Financial Resilience, Income Dependence and Organisational Survival in UK Charities

Author:

Green Elizabeth,Ritchie FelixORCID,Bradley Peter,Parry Glenn

Abstract

AbstractThe financial well-being of the charity sector has important social implications. Numerous studies have analysed whether the concentration of income in a few sources increases financial vulnerability. However, few studies have systematically considered whether the type of income (grants, donation, fund-raising activities) affects the survival prospects of the charity. We extend the literature by (a) explicitly modelling the composition of sources of income, (b) allowing for short-term volatility as well as long-term survival and (c) testing alternative specifications in a nested form. We show that the usual association between income concentration per se and financial vulnerability is a specification error. Greater vulnerability is associated with dependence on grant funding, not overall concentration. Previous studies showing that concentration of income per se is problematic are picking up a proxy effect. We also show that the volatility of income streams may be an important factor in the survival of charities, but that this also varies between income sources.

Funder

Leverhulme Trust

University of the West of England

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Strategy and Management,Public Administration,Sociology and Political Science,Business and International Management

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