Title of article
The Decision-Usefulness of Nonprofit Fundraising Ratios: Some Contrary Evidence
Author/Authors
Daniel Tinkelman، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
فصلنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
22
From page
441
To page
462
Abstract
Prior research indicates that donors consider nonprofit organizationsʹ historic fundraising ratios when making donation decisions. Theoretically, however, historic ratios are only pertinent to the donorʹs decision when they proxy for the organizationʹs future marginal spending performance. In general, theory predicts average historic ratios will differ from future marginal ratios. Examining three large data sets, I find results consistent with theory. Incremental responses of donations to increases in fundraising expense are highly variable and poorly correlated with the average relations in a base year. While the cross-sectional response of donations to fundraising expense is generally linear over the relevant range, and average ratios are highly correlated between years, the low correlation of incremental to average ratios reduces the decision-usefulness of accounting data as currently provided.
Keywords
nonprofit organizations , fundraising ratios , Donations
Journal title
Journal of Accounting Auditing and Finance
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
Journal of Accounting Auditing and Finance
Record number
708061
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