Results 201 to 210 of about 15,104 (248)

Charitable Giving and Intermediation [PDF]

open access: possibleMonash University. Department of Economics. Discussion Papers, 2015
Charitable donations are often made through intermediaries who can fund themselves from these same donations. Donors who purchase charitable output through an intermediary incur a principal-agent problem with unobservable prices. We compare charitable giving in an experiment with and without intermediation.
Nadine Chlaß   +2 more
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Afterlife incentives in charitable giving

Applied Economics, 2010
There is a large economic literature examining determinants of the (roughly) three hundred billion dollars of charitable giving in the U.S. each year. The literature emphasizes the role of marginal tax rates in altering public subsidies for charitable gifts.
Jeremy P. Thornton, Sara Helms
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The complexities of charitable giving

BMJ, 2015
Charitable giving allows people to give to perceived health priorities at home and overseas and is to be encouraged. The emphasis placed on it is one of the more attractive features of major religions. It also helps to foster the idea of a wider community, perhaps one reason why poorer folk are comparatively generous. Does McCartney believe …
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Which maximizes donations: Charitable giving as an incentive or incentives for charitable giving?

Journal of Business Research, 2019
Abstract With charitable donations becoming a conventional norm, companies may choose to donate their products to improve public image and increase product visibility. Using two donation types (donation-for-gift/charity sale) and two product types (hedonic/utilitarian), this research discusses how charities should frame product-for-money activities ...
Chia-Chi Chang, Po-Yu Chen
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Charitable Giving

The Journal of Wealth Management, 2004
The author starts with the observation that charitable giving is a big business, especially in the United States, where as much as $120 billion a year is estimated as the total of charitable contributions by individuals. She then questions what really motivates wealthy families to give to charities at all. Listing and discussing the various motivations
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Charitable Giving and Charitable Gambling: An Empirical Investigation [PDF]

open access: possibleNational Tax Journal, 2004
Recent decades have witnessed a rapid increase in charitable gaming. Some have suggested that this means that conventional donations to charity will fall. In this paper, we use a rich Canadian data set to examine the relationship between direct contributions to charities and those made indirectly via charitable games.
Apinunmahakul, Amornrat   +1 more
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Charitable Giving of Alumni

The American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 1994
Abstract. This research examines the “age‐donation” profile of gift‐giving alumniai a large public university, based on a pooled micro‐data random sample of 4,242 alumni (1926/27‐1989/90 graduates) who gave cash gifts during the 1975/76‐1989/90 fiscal years.
Albert Ade. Okunade   +2 more
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Charitable Giving And Taxation

2001
Abstract This chapter examines the restnct10ns on giving to charity by individuals, 19.01 trustees, and companies, and examines the fiscal consequences of charitable giving. Value added tax is afforded separate treatment at the end of the chapter, since its application does not distinguish between individual and corporate donors.
Peter Luxton, Judith Hill
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Defaults in charitable giving [PDF]

open access: possible, 2015
In an experimental setup we investigate the effect of defaults on charitable giving. In the treatment group, subjects can either specify a charity of their choice, or select one from a default list of five well-known charities; in the control group we do not provide the list. In a sample of 869 subjects we find that offering a list of default charities
Jonathan Schulz   +2 more
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Volunteerism and charitable giving

Nonprofit Management and Leadership, 2006
AbstractGifts of Time and Money: The Role of Charity in America's Communities, by Arthur C. Brooks (ed.). Lanham, Md.: Rowman & Little.eld, 2005. 224 pp., $75.00 cloth, $24.95 paper.
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