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by Retric
2535 days ago
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It's not somehow fundamentally easier to manage a charity than it is a product company of similar scale and size. This is empirically false. Companies fail far more frequently than similar charities do. The core reason for this is companies operate on a much smaller margins. A charity that distributed 90% of it’s donations last year could distribute 80% if it’s donations this year if they collect half as much. Combined with often significant endowments and failure is rarely a major concern. Companies on the other hand are almost never in those situations. |
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There are certainly issues with inefficiency in charities stemming from the fact they don't have the same market pressures on them as private sector companies do (or at least, not as much). However, this doesn't have anything to do with the difficultly of managing complexity in large organizations.
Or were you objecting to the hand-waving about efficiency? I agree measuring impact of charities are difficult but what else would you look at? Executive pay rate is obviously a silly one without extra context. Year-over-year changes are good, but I at least alluded to that.
I guess I don't know quite what you are objecting to.
While it is true for the reasons you mention that a badly managed charity may last much longer than a badly managed company, that has no impact at all on my statement. It is not somehow easier to manage the charity, it is just less immediate that the negative consequences impact you.
But note, I'm not suggesting we support badly managed charities. I'm saying that to manage it well requires similar skill to that of a similarly scaled private sector company, and you will have to pay for those skills.
This is entirely separable from the issue of evaluating whether or not it is being effectively managed.