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by smallnamespace
3142 days ago
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> Charity fundraising is about maximizing net donations, not maximizing donation efficiency. In any other domain, I would agree with you, but charities are at least theoretically about maximizing total gain to society, not just the narrow interests of the charity organization itself. Doing the equivalent of the broken window fallacy in order to capture a larger share of nonprofit donations is literally the definition of organizations turning parasitic and no longer serving their original purpose. This is why competent nonprofits are judged by metrics like administrative efficiency nowadays. |
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No, they aren't. That is government.
Charities are organized for a specific identified charitable purpose and are generally not, even in theory, any less narrowly focussed on that identified purpose than a for-profit firm is on serving the common, usually financial, interests of it's stockholders.
> This is why competent nonprofits are judged by metrics like administrative efficiency nowadays.
The administrative efficiency measures used by outlets like Charity Navigator are feel-good metrics that favor unevaluated, uncontrolled funnelling of money in the hope of achieving the notional objective. A real charity efficiency measure would measure its cost-effectiveness at achieving outcomes that are its charitable purpose, not administrative vs. program funding measures (and, as a consequence, would probably only be directly comparable within the same domain.) Administrative efficiency is used because it's cheap, easy, and portable across domains, not because it's even remotely meaningful.