Which Nonprofit Organizations Borrow?
In: Public budgeting & finance, Band 29, Heft 3, S. 110-123
Abstract
The tax benefit, bankruptcy value, and pecking‐order theories of corporate capital structure are discussed in context of nonprofit organizations. A bivariate probit model shows that coefficients differ between models meaning mortgages and tax‐exempt bonds are not equivalent forms of debt. Organizations with proportionally more program revenues, contributions, total assets, total revenues, and executive compensation are more likely to have a mortgage. Nonprofits that rely on special event fund‐raising or contributions have a lower probability of using bond financing. The use of debt is also influenced by the nature of the organization's mission as measured through the NTEE classification.
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