Busting the Myths of The Charity "Overhead Myth"
CharityWatch
CharityWatch investigates wrongdoing in the nonprofit sector and rates charities on an "A+" to "F" scale.
By Laurie Styron, Executive Director of CharityWatch, as originally published in?Taxation of Exempts?(July/August 2021), a Thomson Reuters journal.?
Criticizing the use of financial ratios as a measure of a charity’s performance, and thereby its worthiness for donations, is de rigueur among nonprofit fundraisers, trade associations, and some of the charities they represent. Overhead should not be a dirty word for donors, many argue, because investing in things like technology and staff training is essential for effectively carrying out a charity’s mission and maximizing its impact.
While this seems like a reasonable argument on the surface, it is not a totally honest one. A wide chasm exists between what the word “overhead” is commonly understood to mean in layperson’s terms versus how overhead?is defined, allocated, and reported in a charity’s IRS Forms 990—the documents from which charity financial efficiency ratios are often derived. Many expenses cited in arguments against overhead ratios are not even considered overhead for purposes of these computations. In addition, measuring program effectiveness in a meaningful way is a notoriously difficult, time-consuming, and expensive task.
While an individual charity might possess the high level of expertise and other resources necessary to invest in a substantive, ongoing review of its own impact results, no third-party charity rater or trade association has the expertise or resources necessary to verify the self-reported impact claims of even a small fraction of the hundreds of thousands of public charities registered with the IRS today. For this reason, financial efficiency measurements continue to play an important role in helping donors identify worthy charities to support.
Before donating to charity, many donors want to know what portion of their donation the nonprofit will spend on programs versus overhead. And this makes sense. Unsurprisingly, those who most want to deemphasize financial efficiency ratios as a means of identifying worthy charities to support are not the donors who are giving the money, but the nonprofits that are asking for it.
What is ”The Overhead Myth?”
Charities and nonprofit fundraisers often reference two industry-endorsed public letters, collectively entitled?The Overhead Myth,?when advocating against the degree to which donors should focus on how efficiently their contributions will be spent. The letter addressed to nonprofits criticizes the “spiral of donor demands” that help to perpetuate a “Nonprofit Starvation Cycle” in which nonprofits underinvest in core costs. Nonprofits should stop reinforcing “funders’ confusion,” according to?The Overhead Myth, by employing “effective performance management systems” instead of highlighting their financial efficiency ratios as a core accomplishment in their fundraising pitches.?
Busting the Myths?
While it is unquestionably true that a charity’s financial efficiency is not the only variable a donor should consider when making giving decisions, suggesting that donors who want to know how efficiently their money will be spent are in a state of “confusion” sends a pretty clear message that the industry would prefer for donors to stop asking about it altogether. It is time to bust the myths of?The Overhead Myth.?
Myth that Charity Overhead Includes Any Expense Other Than Grants or Direct Program Costs
One myth that needs busting is the common misconception that charity overhead includes all spending on things like salaries and benefits, training of program staff, rent and mortgage payments, utilities, conferences, travel, technology, and basically any expense other than grants or direct program costs. Nonprofit executives and their accounting staff know this is not true. Donors, the general public, and many other nonprofit staff members do not.
Charities exploit this misunderstanding when they argue that overhead ratios are a reductive, Machiavellian tool designed to prevent them from effectively carrying out their missions. A charity will describe, for example, how a competent and well-trained program staff, or upgraded computers and software used in its programs, have significantly improved its ability to effectively deliver on its goals.
Of course, these charities conveniently fail to mention that direct and indirect program spending is not considered overhead and is already included in program expense, not overhead expense, in its financial reporting. Meaning, the overhead ratios charities are telling donors to largely ignore do not even include most of the expenses they are citing as being mission critical.
When a charity falsely claims it is being unfairly judged on the basis that common program expenses are considered overhead, this is at best a reflection of ignorance about very basic nonprofit financial reporting rules. At worst, it is an intentional bait and switch tactic intended to manipulate donors into thinking that material amounts of its program spending are reported as overhead, and that donors should ignore a charity’s financial efficiency ratios on this basis.
In their annual tax Forms 990, charities are required to allocate operating expenses among the three categories of program, management and general (M&G), and fundraising. Direct cost reporting is straightforward. For example, grant expenses and program staff salaries are allocated 100% to program, Officers & Directors (O&D) insurance 100% to M&G, and professional fundraising fees 100% to fundraising. Indirect costs are allocated based on which of the three functions they serve, with employee time used as a typical allocation base for many types of expenses.
For example, if a charity executive spends 50% of their time carrying out the charity’s programs, 20% on accounting and management functions, and 30% on fundraising activities, their salary and benefits will be allocated among those three functions commensurately. Of the expenses cited, the ones that would be counted as overhead are the O&D insurance, fundraising fees, and only 50% of the executive’s salary and benefits. None of the salaries and benefits of the program staff would be included in the charity’s reported overhead spending.
Myth that a Charity’s Financial Efficiency is of Little Value
Another myth that needs busting is the idea that a charity’s financial efficiency is of little value because its ability to achieve its end goals is ultimately what matters. If a charity spends 65% of its budget on fundraising and management expenses and only 35% on its programs, this high overhead spending should not matter, some charity fundraisers argue, if this gives it the ability to raise enough funds to ultimately cure cancer or eliminate world hunger.
This line of reasoning has three major flaws. First, citing the success of an extreme outlier (such as a charity with high overhead curing cancer) and suggesting that this outlier is statistically representative of the success that will occur for the entire data set (all charities) is an extrapolation error. A charity achieving an impact goal that drastically improves life as we know it is an outlier event, so suggesting that all charities can justify unreasonably high overhead costs on the basis that such an event might occur is logically flawed. Charitable giving in 2019 amounted to about $450 billion. If nonprofits in aggregate maintained a 40% to 65% overhead ratio when spending these funds, for example, that would amount to between $180 billion and $292.5 billion spent on fundraising and management expenses.
This leads us to the second flaw in this reasoning, which is that if charities with high overhead were up front with donors about how little of their donations will be spent on the charity’s programs, many donors would refuse to give. Any system that relies on either intentionally misleading donors or withholding decision-critical information from them is not an ethical system.
Finally, a charity’s ability to maintain reasonable overhead spending is an important variable that affects the balance of resources it has available to spend on maximizing its program impact. Financial efficiency may not guarantee any specific outcome for any individual charity, but neither does financial inefficiency. Of the two, investing the majority of the $450 billion in annual giving in program activities and encouraging charities to keep their overhead spending reasonable certainly makes achieving outcome goals more likely.
Some for-profit charity consultants and professional fundraisers are particularly fond of engaging in mental gymnastics to try to convince donors that near unlimited spending on fundraising, a component of overhead, is good for charities and for the nonprofit sector on the whole. One way they do this is by citing return on investment (ROI) ratios commonly used to measure the performance of for-profit companies. Stock market returns historically average only about 10% per year, so a charity spending $50, $60, or even $70 to raise each $100 in public support, they posit, is an ROI that should be cause for celebration. When this position is challenged on the grounds that improving fundraising efficiency would free up more resources to be used on programs, the common response from fundraisers is that growing the total pie, rather than using the existing pie more efficiently, is a better solution.
However, the nonprofit sector is not the stock market, and nonprofit organizations are not for-profit businesses. Giving has remained steady at about 2% of gross domestic product since the mid-twentieth century. Because charitable giving is a relatively fixed pie, fundraising and overhead costs necessarily eat into the resources available to be spent on charities’ programs. Growing the giving pie enough to make up for the unnecessary waste many self-interested fundraisers advocate for is not only highly unlikely, it is a morally bankrupt breach of donors’ trust.
An investor measures the success of their investment based only on how much money it generates, and those returns inure to the benefit of the investor. A donor measures the success of their donation based on the extent to which it is efficiently and effectively used to forward the cause the donor is intending to support. The psychological benefit of money well spent by a charity may inure to the donor, but the real benefit inures to the cause, which might be expressed in terms of animals rescued, homeless people housed, scholarships awarded, or environment protected.
A charity may need to steadily increase its revenue to account for inflation or engage in capital campaigns to expand the scope and scale of its programs, but the mere act of generating as much revenue as possible from one year to the next is not how the success of a charity is measured. Those charities that are unable to keep their fundraising costs reasonable should get out of the way and let more efficient charities working in the same cause put the nonprofit sector’s limited resources to better use.
Donors should not ignore fundraising overhead and be happy with low returns on their investments based on a pipe dream some fundraisers have of one day growing the total giving pie large enough to compensate for unnecessary inefficiencies. Inefficiencies that, despite what many fundraisers may say, are designed to benefit the fundraisers, not charities.
Deemphasizing the importance of quantitative measurements like financial efficiency and replacing them with amorphous and largely qualitative ones that attempt to measure impact is attractive to charities with high overhead, in part, because impact measurements are so much easier to manipulate.?When a charity hires consultants with expertise in its specific cause area or invests in other research for the purpose of evaluating and improving the impact of its programs, this can help the charity to operate more effectively.
Alternatively, when impact evaluations of questionable quality and objectivity are instead conducted primarily for the purpose of circulating the results to funders or promoting them in online charity databases for public view, they quickly lose their value as self-evaluation tools and become little more than an extension of a charity’s marketing strategy. Many charities are unlikely to broadly circulate reports reflecting that they utterly failed at meeting their impact goals when it is so easy to simply move the goal post and instead claim that goals were met or exceeded.
Unlike financial efficiency, program impact is notoriously difficult to measure and objectively convey for purposes of comparing the effectiveness of one charity against another working in the same cause.?For example, one charity committed to addressing world hunger and food insecurity may help fewer total people and distribute fewer pounds of food each year compared to a different hunger charity because it primarily operates in war-torn regions or those with extremely limited infrastructure. A second charity may be able to help twice as many people and distribute twice as much food due to working in parts of the world with more reliable food supply and distribution channels. Either charity could use the quantifiers of number of people served or pounds of food distributed to compare how its own impact has changed over time, but a donor could not fairly use these measures to compare the two charities against one another for purposes of deciding which charity is more worthy of their contributions.
Deeply analyzing the programs of a number of nonprofits working in the same cause and determining which ones are having the most impact can be done, but doing this in a meaningful way typically requires consulting with top experts in the cause area and conducting in-depth reviews of the charities’ programs over many years. Academic and research institutions, large foundations, or independent impact evaluation organizations like?GiveWell, for example, may be equipped to invest the time and resources necessary to periodically produce high quality white papers, effectiveness studies, or thoughtful recommendations on a limited number of nonprofits or causes.
Scaling up this process to provide ongoing, high quality impact reports on tens of thousands of charities would require resources far beyond what any of these institutions could provide. Even spending as little as three hours of analysis time per charity in a cursory attempt to verify the accuracy and completeness of the impact data charities report about themselves would require 30,000 hours of analysis time if a charity rater wanted to publish data on as few as 10,000 charities.
Online Databases And Their Limitations
A number of large, online databases and crowdsourcing websites exist that encourage charities to upload information about themselves, such as descriptions of their programs or self-conducted impact evaluations, as a means of improving their ratings—practices more in line with those of an industry trade association than those of an independent rating or watchdog organization. In some cases, a charity’s simple act of adding data about itself to these websites results in a near immediate rating improvement. Meaning, the adding of data is essentially treated as an end unto itself—the data in many cases has not been adequately scrutinized by the charity rater before being published and incorporated into a charity’s rating profile.
While these websites add an element of convenience for donors by housing large volumes of charity information in one centralized place, this data is of limited use to donors if what they are seeking is independently vetted information that goes beyond what is already available on the websites of most charities. Incorporating a rigorous vetting of charities’ self-reported impact reports and other information into this process would be very difficult given the volume of data involved, which may include profiles on tens of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands of nonprofits.
Databases of this size have historically been used in statistical modeling for purposes of identifying trends, making predictions, or drawing conclusions about data subsets within a relevant range and prescribed margins of error. Data clearinghouses exist as a mechanism for supplying large amounts of raw data to academic or research institutions with the time and expertise necessary to analyze and convert that raw data into useful information. In more recent history, online aggregator and crowdsourcing websites have provided the public with a way to organize and share information that users generally understand has not been vetted for accuracy, completeness, or comparability.
Each of these methods of providing data to the public has its strengths and drawbacks and respective fitness for a particular purpose. Unfortunately, some publishers of online charity databases seem unclear about exactly which type of information source they are trying to be at any given moment and are not inclined to clearly communicate the contextual limitations of the data being presented. Some simultaneously present themselves as charity watchdogs and independent raters for donors on the one hand, and additional marketing avenues, fundraising vehicles, and trade associations for charities on the other. Donors are encouraged to disregard overhead ratios at the same time nonprofits are encouraged to spend more on overhead and are actively taught how to game the very rating systems that purport to be overseeing them.
It is understandable that charities like having the ability to quickly improve their own ratings without having to change much, if anything, about how they are actually operating. Even for efficient and effective organizations with great reputations, competition for donations is fierce. Not taking every opportunity to improve donor-facing data, especially when that data could rank high in search engine results, could almost be considered a sign of incompetence in this information era.
However, a tool in the wrong hands quickly becomes a weapon. Charity rating systems that are too easy to game can be misused by bad actors within the nonprofit sector to give donors a false sense of security that their donations will be used efficiently and effectively when this may not be the case.
The hidden danger is that as more and more charities get in on this ratings game, the good charities will start to become indistinguishable from the bad ones. The nonprofit sector suffers from painfully little oversight and practical mechanisms to quickly weed out bad actors before they are able to bilk tens of millions of dollars in some cases from unassuming donors. The financial data charities report in their annual tax filings is easy to manipulate, and if not properly analyzed in conjunction with audited financial statements before being incorporated into charity ratings, only exacerbates a donor’s inability to understand which charities are worthy of their support.?If everybody gets a trophy, having a trophy does not make you special anymore. The bad players become indistinguishable from the good ones.
The nonprofit sector’s constant promotion of the idea that overhead ratios should practically be ignored threatens to diminish one of the most effective tools the average donor has to avoid charity scams and predatory fundraisers.?The Overhead Myth?letter addressed to donors does concede that bad actors within the sector exist when it states, “At the extremes the overhead ratio can offer insight: it can be a valid data point for rooting out fraud and poor financial management.” But this letter does a disservice to donors by failing to convey the scale at which these “extremes” exist.
For example, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), in conjunction with 46 agencies in 39 jurisdictions, filed a Complaint (Federal Trade Commission, et al. v. Associated Community Services, Inc., et al.)?in 2021 in which it accused a number of for-profit charity fundraisers of making “abusive, unsolicited, [and] deceptive fundraising calls to hundreds of millions of Americans. Through more than 1.3 billion fundraising calls to more than 67 million unique telephone numbers, Defendants sought to extract money from donors by making deceptive claims about practically nonexistent charitable programs. Defendants knowingly duped generous Americans into donating tens of millions of dollars to nonprofit organizations…” An FTC press release citing the Complaint states that “the defendants conducted an invasive robocall onslaught and kept the lion’s share of the more than $110 million of consumers’ contributions – as much as 90 cents out of every dollar donated.”?If there is a lesson to be taken from this, it is that donors should be encouraged to pay more attention to overhead ratios before donating to charities, not less.
We should all be willing to concede that some individual donors and institutional funders do focus too much on overhead ratios. Donating to one charity over another solely because one spends 21% of its budget on overhead and the other spends 23% is not a reliable method for identifying which charities are making the biggest impact in forwarding their respective causes. Foundation and corporate donors may be inclined to legally restrict their donations for a specific program purpose, sometimes forcing grant recipients to scramble for unrestricted funding from other sources to cover the overhead costs related to fulfilling the conditions of these restricted grants.
Conclusion
The Overhead Myth?letter addressed to donors gets it right when it says that “focusing on overhead without considering other critical dimensions of a charity’s financial and organizational performance does more damage than good.” But overhead ratios do serve as an important starting point for donors as a means of narrowing down which charities working in a particular cause are using their resources efficiently. Deemphasizing the importance of ratios used for this purpose also does more damage than good given that the more subjective measures of effectiveness cannot replace the function these ratios serve in weeding out bad actors and poorly performing charities.
Foundations and wealthy individuals looking to make large grants to improve or solve a very specific problem tend to treat their funding decisions more like business plans. Such donors may rightly fund their own impact studies of charities working in a particular cause prior to making any major grant decisions. Others may set aside funding within their grants so that grantees can continuously evaluate and improve the effectiveness with which they carry out related programs. While this is a good practice for large funders, the average donor has neither the time, interest, nor financial resources to approach their giving decisions this way. The public is bombarded with large volumes of charity solicitations that often contain emotionally charged messages and images designed to elicit visceral responses from potential donors that cause them to give quickly and generously.
While large grantmaking foundations may have a full-time staff whose entire jobs consist of reviewing grant proposals and screening potential grant recipients, the average individual donor does not have the ability to vet charities in a similar way each time they encounter a charity solicitation. High quality financial efficiency ratios can play a significant role in helping these donors avoid contributing to predatory fundraisers and charities that will misuse their donations.
What could have been a meaningful public discourse on understanding the limitations of charity financial efficiency ratios and mitigating their use as the sole deciding factor in donors’ giving decisions has instead been appropriated by nonprofit trade associations and big data websites in ways that prioritize the desires of nonprofits over the needs of donors. A charity’s desire to give the appearance of being effective and making an impact has been centered at the expense of the average donor’s ability to understand how to incorporate properly analyzed financial data into the overall picture of how well a charity is operating. And that is no myth.
NOTES:
Beyond the scope of this article is an examination of overhead negotiated between the Federal Government and nonprofit grantees related to estimated indirect cost rates, or NICRA.?Of the 1.5 million nonprofits registered with the IRS, approximately two-thirds are classified as 501(c)(3) public charities, and approximately 35% were required to file an IRS Form 990, 990-EZ, or 990-PF (The National Center for Charitable Statistics at the Urban Institute,?The Nonprofit Sector in Brief, 2019).?The Overhead Myth letters addressed to donors and charities, respectively, were previously published at "https://overheadmyth.com/"?and active on this website until at least May 23, 2021. The domain has since expired and the letters are no longer viewable as of at least June 10, 2021. The letters, which were signed by representatives from BBB Wise Giving Alliance, GuideStar, and Charity Navigator, may be viewed on an archived copy of the site?here.?Giving USA provides statistics on total annual giving which may be read?here.?The Chronicle of Philanthropy?reports on the stubborn 2% giving rate. You may view?links to the referenced Federal Trade Commission?Complaint?& related?Press Release.