2021
DOI: 10.1093/jopart/muab019
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Finding Your Crowd: The Role of Government Level and Charity Type in Revenue Crowd-Out

Abstract: The literature on the relationship between government funding and private donations finds evidence of both crowd-out (a reduction in private donations due to the receipt of government funding) and crowd-in (increased donations rather than a reduction). This study uses organizational-level data and information regarding funding from multiple levels of government in Canada to provide an important contribution to the literature, which has traditionally relied upon aggregated measures of government funding. Result… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…The receipt of government funding serves as a signal of nonprofit quality and good governance, which can be perceived as a virtue signal and make it easier to compete for additional awards from other government sources or foundations (Bennett & Iossa, 2009; Spector et al, 1998). Grasse et al (2021) highlight instances where government awards can attract or crowd‐in other sources of funding.…”
Section: Review Of Existing Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The receipt of government funding serves as a signal of nonprofit quality and good governance, which can be perceived as a virtue signal and make it easier to compete for additional awards from other government sources or foundations (Bennett & Iossa, 2009; Spector et al, 1998). Grasse et al (2021) highlight instances where government awards can attract or crowd‐in other sources of funding.…”
Section: Review Of Existing Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…More specifically, it also includes norms around transparency and accountancy: the information that a charity might be expected to share beyond what is legally required. Social norms can also determine quite concrete measures, for example, what level of charity overhead is seen as appropriate or excessive (Lecy & Searing, 2015) or whether government funding is acceptable (Grasse et al 2022).…”
Section: The Role Of Data In Comparative Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Nonprofits should also take the advantage of government grants. They are a substantial resource that can help signal a nonprofit's financial health and encourage more giving-a phenomenon known as the "crowd-in effect" (Steinberg 1991, 592;Grasse, Searing, and Neely 2022) and can enable nonprofits' revenue diversification strategy. However, solely relying on revenue diversification as a mitigation strategy for crowding out is insufficient because crowding out can happen between different revenue sources, for instance, between different government grants (Zhao and Lu 2019), or reverse crowding (e.g., charity spending crowding out government expenditure; Cheng 2019).…”
Section: Are There Ways My Organization Can Proactively Mitigate Crow...mentioning
confidence: 99%