Differentiated regulation: the case of charities |
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Authors: | Carolyn J Cordery Dalice Sim Tony van Zijl |
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Institution: | 1. School of Accounting and Commercial Law, Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand;2. Dean's Department, University of Otago, Wellington, New Zealand |
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Abstract: | The increasing number and influence of charities in the economy, evidence of mismanagement and the need for information for policymaking are all reasons for establishing charity regulators. Public interest and public choice theories explain charity regulation which aims to increase public trust and confidence in charities (and thus increase voluntarism and philanthropy) and to limit tax benefits to specific organisations and donors. Nevertheless, regulation is resource intensive, and growing pressure on government budgets requires efficiencies to be found. This study proposes regulation differentiated according to charities' main resource providers, to reduce costs and focus regulatory effort, and provides a feasible segmentation. |
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Keywords: | Charity regulation Non‐profit organisations Regulation efficiency Differentiated regulation |
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