Samaritan Bundles: Fundraising Competition and Inefficient Clustering in Ngo Projects

The Economic Journal, Forthcoming

59 Pages Posted: 8 May 2020

See all articles by Marco A. Marini

Marco A. Marini

University of Rome "La Sapienza"

Date Written: April 14, 2020

Abstract

This paper provides a theoretical framework to understand the tendency of non governmental organisations (NGOs) to cluster and the circumstances under which such clustering is socially undesirable. NGOs compete through fundraising for donations and choose issues to focus their projects on. Donors have latent willingness-to-give that may differ across issues, but they need to be "awakened" to give. Raising funds focusing on the same issue creates positive informational spillovers across NGOs. Each NGO chooses whether to compete in the same market (clustering) with spillovers, or to face weaker competition under issue specialization. We show that equilibrium clustering is more likely to occur when the share of multiple-issue donors is relatively large, and when the fundraising technology is sufficiently efficient. Moreover, this situation is socially inefficient when the cost of fundraising takes intermediate values and the motivation for donors' giving is relatively high. We illustrate the mechanisms of the model with several case studies.

Suggested Citation

Marini, Marco A., Samaritan Bundles: Fundraising Competition and Inefficient Clustering in Ngo Projects (April 14, 2020). The Economic Journal, Forthcoming, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3575753 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3575753

Marco A. Marini (Contact Author)

University of Rome "La Sapienza" ( email )

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