Unregulated Charity

74 Pages Posted: 17 Oct 2018 Last revised: 30 Jan 2020

Date Written: August 6, 2018

Abstract

The vast majority of charities in the United States operate in a regulatory blind spot, as they are neither meaningfully evaluated when they apply for charitable status nor substantively monitored after they receive charitable status. Driven by severe budget constraints, the IRS decided to essentially ignore any charity that claims it will realize less than $50,000 in annual gross receipts. From a practical perspective, the IRS’s decision makes sense. To the extent smaller charities are less likely to cause harm, it is reasonable (perhaps even preferable) to subject them to less scrutiny. This type of prioritization, known as risk-based regulation, has become increasingly popular as regulatory budgets have continued to shrink. But however intuitive, reasonable, or widespread, the fact remains that the IRS has effectively absolved itself of the duty to oversee the majority of charities.

This Article explores, on both a micro- and macro-level, the negative consequences of the IRS’s decision to leave smaller charities unregulated. On the micro-level, the lack of regulation impacts virtually every person who interacts with the charitable sector, including donors, beneficiaries of charities, and private actors in the market. On the macro-level, as an increasing number of charities operate without proper regulation, the public will lose faith in the charitable sector and hasten the erosion of the “halo effect” enjoyed by all charitable organizations, large and small.

This Article is the first to identify and discuss the harms associated with the IRS’s failure to apply either front-end or back-end scrutiny to smaller charities. To address this regulatory failure, this Article argues that the IRS should require a more robust retrospective regulatory tool for all charities, regardless of size. This solution represents a cost-effective means for the IRS to meet its regulatory burden in a manner that will help restore public faith in the charitable sector.

Suggested Citation

Amarante, Eric Franklin, Unregulated Charity (August 6, 2018). Washington Law Review, Forthcoming, University of Tennessee Legal Studies Research Paper No. 361, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3255911 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3255911

Eric Franklin Amarante (Contact Author)

University of Tennessee College of Law ( email )

1505 West Cumberland Avenue
Knoxville, TN 37996
United States

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