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The Nonprofit Sector Leadership Sioux Falls 27 April 4, 2013

Nonprofit Sector - Statistics & Influences

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Addresses US, South Dakota, and Sioux Falls area statistics involving nonprofits and their role in employment and the economy. Regulatory influences and public perception of nonprofits is also addressed. Presented to the "Leadership Sioux Falls" group of the Sioux Falls Area Chamber of Commerce in April, 2013. This presentation has been made to many audiences in the past ten years, regularly updated. Designed to give nonprofit professionals, volunteer board members, and community leaders perspective on the importance and reach of the nonprofit sector. Preparation for leaders to consider nonprofit board service in the larger context of economic development, employment, and governance duty.

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Page 1: Nonprofit Sector - Statistics & Influences

The Nonprofit Sector

Leadership Sioux Falls 27April 4, 2013

Page 2: Nonprofit Sector - Statistics & Influences

Topics We Will Cover

• Statistics on Nonprofits and Philanthropy– US– South Dakota– Local

• Trends:– Governance– Accountability– Public Perception– Regulation

Page 3: Nonprofit Sector - Statistics & Influences

The Statistics are Difficult to Substantiate

• Nonprofit sector very diverse, with few large players

• Government does not allocate resources to data collection on nonprofits on par with other economic sectors

• Employment data is kept by states; some states limit how data can be used

• New reliance on NAICS system is a problem – no distinct category for nonprofits

The Nonprofit Almanac 2008, Urban Institute

Page 4: Nonprofit Sector - Statistics & Influences

Numbers Change, but Proportions Don’t

• Gifts & bequests – 87% in 1970, 83% in 2000• Giving as percentage of GDP constant at

about 2% over past 30 years• Individual giving as percentage of annual

income constant at about 2% over past 30 years

• Corporate giving as percentage of revenue constant at 1.2%

Nonprofit Nation, Michael O’Neill

Page 5: Nonprofit Sector - Statistics & Influences

Nonprofits in the US

Total 501(c) organizations - 1,616,053

Total 501(c)3 organizations - 1,081,891

Total 501(c)6 organizations - 69,198

Nonprofits comprise about 8.5% of GDP

Nonprofits comprise about 11% of employment

Source: IRS 2012 Data Book; Independent Sector

Page 6: Nonprofit Sector - Statistics & Influences
Page 7: Nonprofit Sector - Statistics & Influences

Nonprofit Market is Vast

• 75% of US nonprofits have revenue under $1 million

• Largest nonprofits’ revenues only 1.5% of annual giving

• Only ¼ of 501(c)3s file a Form 990/990-EZ

Page 8: Nonprofit Sector - Statistics & Influences

Nonprofits in South Dakota

8,950 Organizations

$8.25 Billion in Income*

$15.85 Billion in Assets

*2011 SD State GDP=$40.117 Billion

Source: TaxExemptWorld.com, US Bureau of Economic Analysis

Page 9: Nonprofit Sector - Statistics & Influences

Nonprofits in Sioux Falls

Sioux Falls Development Foundation

(2012 Community Profile)

Major Employers (500+ employees)

Type Number Employees Percentage

For-Profit 16 20,231 45.77%

Nonprofit 7 17,156 38.81%

Government 5 6,288 14.23%

Other 1 524 1.18%

TOTAL 29 44,199 100.0%

Page 11: Nonprofit Sector - Statistics & Influences

2011 Giving by Recipient TypeRecipient Type $ (billions)

Religion 95.88Education 38.87Foundations 25.83Human Services 35.39Public-Society Benefit 21.37Health 24.75International 22.68Arts, Culture, Humanities 13.12Environment & Animals 7.81

Foundation Grants to Individuals 3.75Unallocated 8.97TOTAL $298.42 billionSource: 2012 Giving USA

Page 12: Nonprofit Sector - Statistics & Influences

Volunteering in the US

• In 2011, the number of volunteers reached its highest level in five years, as 64.3 million Americans volunteered through an organization, an increase of 1.5 million from 2010.

• Americans volunteered a total of almost 8 billion hours, an estimated economic value of roughly $171 billion.

• A majority of Americans assisted their neighbors in some way and more than a third actively participated in a civic, religious, or school group.

• Americans overwhelmingly volunteered in schools or with other youth organizations, working to advance the lives of young people.

Source: www.volunteeringinamerica.gov

Page 13: Nonprofit Sector - Statistics & Influences

Where the money comes from and where it goes doesn’t change much over time

75% of gifts are made by individuals – 1.4%-1.6% of GDP

Corporate gifts tied to net revenues (usually 1.2% of pretax profits)

Religion and education are top causes

International causes are usually at bottom*

Corporate giving tied to HQ and operations locations

Page 14: Nonprofit Sector - Statistics & Influences

Nonprofits in the News(usually for the wrong reasons!)

• United Way of America – William Aramony• September 11 charity• American Red Cross – 9/11, etc.• Jerry Sandusky/Penn State/The Second Mile• “Pennies for Charity” and state AGs• Katrina• Nonprofit hospitals• University endowments• Local “Scandal du jour”

Page 15: Nonprofit Sector - Statistics & Influences

Regulatory Trends and Influences

• IRS “Intermediate Sanctions”• Sarbanes-Oxley (SOX) – perception, not real• Senate Finance Committee• House Joint Tax Committee (hospitals)• Panel on the Nonprofit Sector• IRS Governance Best Practices (now included in

2008 Form 990 questions)• IRS Inquiry Letters (hospitals, universities, other

“non-charity” nonprofits)

Page 16: Nonprofit Sector - Statistics & Influences

Conclusions

• Nonprofit sector is big and influential• Nonprofit sector is very splintered• Perception of eroding confidence in charity• Trends toward more public scrutiny• “Where was the board?”• IRS changing role – reluctantly - from pure

financial regulation to broader governance oversight

Page 17: Nonprofit Sector - Statistics & Influences

Thank You!

818 S. Hawthorne Avenue

Sioux Falls, South Dakota 57104-4537

(605) 336-0244 or (888) 4-SUMPTION

www.sumptionandwyland.com