New York, NY — October 23, 2012. The Foundation Center, the nation's
leading authority on philanthropy, has released new reports that examine
the payout practices and spending patterns of more than 1,000 larger
U.S. independent foundations. These reports provide an authoritative,
unbiased source of knowledge to help the public and policymakers better
understand foundation practice and to help foundations benchmark their
own activities.
Understanding and Benchmarking Foundation Payout
explains the concept of payout, which refers to the total amount that a
foundation reports as its charitable distribution. (The law requires the
vast majority of private U.S. grantmaking foundations to distribute at
least 5 percent of their net investment assets for charitable purposes
each year.) The report is the first of its kind to track payout
practices of the largest U.S. foundations. It finds that during the
period 2007-2009, the largest share of endowed foundations (46 percent)
reported payout rates in the range of 5 to 5.9 percent, on average.
Nearly one-in-five foundations had payout rates at or above 10 percent.
The Foundation Center does not take sides on whether the minimum payout
rate should be higher or lower — whether foundation assets should be
spent down quickly or preserved long-term — rather it provides data and
research to inform the debate.
"While the very top grantmakers
tend to pay out close to the 5 percent minimum, there is surprising
variation in payout levels of larger foundations overall, and annual
rates are affected by drastic changes in the stock market," said Loren
Renz, the author of the report and vice president emeritus for research
at the Foundation Center. "Only by averaging these rates across multiple
years can a balanced view of payout practices be realized."
The
amount a foundation spends on staff, overhead, and other program-related
administrative expenses is included in the calculation of its
qualifying distributions each year. Benchmarking Foundation
Administrative Expenses: Update on How Operating Characteristics Affect
Spending considers how differences in foundations’ infrastructure,
operations, and programmatic activities influence their spending
patterns.
The report finds that whether a foundation employs paid
staff is the single most important factor affecting its expense levels,
followed by staff size. In addition, foundations that regularly engage
in international grantmaking, foundation-administered programs, or
making grants directly to individuals have expenses-to-qualifying
distribution ratios that are roughly twice as high as those that do not.
Understanding
and Benchmarking Foundation Payout and Benchmarking Foundation
Administrative Expenses can be downloaded at no charge from the Gain
Knowledge area of the Foundation Center's web site. To receive future
updates on Foundation Center news, sign up here.
This research was made possible through support from the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation.
About the Foundation Center
Established
in 1956, the Foundation Center is the leading source of information
about philanthropy worldwide. Through data, analysis, and training, it
connects people who want to change the world to the resources they need
to succeed. The Center maintains the most comprehensive database on U.S.
and, increasingly, global grantmakers and their grants — a robust,
accessible knowledge bank for the sector. It also operates research,
education, and training programs designed to advance knowledge of
philanthropy at every level. Thousands of people visit the Center's web
site each day and are served in its five regional library/learning
centers and its network of more than 470 funding information centers
located in public libraries, community foundations, and educational
institutions nationwide and around the world. For more information,
please visit foundationcenter.org or call (212) 620-4230.
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