaking Organizations: Serving Service Providers

Foundation Types

Financing Models

Capacity and Sustainability

Illustrations

Concluding Thoughts

Appendix: S&P Metrics of Financial Capacity for Grantmakers

CHAPTER 10: Beyond Sustainability: Managing Revenue to Maximize Growth

Revenue Sources

Theories of Revenue Composition

Application

Unfair Competition

Concluding Thoughts

CHAPTER 11: The Nonprofit Difference: Doing Good Well

Control Environment

Being Businesslike

Concluding Thoughts

Notes

Glossary

References

About the Web Site

About the Author

Index

End User License Agreement

List of Tables

CHAPTER 1: Introduction: How Nonprofits Are (and Are Not) Like Businesses

TABLE 1.1 Nonprofit Organizations and For-Profit Businesses in 2005

TABLE 1.2 Advantages and Disadvantages of Nonprofit Status and Tax Exemption

TABLE 1.3 Nonprofit Archetypes

CHAPTER 2: Accounting: Measuring Past Performance

TABLE 2.1 Statement of Financial Position of Famous University, 2007 ($1,000s)

TABLE 2.2 Statement of Activities, Famous University, 2007 ($1,000s)

TABLE 2.3 Cash Flow of Famous University 2007, Presented in Indirect Format ($1,000s)

CHAPTER 3: Investing: Looking to the Future

TABLE 3.1 Effect of Asset Allocation on Portfolio Return and Risk, 1970–2006

TABLE 3.2 Investments of Famous University, 2007 ($1,000s)

TABLE 3.3 Comparison of Famous University’s Financial Statements with IRS Form 990 Data ($1,000s)

TABLE 3.4 Comparison of Ordinary and Presumptively Endowed Nonprofits ($1,000s)

CHAPTER 4: Budgeting: Taking Control of the Present

TABLE 4.1 Outline of Program-Level Budgets

TABLE 4.2 Budget Template for Organizations without Gifts, Grants, or PP&E

TABLE 4.3 Budget Template—No Gifts and Grants, No Endowment, but Owning PP&E and Minimal Investments

TABLE 4.4 Budget Template—Owning PP&E and Receiving Gifts and Grants

TABLE 4.5 Budget Template—Endowed Organizations

TABLE 4.6 Reconciliation to Surplus per IRS Form 990

CHAPTER 5: Nonprofits in History and Tax Law: Why Nonprofits Do What They Do

TABLE 5.1 Federal Tax Exempt Entities, 2005

TABLE 5.2 Federal Tax-Exempt Entities by Type, 2005*

CHAPTER 6: Ordinary Service Providers: Serving the Public Today

TABLE 6.1A Balance Sheet for Youth Haven ($1,000s)

TABLE 6.1B Statement of Activities for Youth Haven ($1,000s)

TABLE 6.2 Shortfall from Status Quo Surplus

TABLE 6.3 Capacity and Sustainability Percentiles for Ordinary Nonprofits, Averages of 2001–2003

TABLE 6.4 Capacity Percentiles for Ordinary Nonprofits by Field of Activity, Averages of 2001–2003 (Interquartile Range in Italics)

CHAPTER 7: Membership Associations: Serving People with a Common Purpose

TABLE 7.1 Number and Size of Cooperatives by Type ($ in 1,000s)

CHAPTER 8: Endowed Service Providers: Serving the Next Generation, Too

TABLE 8.1 Tax-Exempt Organizations in Fields of Activity Where Investments Provide More than 5 Percent Income, 2001–2003, Ranked by Percent and Number

TABLE 8.2 Capacity and Sustainability Percentiles for Endowed Nonprofits

TABLE 8.3 Capacity Percentiles for Endowed Nonprofits by Field of Activity, Averages of 2001–2003 (Interquartile Range in Italics)

CHAPTER 9: Grantmaking Organizations: Serving Service Providers

TABLE 9.1 Foundation Number and Characteristics by Type, 2007

TABLE 9.2 Minimum Values of Key Financial Ratios per Standard & Poor's, 2001

CHAPTER 10: Beyond Sustainability: Managing Revenue to Maximize Growth

TABLE 10.1 Nonprofit Revenue Sources, 2005

TABLE 10.2 Characteristics of Common Revenue Sources

TABLE 10.3 Revenue Composition of Ordinary Nonprofits, 1998–2004

TABLE 10.4 Importance of Philanthropy and Earned Income by Field of Activity, 1998–2004

TABLE 10.5 Composition of Revenue Comparison

Guide

Cover

Table of Contents

Begin Reading

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Finance Fundamentals for Nonprofits

Building Capacityand Sustainability

 

WOODS BOWMAN

 

Copyright © by Woods Bowman. All rights reserved.

Published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Hoboken, New Jersey.

Published simultaneously in Canada.

No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning, or otherwise, except as permitted under Section 107 or 108 of the 1976 United States Copyright Act, without either the prior written permission of the Publisher, or authorization through payment of the appropriate per-copy fee to the Copyright Clearance Center, Inc., 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, MA 01923, (978) 750-8400, fax (978) 646-8600, or on the Web at www.copyright.com. Requests to the Publisher for permission should be addressed to the Permissions Department, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 111 River Street, Hoboken, NJ 07030, (201) 748-6011, fax (201) 748-6008, or online at www.wiley.com/go/permissions.

Limit of Liability/Disclaimer of Warranty: While the publisher and author have used their best efforts in preparing this book, they make no representations or warranties with respect to the accuracy or completeness of the contents of this book and specifically disclaim any implied warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose. No warranty may be created or extended by sales representatives or written sales materials. The advice and strategies contained herein may not be suitable for your situation. You should consult with a professional where appropriate. Neither the publisher nor author shall be liable for any loss of profit or any other commercial damages, including but not limited to special, incidental, consequential, or other damages.

For general information on our other products and services or for technical support, please contact our Customer Care Department within the United States at (800) 762-2974, outside the United States at (317) 572-3993 or fax (317) 572-4002.

Wiley also publishes its books in a variety of electronic formats. Some content that appears in print may not be available in electronic books. For more information about Wiley products, visit our web site at www.wiley.com.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data:

Bowman, Woods, 1941–Finance fundamentals for nonprofits: building capacity and sustainability/

Woods Bowman.

p. cm.—(Wiley nonprofit authority)

Includes bibliographical references and index.

ISBN 978-1-118-00451-7 (hardback); 978-1-118-11398-1 (ebk); 978-1-118-11400-1 (ebk); 978-1-118-11399-8 (ebk)

1. Nonprofit organizations—Finance. 2. Nonprofit organizations—United States—Finance. I. Title.

HG4027.65.B69 2011

658.15—dc22

2011014328

To Michèle

Preface

I am an economist, so when my university assigned me to teach nonprofit finance 15 years ago, I naturally wondered: What is the nonprofit analogue of profit? Should nonprofits try to maximize it, like businesses strive to maximize profit? If not, do they maximize anything in particular? Should they?

It took me a while to find satisfying answers. I concluded that profit (surplus) is a relevant concept for nonprofits, but there is more than one way to define it and each version is useful in the appropriate context.

Nonprofits should not try to maximize surplus, because they have a public service mandate to “spend” it to produce more, to increase quality, to lower their price, to grow to meet future demand, or all of these at once. By minimizing surplus, nonprofits can maximize spending on their mission-related objectives. But this realization raised another question: Is there an acceptable lower limit for surplus that is greater than zero? This line of inquiry led me to the sustainability principle that I describe in this book.

This book blends business and public service perspectives on nonprofit financial management, so I hope it will be useful to both practitioners and academics. There is much about nonprofit finance that is different—particularly in accounting, investing, and budgeting. Before the issue of sustainability can be addressed, these differences must be understood, so Chapters 2 through 5 lay this groundwork.

Chapters 6 through 10, which form the core of this book, provide several formulas for goal-setting and diagnostic measurement of sustainability, and the companion concept of capacity. I searched the literature for tried-and-true formulas familiar to practitioners, favoring formulas with the fewest variables so their interrelationships would be transparent. Nevertheless, I had to redefine a few variables in familiar formulas, and in some cases it was necessary to invent new formulas.

One contribution of this book is showing how a variety of financial concepts, as described by these formulas, are interrelated and work together to tell a coherent story. To aid practitioners, the publisher’s web site has spreadsheets that automatically calculate all of the formulas using only data from an IRS Form 990 informational return.

To illustrate concepts, nearly every chapter begins with a vignette of a real problem, which I analyze after the chapter lays the necessary groundwork. Wherever my commentary seemed critical, I avoided using an organization’s real name. Organizations featured in published accounts are usually identified. The opening vignette of Chapter 10 uses actual names but the financial data are publicly available and it focuses on an organization whose story is recounted by a book readily available in libraries. The analysis parses decisions made generations ago that left a permanent mark on the organization; it does not reflect on the current leadership.

Practitioners who are most likely to find this book useful are successful businesspersons on nonprofit boards trying, as I once did, to adapt what they know about business to a nonprofit organization. Executive directors who worked their way up through a series of service-delivery roles and who have learned finance on the job may find it useful as a way to fill in gaps in their knowledge about the business of being nonprofit.

I tried to translate business concepts into jargon-free language without sacrificing technical accuracy. I retain terms like markup that are common in business even if they sound strange in a nonprofit context. I define all terms upon first use and provide a Glossary to help readers quickly summon a definition when needed later. When not discussing my own research, I make copious use of citations to recognize landmark contributions and to support substantive statements with state-of-the-art research by experts. Any recommendations are based on the weight of the best available evidence.

Researchers may find this book’s systematic treatment of certain topics helpful as a reference on matters where nonprofits and for-profits differ. It could also be used as a text in nonprofit financial management, but instructors might want to assign supplemental material on basic financial topics, such as cash flow analysis, that are common to both businesses and nonprofits. A particularly helpful feature for the classroom is how this book compares and contrasts different types of nonprofits: ordinary service providers, endowed service providers, membership associations (including cooperatives), and grantmakers.

I would like this book to be readable and interesting as well as useful, so I make extensive use of endnotes for technical details that are likely to be of interest only to specialists, and for color I scatter snippets of history here and there.

Woods BowmanChicago, IllinoisMarch 2011

Acknowledgments

I began this book in 2008 while lecturing at the Rotterdam School of Management of Erasmus University in the Netherlands. I thank my host Lucas Meijs and his faculty colleagues and staff of the Department of Business Society Management for the invitation and their support.

In 2009 I taught a special topics course in the Kellstadt School of Business of DePaul University using the new materials, and for this opportunity I thank Dean Ray Whittington of the School; Scott Young, chair of the Management Department; and Pat Murphy, director of the School of Public Service, where I am a member of the faculty.

I completed most of a first draft of the manuscript in 2010 while visiting at the Department of Public Management and Policy of the Andrew Young School of Policy Studies of Georgia State University in Atlanta. I thank my host Dennis Young and his faculty colleagues and staff for the invitation and their support.

Readers will share my gratitude to the many experts—academic and practitioner—who read portions of the manuscript, which improved the final product considerably: Grace Budrys, Chris Einolf, Bonnie Frankel, Michael Frigo, Deborah Gillespie, Andy Holman, Marc Jegers, Denise Nitterhouse, Michael O’Neill, George Rosen, Monroe Roth, Keith Skillman, Rob Taylor, and Dennis Young. I cannot thank them enough. I would like to acknowledge persons affiliated with various pseudonymous organizations used as illustrations, but it might compromise their organizations’ anonymity. I am grateful for their help nevertheless.

I truly appreciate the work of my graduate assistants who labored over the manuscript in its final stages: Mary Kate Murray of Georgia State University and Liz Schering, Joan Pinnell, and José Rodriquez-Domingos of DePaul University deserve considerable thanks for tirelessly reading and correcting the manuscript.

I want to acknowledge my students at DePaul University, Erasmus University, and Georgia State University whose questions helped me refine my ideas. I also owe a debt to practitioner participants in the many forums where I presented my preliminary work, including the Program for Nonprofit Excellence in Memphis, the Helen Bader Institute Executive Workshop in Milwaukee, and the Executive Leadership Program for Nonprofit Organizations in Georgia.

I hope that constant sifting and testing of ideas removed all errors, but I know better. I bear full responsibility for the remaining ones. When the time came to publish, I sought advice from Peter Frumkin, Kirsten Grønbjerg, and Harvey Rosen, who were very helpful and they too have my thanks.

CHAPTER 1Introduction:How Nonprofits Are (and Are Not) Like Businesses

It is not enough to do good. It must be done well.

—Vincent de Paul (1581–1660)

What are we to make of for-profit charities like Google.org or nonprofit corporations like the furniture purveyor IKEA1 and (before 2006) that icon of American capitalism, the New York Stock Exchange? These crossover examples serve to remind us that nonprofits and for-profit businesses have much in common. However, their rarity also indicates fundamental differences.

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