Behavioral economics. Avoiding overhead aversion in charity

Science. 2014 Oct 31;346(6209):632-5. doi: 10.1126/science.1253932.

Abstract

Donors tend to avoid charities that dedicate a high percentage of expenses to administrative and fundraising costs, limiting the ability of nonprofits to be effective. We propose a solution to this problem: Use donations from major philanthropists to cover overhead expenses and offer potential donors an overhead-free donation opportunity. A laboratory experiment testing this solution confirms that donations decrease when overhead increases, but only when donors pay for overhead themselves. In a field experiment with 40,000 potential donors, we compared the overhead-free solution with other common uses of initial donations. Consistent with prior research, informing donors that seed money has already been raised increases donations, as does a $1:$1 matching campaign. Our main result, however, clearly shows that informing potential donors that overhead costs are covered by an initial donation significantly increases the donation rate by 80% (or 94%) and total donations by 75% (or 89%) compared with the seed (or matching) approach.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Altruism*
  • Charities / methods*
  • Economics, Behavioral*
  • Fund Raising / methods*
  • Gift Giving*
  • Humans