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Private Foundation Assets Are Not Public Dollars

Thu Jun 18, 2009 9:29pm EDT
A new study defends the limited relationship between philanthropy and
government

WASHINGTON, June 18 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Tomorrow, The Philanthropy
Roundtable releases a new report on charitable giving and the government's
relationship with foundations and charities. The report, How Public Is Private
Philanthropy? Separating Reality from Myth, is a comprehensive legal analysis
that examines the claim that charitable funds are "public money" because they
are exempt from federal taxes, receive state charters, and are subject to
oversight by state attorneys general. 

The co-authors of this report are prominent scholars Evelyn Brody, Professor
at the Chicago-Kent College of Law, and John Tyler, Secretary and General
Counsel of the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation. They conclude, based on
numerous applicable legal precedents, that the public-money assertion is not
well grounded. 

Brody and Tyler demonstrate that it is deeply problematic to consider the
federal tax exemption and the charitable tax deduction subsidies to charities,
and even more problematic to assert that the public has a legitimate claim to
private philanthropic assets. Individuals and businesses routinely receive tax
preferences, the authors note, but they are never considered governmental
entities nor are their assets considered public property. 

The law treats foundations like private entities devoted to public ends, but
they do not have to serve the government's purposes nor those of the public at
large. Similarly, a charter from the state does not make foundations and other
charities public entities. Policymakers cannot use these arguments to intrude
into the governance, missions, and operations of philanthropies. 

Traditionally, there has been a limited relationship between philanthropy and
government. In recent years, the "public money" claim has been employed to
support proposals to urge stricter legal limits on the operations and
governance of foundations and other charities. This report underscores the
legal basis for continued separation between government and philanthropy.

"American philanthropy is the envy of the world, with charitable giving last
year at over $307 billion," said Adam Meyerson, President of The Philanthropy
Roundtable. "But it's under attack by activists, legislators, and policymakers
who clamor for greater governmental authority to regulate the activities of
American philanthropists."

The report will be released on Friday, June 19, 2009, during a panel
discussion hosted by the Hudson Institute's Bradley Center for Philanthropy
and Civic Renewal in Washington, D.C.

For more information on The Philanthropy Roundtable and this report visit
www.philanthropyroundtable.org.
    Contact: Sue Santa
             publicpolicy@philanthropyroundtable.org
             202-822-8333

SOURCE  The Philanthropy Roundtable

Sue Santa, Philanthropy Roundtable, +1-202-822-8333,
publicpolicy@philanthropyroundtable.org



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