Non-Profit Organizations - What are They?
by John Day
Published on this site: August 25th, 2005 - See
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Definition of Fund; Assets; and Fund Balance
According to the "Financial and Accounting Guide for
Not-For-Profit Organizations" written by CPAs Gross,
Larkin, Bruttomesso, and McNalley, (fifth edition, pg 25)
the definition of a these three terms is as follows:
- A fund is any part of an organization for which separate
account records are kept.
- Assets are valuable things owned or controlled by the
organization. Types of assets include cash, investments,
property, and amounts owed to the organization.
- Fund balance is the mathematical number obtained by subtracting
total liabilities from total assets; it is a numerical representation
of the net worth of the organization, but has no other significance.
Fund balances do not exist except on paper; unlike assets,
they have no intrinsic value and cannot be spent. Both assets
and fund balances (as well as liabilities, revenues, and
expenses) are part of the accounting records of a fund.
What are non-profit organizations?
A few years ago, a dentist client of mine, who did a lot of
work for low-income patients under the California medical
assistance program called "MediCal", asked me a
bizarre question. He wanted to know if he could be considered
a "non-profit organization" since he did so much
MediCal work. At first, I thought he was joking, but he was
serious. I told him that just because he charged less for
his services did not qualify him to become exempt from paying
taxes. In fact, he made a very nice profit. However, this
is a good example of how non-profit organizations (NPO's)
are misunderstood by a large segment of the general public.
Most countries around the world have NPO's, but outside the
U.S. they are called non-governmental organizations (NGOs)
or civil society organizations. These organizations are exempt
from paying taxes because they provide some sort of public
benefit. They are said to enhance the fabric of society. They
differ from a business organization in that there are no owners.
A Board of Directors oversees operations of the organization.
An Executive Director, who reports to the Board, functions
like a CEO of a business. Usually there is a lengthy application
process to establish the mission or purpose of the organization
before exempt status is granted.
According to Independent Sector, an organization that serves
as an information resource for non-profit boards, there are
1.5 million non-profits that, when combined, have general
annual revenues totaling more than $670 billion dollars. They
report that six percent of all organizations in the U.S. are
non-profits and one in twelve Americans work for a non-profit.
That's big business and has caused profit-making businesses
to become alarmed that some of these NPOs are competing unfairly.
Think about a private hospital as compared to a non-profit
hospital. The profits of the private hospital are taxed, but
the NPO hospital can apply all their profits to higher salaries,
more equipment, etc. Hence, there is high scrutiny of NPOs
by the Internal Revenue Service, state Attorney General offices,
private watchdog organizations, and the press.
There are all types of non-profit organizations. Public charities
are exempt under the Internal Revenue Service code 501(c)(3).
These organizations, such as hospitals, museums, orchestras,
private schools, churches, scientific research
organizations, soup kitchens, etc., obviously do much more
than provide free care and services to the needy. To qualify
for exempt status, these organizations must show broad public
support, rather than funding from an individual source. In
addition, there are private foundations, colleges, universities,
social welfare organizations, professional and trade organizations,
and many more. Governmental organizations such as communities
and agencies are also non-profit organizations, however, their
accounting and record keeping is handled quite differently
from 501(c)(3) organizations.
How are non-profit books organized?
Briefly, the books of an NPO are organized in the same way
as a profit-making business except for a few differences.
It's okay for a non-profit to make a profit because there
may be many uses the board has planned for the extra money.
But, NPOs traditionally refer to profit as "Excess Revenues
over Expenses" to avoid being mischaracterized as a profit-making
organization. A net loss is called "Excess Expenses over
Revenues". Recall the fundamental equation that makes
double-entry accounting work:
Assets = Liabilities + Equity
Instead of the term Equity, a non-profit will substitute the
words Fund Balance or more recently Net Assets. The concept
is still the same. After subtracting liabilities from assets
the difference is what is owned by the organization. Where
NPOs differ in their financial statement presentation from
profit-making businesses is what is called Fund Accounting.
Obviously, the presentation varies depending on the purpose
and size of the organization. For instance, a Little League
baseball organization may only have one fund for which they
have to account. They also may not have any restrictions placed
on the usage of contributions they receive. Everything is
straightforward.
Or, a scientific research organization may be working on various
projects at the same time with funding sources made up of
private and governmental grants or contracts, private donations,
sales of research documents, some of it restricted to specific
expenditures and the rest unrestricted. The accounting challenge
is to report the revenue and expenses accurately for each
fund or project and be able to combine all the funds into
one cohesive financial statement.
The problem in the past for the contributors was that they
could not easily tell from the financial documents what funds
were restricted and unrestricted and whether their contributions
were being spent properly. The Financial Accounting Standards
Board (FASB) decided that all external accounting should be
done using the "Net Assets" approach as opposed
to the "Fund Balance" approach. Essentially, the
net assets approach requires that the equity of the organization
be presented with three classes of assets, i.e., Restricted
Assets; Temporarily Restricted Assets; Unrestricted Assets.
You can still use Fund Accounting for internal bookkeeping
purposes, but for external reporting purposes you are required
to disclose your restricted and unrestricted funds. If you
have no restricted funds, then it is not much of a challenge.
One of the key factors in setting up non-profit books is a
well thought out Chart of Accounts. In other words, this is
choosing which general ledger accounts are the most appropriate
for recording revenue and expenses, etc., and organizing them
in such a way as to provide meaning. Some U.S. organizations
simply follow the same format found on the 990 IRS form for
non-profits. They do this so that their financial statements
are in conformity with the way that return is organized. This
makes it easy to transfer information from their financial
statement to the 990 form.
Nevertheless, the main thing is to design your accounts so
that they tell you exactly where your revenue came from and
what expenses are related to that revenue. I have worked with
NPOs that have not done a very good job of this in the beginning,
and I can testify that it is no fun trying to straighten the
accounts out later. It may be well worth the money to hire
a competent accountant to guide you through the set up phase.
Better yet, let your accountant review your books a couple
of times a year just to make sure you are on track and save
yourself some year-end grief.

John W. Day, MBA is the author of two courses in accounting
basics: Real Life Accounting for Non-Accountants (20-hr online)
and The HEART of Accounting (4-hr PDF). Visit his website
at http://www.reallifeaccounting.com
to download for FREE his 3 e-books pertaining to small business
accounting and his monthly newsletter on accounting issues

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