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Financial Plan for Charitable Giving

Posted on 10/5/12 at 10:35 pm
Posted by Bayou Tiger
Member since Nov 2003
3657 posts
Posted on 10/5/12 at 10:35 pm
Overall my finances are streamlined, organized, and have a five-year "strategic plan".

However, this is not the case for my charitable giving. I had just kind of lost track of it and started trying to organize it over the last few days. Giving has been scattershot, inconsistent, and not as much as I was thinking it was (not bad, just not great).

Anyway, after taking an inventory of where my giving has been going, I would like to do the following:
1) Identify my most important charitable priorities
2) Determine the best way to make an impact for each priority(which organizations, type of donations or volunteering, etc)
3) Set giving and volunteering goals on a short-term and long-term basis

Has anyone ever attempted something like this? Even though I am not an OT baller, it would be nice to have a roadmap to work towards. Any tips are appreciated.

Posted by foshizzle
Washington DC metro
Member since Mar 2008
40599 posts
Posted on 10/5/12 at 11:20 pm to
I very honestly don't know. If I like a charity I volunteer my time. I'm not sure I'd just throw money at them.

But regarding impact, you won't have much unless you are giving in the range of 7 figures every year. Most charities are simply money conduits, and you have to pay for whomever is arranging the cash transfers.
Posted by Poodlebrain
Way Right of Rex
Member since Jan 2004
19860 posts
Posted on 10/6/12 at 2:25 am to
The standard reference for how to structure charitable giving is called Tax Economics of Charitable Giving. It was written by several Arthur Andersen experts as a reference book for accountants and lawyers. Many of those who contributed to the book now work for WTAS.
Posted by 756
Member since Sep 2004
14853 posts
Posted on 10/7/12 at 5:46 pm to
Poodle speaks again
This post was edited on 10/7/12 at 5:48 pm
Posted by Bayou Tiger
Member since Nov 2003
3657 posts
Posted on 10/8/12 at 12:25 am to
quote:

Tax Economics of Charitable Giving
On Amazon.com, this book is $326 new, $200 used.

In the meantime (until becoming fabulously wealthy enough to buy that book) I have been perusing the following links:

Making Charitable Giving Part of Your Financial Plan - A Five-Step Guide

A Primer on Charitable Giving - Free online summary based on the 2004/2005 Version of the book you mentioned

Thanks for the tip, since the free summary of that book above has some useful info.
Posted by Chris4x4gill2
North Alabama
Member since Nov 2008
3092 posts
Posted on 10/8/12 at 7:13 am to
The biggest thing for us was choosing the charities / causes we wanted to support and dedicating msot of our giving to that cause. I feel that it does more good to give larger amounts to one group than scatter smaller amounts to multiples.

Our primary charity is a local childrens home. By giving directly to them, we also know that the money is being put to good use and not being eat up by admin costs like you get with large national charities. We also give alot of purchased or used items instead of cash - they put out a list of needs every quarter.
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