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Introduction. Nonprofits should think like for-profitsCompete for the same resources (labor, buildings, office supplies)Depend on revenue generation from economyNeed to have revenue greater than expenses to surviveNeed to keep 501c(3) status, of courseSusceptible to economic cycles and lagsLik
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1. Non-Profit OrganizationsEconomic Outlook 2006December 2, 2005 Robert Eyler, Ph.D.
Department of Economics
Sonoma State University
eyler@sonoma.edu
2. Introduction Nonprofits should think like for-profits
Compete for the same resources (labor, buildings, office supplies)
Depend on revenue generation from economy
Need to have revenue greater than expenses to survive
Need to keep 501c(3) status, of course
Susceptible to economic cycles and lags
Like any other business
Somewhat dependent on wealth accumulation
Lag behind other parts of the economy
3. General Challenges Non-Profits face similar economic challenges
Donations/Endowments Search
Two-sided challenge: income versus wealth
Need good development personnel
Need local philanthropists willing to give regularly and/or big
Staff Turnover
The private sector’s growth acts as a natural lure.
Staff must derive benefit from being in organization.
Management must reinforce that benefit.
4. Challenges (cont.) Net Income Anomalies
Donations shocks, cyclic or episodic
The natural disaster conundrum (Katrina)
Changing services
When new need identified, have both costs and revenues
Competition
Many local nonprofits (800? 1000?)
Fighting for the same dollars
Competition beyond county borders
5. Opportunities The economics of nonprofits focus on finding opportunities
Must identify challenges and turn them into opportunities
Must be creative in using current and finding new resources
Budgets must be maintained and analyzed, especially in soft economic times
Market major needs
Cannot assume citizens and firms will pick your organization specifically
6. The Economic Outlook Economic Cycles lead nonprofits
Currently in a strange economic cycle
Incomes slow moving, productivity strong.
Gas prices rising, then falling
Local housing market softer, still relatively high
Especially for wages offered by most non-profits
Should non-profits care about economic cycles?
They affect budget and reality.
Can also help target certain firms, individuals and industries.
7. Outlook (cont.) Outlook for nonprofit revolves around expected revenue
Will revenue increase in the coming year?
2006 looks like another tough year for non-profits.
Federal and State deficits still exist
Higher interest rates mean higher rates of return on endowments.
Local economic growth unlikely without national trend upward
Most costs are predictable.
Gas prices are both a cost to workers and the organization.
Higher interest rates also mean higher credit costs.
8. Outlook (cont.) National economy looks to be headed in right direction
Gas prices have fallen from episodic surge
Still relatively high
Will remain there for some time
Has effect on labor decision to work and stay at nonprofit
Interest rate increases look to continue
May hurt line of credit costs for seasonal low points in donations
This also depends on endowments
Should, at least, be looked at in the budgets of non-profits
Economic Growth in place
Local employment somewhat up, non-profit employment is up.