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Finance and Revenue

(page 82 of 111)

Princeton Endowment Returns Best Yale’s and Harvard’s

The 12.7-percent investment gain beat Ivy League peers that have reported results so far and vaulted Princeton into fourth place among the biggest U.S. college endowments, Bloomberg reports.

Study Raises Questions About Colleges That Go Nonprofit

An education researcher argues in a new report that some commercial colleges that change to nonprofit status behave like “covert for-profits” and generate financial benefits for their backers, The Chronicle of Higher Education writes.

World Bank Charts Decline in Ranks of the Extremely Poor

The international development lender said Sunday that the number of people living in extreme poverty is likely to drop this year to less than 10 percent of the global population for the first time, the Thomson Reuters Foundation reports.

Borrowed From Business: Nonprofits Try Their Own Version of Wall Street-Style Earnings Reports

Borrowed From Business: Nonprofits Try Their Own Version of Wall Street-Style Earnings Reports

Some charity leaders are bullish on quarterly updates like those that businesses are required to do but acknowledge the risks involved with flinging open the books.

Surviving Rough Waters: How the Nature Conservancy Bounced Back From Scandal

A decade ago, the group was rocked by investigations by Congress, the IRS, and the EPA, and donations withered. A structural overhaul — and a big dose of transparency — helped restore the public’s trust.

Brookings Scholar Resigns in Flap Over Corporate Funding

An economist long affiliated with the Brookings Institution has resigned from the Democrat-leaning think tank after being assailed by Sen. Elizabeth Warren for research she contends was influenced by a corporate sponsor, writes The Washington Post.

New York’s Gotham Chamber Opera Shutting Down

The troupe, which has won acclaim for producing small-scale works in a variety of unconventional venues, announced Thursday that it would close following the discovery of a previously unseen deficit, writes The New York Times.

Planned Parenthood Funds Intact in Adopted Spending Bill

With Democrats joining a portion of the Republican majority, Congress cleared a stopgap spending measure Wednesday that will keep the federal government running through December 11 and fully funds Planned Parenthood, reports The Washington Post. 

Hearing Raises Issue of Planned Parenthood Leader’s Salary

U.S. News & World Report and The New York Times examine Cecile Richards’s compensation following a hearing Tuesday in which House Republicans raised the issue.

Opinion: Economics of Insurance Doom Obamacare Co-ops

A Bloomberg columnist writes that the economics of health insurance stack the odds against financial sustainability for the nonprofit coverage co-ops established under the Affordable Care Act, four of which have gone under since the start of the year.

Minnesota Hospitals’ Charity-Care Costs Plunge 22%

Medical centers in the state saw the biggest drop in the cost of unpaid care in 20 years in 2014 as a lower uninsured population sent charity-care expenses down sharply, the Minneapolis Star Tribune reports. 

Grassley Demands Details on Red Cross Response to GAO Review

Senator Charles Grassley is asking the Government Accountability Office for more information on what he termed the American Red Cross’s “apparent unwillingness to fully cooperate” with a federal review of its emergency relief work, ProPublica reports.

Many Cancer Doctors Asked to ID Donors Among Patients

Development offices at leading cancer centers are increasingly teaching doctors to discern and act on fundraising opportunities among people they treat, The New York Times writes, citing new research by a University of Michigan oncologist and ethicist.

NYC Bill Would Compel Fiscal Disclosure by Charity CEOs

New York Mayor Bill de Blasio is opposing a proposal before the City Council to require the heads of taxpayer-funded nonprofits to submit conflict-of-interest and financial-disclosure forms, Politico New York reports.

Planned Parenthood Fights Funding Threats With Nationwide Events

The embattled women’s health nonprofit will hold scores of rallies across the country Tuesday as part of its effort to demonstrate support and regain the political initiative amid a partisan controversy over its provision of fetal tissue for medical research, The New York Times writes.

MIT Beating Yale and Harvard in Endowment Growth

A Yale graduate who formerly helped manage his alma mater’s endowment is now outperforming it as head of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s investment fund, which achieved 13.2 percent growth in fiscal 2015, The Wall Street Journal writes.