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During this period, the extraordinary level of spending from the endowment was hidden by the tremendous performance of the equity markets. In 1985, for example, the average total return in the equity markets was 31.6 percent.
Because of the importance of endowment to an institution like the Society, the deleterious impact of its 1980s endowment spending record cannot be exaggerated. During the period between 1974 and 1988, realized gains spent by the Society exceeded the 5 percent spending rate by more than $11 million.
Figure 10.1 shows the cumulative impact of the Society's spending policy on the growth of the endowment since it first exceeded the 5 percent spending rate in 1974. The assumptions of the model are as follows:
This model isolates the impact of the Society's spending from the endowment since 1975. It uses the Society's actual investment performance and the actual capital gifts received, and it follows the board-designated spending policy. It reveals that had the Society operated within the 5 percent spending policy, by the end of 1993 the market value of its endowment could have been nearly $84 million, instead of the actual value of approximately $5 million. Under this scenario, the justifiable 5 percent spending from the endowment in 1993 would have been $3.5 million!
The total dollar value of gifts, grants, and contributions in a report from the development office represents only a small part of the revenue picture of a large nonprofit. Is that grant restricted? Can it all be spent this year? Which grants are for endowment? Is the income from that endowment unrestricted? These questions illuminate just a few of the many issues that must be taken into account because nonprofit donors can direct their gifts to specific purposes. Managing these distinctions requires close administrative control to ensure that sources of support are matched with intended uses.
But the complexities of managing a large nonprofit institution go beyond the restrictions on gifts and grants. Research has shown that expenditures at many nonprofits grow at a rate in excess of inflation, exerting pressure on revenues to keep pace. For institutions that cannot rely on earned income or government appropriations to provide significant revenue, investment income from the endowment emerges as the most important source for providing that growth. Sadly, part of the value in studying the Society's recent history is the fact that it provides such a clear illustration of how not to manage this important resource.
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