Public funding and the voluntary sector

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Public funding and the voluntary sector

Arjen de Wit Philanthropic Studies, VU University Amsterdam

ESRC Public Policy Seminar University of Kent, Canterbury

17 September 2015

Theories of altruism

Behavioural economics

Utility function includes preference for provision of public good

Public good can be provided in different ways

Theories of altruism

Behavioural economics

Utility function includes preference for provision of public good

Public good can be provided in different ways

voluntary work, charitable donations and government expenditures are substitutes

Giving money or giving time?

People who volunteer are…

Older

Higher educated

Higher incomes

Wealthier

Frequent churchgoers

Giving money or giving time?

People who volunteer are…

Older

Higher educated

Higher incomes

Wealthier

Frequent churchgoers

People who give are…

Older

Higher educated

Higher incomes

Wealthier

Frequent churchgoers

Giving money or giving time?

Profile of volunteers and charitable donors are quite similar

Besides altruism, there are many other mechanisms like ‘warm glow’ of giving, values, social pressure, etc. etc.

So maybe giving and volunteering are complements

Giving money or giving time?

Profile of volunteers and charitable donors are quite similar

Besides altruism, there are many other mechanisms like ‘warm glow’ of giving, values, social pressure, etc. etc.

So maybe giving and volunteering are complements

and _

Giving money or giving time?

Profile of volunteers and charitable donors are quite similar

Besides altruism, there are many other mechanisms like ‘warm glow’ of giving, values, social pressure, etc. etc.

So maybe giving and volunteering are complements

and ! _

“Civic core”

(Reed & Selbee, 2001)

Local active citizenship in The Netherlands

Shifting policies

The crowding-out hypothesis

Alexis de Tocqueville 1840

Robert Nisbet 1953

Milton Friedman 1962

The crowding-out hypothesis

“For every welfare state, if social obligations become increasingly public, then its institutional arrangements crowd out private obligations or make them at least no longer necessary” (Van Oorschot and Arts 2005: 2)

Alexis de Tocqueville 1840

Robert Nisbet 1953

Milton Friedman 1962

Possible welfare state effects

Altruism: Donors and volunteers provide services that are left over

Organisations: Public funding changes reputations and strategies of nonprofit organisations

Resources: Welfare state arrangements affect levels of income, wealth, education

Values: People adopt values of universalism, solidarity from the institutions surrounding them

What's the evidence?

What's the evidence?

What's the evidence?

What's the evidence?

Valid testing?

Laboratory experiments in which undergraduate students don't decide over their own money, are aware of participating in research and have full information

Aggregate measures of non-profit revenue sources

How about volunteering?

A closer look

Macro: what are the rates of voluntary contributions across welfare states?

Meso: How are changes in subsidies related to changes in voluntary contributions to organisations?

Micro: how do people respond to actual policy changes?

A closer look

Macro: what are the rates of voluntary contributions across welfare states?

Meso: How are changes in subsidies related to changes in voluntary contributions to organisations?

Micro: how do people respond to actual policy changes?

Cross-country comparison

European Social Survey 2002

Donations to “For each of the voluntary organisations I will now mention, please use this card to tell me whether any of these things apply to you now or in the last 12 months, and, if so, which”

− Donated money

− Voluntary work

Country-level: IMF/OECD 2001

Cross-country comparison

Cross-country comparison

Cross-country comparison

Cross-country comparison

Cross-country comparison

Cross-country comparison

A closer look

Macro: what are the rates of voluntary contributions across welfare states?

Meso: How are changes in subsidies related to changes in voluntary contributions to organisations?

Micro: how do people respond to actual policy changes?

Subsidies and donations over time

The Giving in the Netherlands Panel Survey (GINPS)

– n = 1,879

Central Bureau on Fundraising (CBF)

– 17 organisations

Newspaper articles through LexisNexis

No clear trend

Budget cuts on development aid

More subsidies to the Salvation Army

Budget cuts are covered in the news

...but what about extra funding?

No strong association on average

Results from first-difference regression models with fixed-effects for organization and year

No strong association on average

Results from first-difference regression models with fixed-effects for organization and year

No strong association on average

Results from first-difference regression models with fixed-effects for organization and year

No strong association on average

Results from first-difference regression models with fixed-effects for organization and year

*

A closer look

Macro: what are the rates of voluntary contributions across welfare states?

Meso: How are changes in subsidies related to changes in voluntary contributions to organisations?

Micro: how do people respond to actual policy changes?

How the Dutch respond to cutbacks

Giving in the Netherlands Panel Survey 2012 (n=1,448)

“With your household you donated €100 to health in the past year. If the government cuts 5% in this area, how would you react?”

How the Dutch respond to cutbacks

Why don't we find crowding-out?

Why don't we find crowding-out?

It doesn't exist

Why don't we find crowding-out?

It doesn't exist

The Netherlands is different from the US

Why don't we find crowding-out?

It doesn't exist

The Netherlands is different from the US

People don’t know about all government policies

Why don't we find crowding-out?

It doesn't exist

The Netherlands is different from the US

People don’t know about all government policies

There are many more reasons to donate

Why don't we find crowding-out?

It doesn't exist

The Netherlands is different from the US

People don’t know about all government policies

There are many more reasons to donate

Other mechanisms (organisations, resources, values) suppress the effect

Why don't we find crowding-out?

It doesn't exist

The Netherlands is different from the US

People don’t know about all government policies

There are many more reasons to donate

Other mechanisms (organisations, resources, values) suppress the effect

It depends on the organisational context

Summing up

Theories of altruism predict that volunteering can be substituted by charitable giving or public funding

This is not likely to occur

Same predictors of giving money and giving time

People don’t know and don’t care about government subsidies

Thank you

Arjen de Wit

Philanthropic Studies VU University Amsterdam

@arjen_dewit a.de.wit@vu.nl