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Working Paper 27: Abstract
Assessing Financial Vulnerability in the Nonprofit Sector
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Effective nonprofit governance relies
upon understanding an organization's financial condition and
vulnerabilities. However, financial vulnerability of nonprofit
organizations is a relatively new area of study. In this paper, we
compare two models used to forecast bankruptcy in the corporate
sector (Altman 1968 and Ohlson 1980) with the model used by
nonprofit researchers (Tuckman and Chang 1991). We find that the
Ohlson model has higher explanatory power than either Tuckman and
Chang's or Altman's in predicting four different measures of
financial vulnerability. However, we show that none of the models,
individually or combined, are effective in predicting financial
distress. We then propose a more comprehensive model of financial
vulnerability by adding two new variables to represent reliance on
commercial-type activities to generate revenues and endowment
sufficiency. We find that this model outperforms Ohlson's model and
performs substantially better in explaining and predicting financial
vulnerability. Hence, the expanded model can be used as a guide for
understanding the drivers of financial vulnerability and for
identifying more effective proxies for nonprofit sector financial
distress for use in future research.
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