United States Government Accountability Office
GAO Report to the Chairman, Committee on
Ways and Means, House of
Representatives
July 2006
TAX-EXEMPT
ORGANIZATIONS
Collecting More Data
on Donor-Advised
Funds and Supporting
Organizations Could
Help Address
Compliance
Challenges
JAL
G A 0
A....Wry • Integrity • Rell.' Illy
GAO-06-799
EFTA01104426
July 2006
TAX-EXEMPT ORGANIZATIONS
proG A 0
Highlights Collecting More Data on Donor-Advised
Highlights of GAO.CG7vu, a report to the Funds and Supporting Organizations
Chairman, Committee on Ways and
Means, House of Representatives Could Help Address Compliance
Challenges
Why GAO Did This Study What GAO Found
Donor-advised funds and Donor-advised funds, supporting organizations, and private foundations
supporting organizations are two are all tax-exempt charitable-giving vehicles. Donor-advised funds are
charitable-giving options that have separate accounts held by a public charity to receive contributions from
received attention from Congress
and the Internal Revenue Service donors who may recommend, but not control, charitable distributions
(IRS) for their potential to facilitate from the account. Supporting organizations are public charities that are
noncompliance with tax law. to carry out their tax-exempt purpose by supporting one or more tax-
As requested, GAO is providing exempt organizations, usually other public charities. Compared with
information on donor-advised private foundations, donor-advised funds and supporting organizations
funds and supporting organizations give donors less control over how their donation will be used but provide
related to (1) federal laws and donors more favorable tax deductions, lower administration costs, less
regulations, compared to private IRS oversight, and fewer reporting requirements.
foundations; (2) financial and
organizational characteristics; and
(3) types of noncompliance and Donor-advised funds hold billions of dollars in assets, and supporting
promotion methods and challenges organizations and private foundations hold hundreds of billions of dollars in
identifying them. assets. Public charities and private foundations must annually file an IRS
Form 990 or Form 990-PF, respectively, to report their activities. However,
What GAO Recommends donor-advised fund data are limited because organizations that maintain the
funds are not required to separately report fUnd data from other financial
GAO suggests that Congress data on Form 990. Although some supporting organization characteristics
consider (1) directing IRS to collect
Form 990 data for, and provide can be determined from Form 990 data, other characteristics, such as the
guidance on calculating payout rate at which payments are made to charities and details about the recipients
rates for donor-advised funds and of loans from the organization, cannot be reliably determined. Concerns
supporting organizations, and (2) have arisen about the "payout" rate to charities, and Congress is considering
providing IRS authority to protect a minimum payout requirement, similar to the one for private foundations.
from public disclosure the taxpayer Further, supporting organizations are not required to report their supported
identification numbers (TIN) of organizations' identification numbers, making it more difficult to track the
loan recipients, so that IRS can relationship between organizations. To collect additional data, IRS revised
collect the TINs on the Form 990. Form 990 for 2003 and 2005 and Is considering further revisions, but no firm
GAO recommends that IRS require plans have been determined.
(1) more comprehensive reporting
of donor-advised fund data, (2)
reporting of supported According to IRS managers, examinations reveal that some donor-advised
organizations' identification hinds and supporting organizations are used in abusive schemes to
numbers, and (3) reporting of TINs unallowably benefit donors or related parties or give donors excess control
for recipients of large loans, if of charitable assets and operations. In some cases, IRS is able to clearly
granted authority to protect the determine noncompliance and assign appropriate corrective actions.
TINs from public disclosure. However, in other cases, IRS faces challenges gathering evidence or
addressing activities that do not seem to benefit charities, but do not violate
IRS agrees with the first two any law or regulation, such as when a supporting organization loans money,
recommendations but believes it at market rate, to a donor, director, or officer of the organization.
needs legislative authority to Promoters, who are individuals or entities who facilitate abusive schemes,
protect loan recipient Ms.
further complicate IRS's examination efforts.
www.gao.govfogebingetrpt?GAG.06-799.
To view the hi product, including the scope
and methodology, click on the link above.
For more information, contact Michael
Brostek at (202) 512-9110 or
brostekmOgeo.gov.
United States Government Accountability Office
EFTA01104427
ig GA O w
Accountability • lany • RAMSlay
United States Government Accountability Office
Washington, DC 20548
July 27, 2006
The Honorable William M. Thomas
Chairman
Committee on Ways and Means
House of Representatives
Dear Mr. Chairman:
Each year, millions of donors give hundreds of billions of dollars to
charities.' The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) estimated that for tax year
2002, charitable contributions totaled over $229 billion, the largest portion
coming from individuals and foundations.' In addition to traditional public
charities and private foundations, donors may make charitable
contributions through the use of donor-advised funds and supporting
organizations. Donor-advised funds are generally separate funds or
accounts established and maintained by a public charity to receive
contributions from a single donor or a group of donors.' While the donor
may recommend charitable distributions from the account, the charity
must be free to accept or reject the donor's recommendations. Supporting
organizations are public charities that are to carry out their tax-exempt
purpose by supporting one or more tax-exempt organizations, usually
other public charities. IRS has recognized that while the majority of tax-
exempt organizations are trying to comply with tax law, a significant
compliance challenge involves the use of donor-advised funds and
supporting organizations in abusive arrangements benefiting individuals or
organizations other than charities. Concerns about these abuses have led
'Charities, recognized by Internal Revenue Code (IRC) section 50I(c)(3), are exempt front
paying income taxes on the funds collected for charitable purposes. Charitable purposes
include serving the poor and distressed; advancing religious, educational, and scientific
endeavors; protecting various human and civil rights; and addressing various societal
problems. Contributions to charities are tax deductible under IRC section 170. See glossary
for terms used throughout this report.
'The most recent IRS estimate available at the time of our review was for tax year 2002. We
have convened IRS's reported dollar amounts to 2005 constant dollars.
'The term donor-advised funds has been used to refer to both the individual accounts
donors establish, as well as the charities that maintain these accounts. For this report, we
will be using the terms donor-advised funds or donor-advised fund accounts to refer to the
accounts that donors establish, unless otherwise noted.
Page I GA0.06.799 Tax Compliance
EFTA01104428
to proposed legislation imposing requirements on the operation of donor-
advised funds and supporting organizations.
As requested, we are providing information on (1) federal laws and
regulations regarding donor-advised funds and supporting organizations,
as compared to private foundations; (2) financial and organizational
characteristics, such as loan recipients, of donor-advised funds, supporting
organizations, and private foundations, to the extent data are available;
and (3) types of potential or actual noncompliance and promotion
methods involving donor-advised funds and supporting organizations and
the challenges identifying them. In addition, we agreed to provide
information about noncash contribution valuation methods and marketing
methods involving donor-advised funds and supporting organizations,
which are discussed in appendixes III and IV.
To compare current federal laws and regulations for donor-advised funds
and supporting organizations to those for private foundations, we
reviewed the Internal Revenue Code (IRC), Department of the Treasury
regulations, and IRS publications as they related to the purpose and
operation of these entities. To determine financial and organizational
characteristics of donor-advised funds, supporting organizations, and
private foundations, we analyzed IRS Forms 990 and 990-PP data, as well
as reviewed survey data that external organizations collected on donor-
advised funds. Unless otherwise noted, tax year 2003 was the most recent
year of data available at the time of our analysis. We converted 2003 dollar
amounts to 2005 constant dollars. To identify types of noncompliance and
promotion methods involving donor-advised funds and supporting
organizations, we reviewed documents from IRS as well as from our
literature search. For each objective, we spoke to various IRS managers
and individuals knowledgeable about the tax-exempt community. We
conducted our review from July 2005 through May 2006 in accordance
with generally accepted government auditing standards.
'Private foundations are defined by IRC as section 501(cX3) domestic or foreign tax-
exempt organizations except those specifically excluded from the definition by section
509(a), including wiiversities, churches, and hospitals, and similar organizations that meet
a public support test or that support one of these organizations.
'IRS Forms 990 and 990-PF are federal information returns filed annually by tax-exempt
public charities, such as supporting organizations, and private foundations, respectively.
Information reported on these returns includes assets held, contributions received, and
grants paid.
Page 2 0AO46-799 Tax Compliance
EFTA01104429
Although donor-advised funds, supporting organizations, and private
Results in Brief foundations are all tax-exempt, charitable-giving vehicles, federal tax laws
and regulations treat them differently. In general, donors who establish
donor-advised funds and supporting organizations have less control over
the use of the charitable assets than those who establish private
foundations, but they generally incur less administrative burden, receive
less IRS oversight, have fewer limits in claiming charitable tax deductions,
and have fewer reporting requirements. Donor-advised funds, unlike
supporting organizations and private foundations, are charitable-giving
vehicles rather than entities and are not defined under federal law.
Supporting organizations fall in between a donor-advised fund and a
private foundation in terms of restrictions and sanctions versus control
over the use of the charitable assets. The level of control that the
supported charity has over the supporting organization varies, depending
on the type of relationship between the two entities. Unlike donor-advised
funds and supporting organizations, private foundations are not public
charities. They also face more types of taxes and requirements, such as in
annual reporting, making investments, and paying out funds.
Donor-advised funds hold billions of dollars in assets, and supporting
organizations and private foundations hold hundreds of billions of dollars
in assets. However, IRS data on donor-advised funds are limited because
although organizations that maintain donor-advised funds are to file a
Form 990 that includes financial data for all organizational activities,
including for donor-advised funds, data on these funds are not readily
identified from the form because these data are not separately reported.
Limited data on donor-advised funds are available from annual surveys by
The Chronicle of Philanthropy, even though these data are incomplete
and only represent those who voluntarily responded.' For 2003, the 90
survey respondents reported that their donor-advised fund accounts held
over $11.9 billion in assets and distributed over $2.2 billion to charities.
Data from Forms 990 and 990-PF for 2003 showed differences between
supporting organizations and private foundations. For example, in 2003,
supporting organizations held over $239.4 billion in assets and paid over
°The Chronicle ofPhilanthropy is a newspaper that publishes articles about the tax-
exempt sector and Is a source cited by IRS and others on the tax-exempt sector. Its most
recent survey of donor-advised funds collected 2005 data, but in order to compare the data
to that for supporting organizations, we used 2003 survey data that we adjusted to 2005
constant dollars. Results from this survey cannot be interpreted as being representative of
all donor-advised funds.
Page 3 GAG•06.799 Tax Compliance
EFTA01104430
810.7 billion in grants.' Private foundations held over 8449.5 billion in
assets in 2003 and paid over $31.0 billion in grants. Certain other
characteristics cannot be reliably determined from Form 990. For
example, supporting organizations are not required to compute and report
a "payout" rate equivalent to that for private foundations. Questions have
arisen about how much and how often supporting organizations pay out to
charities because, like private foundations, some supporting organizations
can be used to accumulate contributions before distributing the money to
charity. Further, other organizational characteristics, such as detailed
information on ►oan recipients and supported organizations' identification
numbers, are not readily identified from the Form 990. IRS revised the
Form 990 for 2003 to include whether the Form 990 filer maintains donor-
advised funds, and for 2005, the type of supporting organization in terms
of its relationship to its supported organization. IRS is considering other
Form 990 revisions for donor-advised funds and supporting organizations,
but plans for making revisions are preliminary.
Through examinations, IRS is finding evidence that some donors or related
parties are exerting excess control over or receiving undue benefits from a
donor-advised fund or supporting organization. For example, some donors
to donor-advised funds and supporting organizations participate in
schemes which allow them to regain their contribution, thus giving them a
tax deduction on assets that did not actually go to charity. These
examinations were not intended to be a statistically representative sample
and even when finished will not allow IRS to estimate the magnitude of
noncompliance involving donor-advised funds and supporting
organizations. Although the examinations have produced strong evidence
of abusive schemes involving excess control and undue benefits, IRS faces
challenges when identifying and examining noncompliance, namely the
difficulty of gathering evidence on the facts and circumstances of some
cases. IRS is also challenged by cases in which a donor-advised fund or
supporting organization is compliant because no law or regulation is
violated, but engage in activities that do not seem to benefit charity. For
example, under certain circumstances, a market rate loan made to a
:B
eyond grants, supporting organizations can also provide support through other means,
such as providing direct services. At the time of our analysis, the most recent data available
were from 2003. For data that IRS did not transcribe, such as amount of grants paid for
supporting organizations, we obtained the data from GuldeStar. GuideStar is a nonprofit
organization that transcribes data front Form 990 into searchable databases. IRS has not
assessed in detail the quality of GuldeStar's data, but did include quality control provisions
in its contract with GuideStar.
Page 4 GA0.06499 Tax Compliance
EFTA01104431
donor, officer, or director from a supporting organization may not violate
legal requirements applicable to public charities even though it may
appear to be a conflict of interest and have no benefit to charity. Some
abusive schemes are instigated or facilitated by entities or individuals,
such as attorneys, accountants, and financial planners, who promote the
schemes. Because of the potentially criminal and obscure nature of their
activities, these entities and individuals are often difficult to identify and
investigate, which adds to the challenges in IRS's examinations.
Given the concerns about how much and how often donor-advised funds
and supporting organizations are paying out their assets to charities, this
report suggests that Congress should consider directing IRS to revise the
Form 990 to collect sufficient information so that a consistent payout rate
can be calculated for both types of charitable-giving vehicles. This
information could help inform decisions about whether to adopt a
minimum payout requirement and if so, whether the required rate should
be adjusted over time. To help IRS make these revisions, Congress should
direct IRS about the types of support that should be included in the payout
rate, as it has for private foundations. In addition, given the lack of data
from the Form 990 to be used to determine certain characteristics of
donor-advised funds and supporting organizations and the concerns about
noncompliance involving these charitable-giving vehicles, we are making
recommendations to IRS on collecting better data on the Form 990. IRS
agreed with our two recommendations to require more comprehensive
reporting of donor-advised fund data and to require supporting
organizations to report their supported organizations' employer
identification numbers (EIN). However, IRS did not believe that it could
implement our third recommendation to require reporting of loan
recipients' taxpayer identification numbers (TIN) without legislative
authority to protect the TINs from public disclosure.' In response, we have
revised our recommendation and, so that IRS can modify the Form 990 to
require reporting of Tills of loan recipients from supporting organizations,
we are also suggesting that Congress consider providing IRS authority to
protect that information from public disclosure.
EFTA01104432
In recent years, donor-advised funds have become popular charitable-
Federal Laws and giving vehicles, and the number of supporting organizations has also
Regulations Impose continued to increase. At the same time, federal tax law generally imposes
Fewer Requirements fewer restrictions and requirements on donor-advised funds and
supporting organizations, but provides them and their donors less control
on Donor-Advised over the use and investment of the charitable assets compared to private
Funds and Supporting foundations; in fact, section 501(c)(3) and federal regulations do not
specifically mention donor-advised hinds.
Organizations and
Their Donors, but As a general principle, the more control that a donor has over the use of
the charitable contributions and assets, the more regulations and
Allow Donors Less restrictions apply. Table 1discusses how federal tax law views donor-
Control Compared to advised funds and supporting organizations compared to private
foundations across a number of variables.
Private Foundations
Page 11 GA0-06-799 Tax Compliance
EFTA01104433
Table 1: Simplified Comparison of Differences and Similarities in Federal Tax Laws for Donor-Advised Funds. Supporting
Organizations, and Private Foundations
Donor-advised funds Supporting organizations Private foundations
Tax code treatment Although not statutorily defined, Public charities that carry out their Charities that do not qualify as
part of a public charity that charitable purpose by supporting public charities.
operates funds as separately other public charities.
identified accounts.
Filing requirement Fund administrators must apply for Must apply for exempt status as a Must apply for exempt status as a
tax-exempt status and annually file supporting organization. Must private foundation. Must annually
Form 990 If annual gross receipts annually file Form 990 if annual file Form 990-PF as well as
are over $25,000, indicating if they gross receipts are over 525,000. schedules on the use. distribution,
have separate accounts (on which and investment of funds.
separate Forms 990 are not
required).
Donor control Donors cannot have control but Donors can be involved with boards Donors and foundation's board
may advise on use of funds. but should not directly or indirectly have absolute control, such as
control the boards. hiring staff and choosing charities
to support.
Donor tax Follows rules for public charities. Donors may deduct up to 50 Donors may deduct up to 30
deductions See 'Supporting organizations? percent of adjusted gross income percent of adjusted gross income
for cash donations and up to 30 for donations of cash and up to 20
percent of adjusted gross income percent of adjusted gross income
for donations of capital gain on capital gain property at cost
property at fair market value. basis.
Excise taxation Follows rules for public charities. Subject to two excise taxes. Subject to six excise taxes.
See 'Suppoding organizations?
Payout rules None. None Must meet annual minimum payout
requirement.
Association with Follows rules for public charities. May make grants to foreign Must follow more detailed rules
foreign entitles See 'Supporting organizations? organizations, but must ensure that than for public charities, including
funds are used for charitable expenditure responsibility process.
purposes.
Source GAO anakis or Primal Revenue Code. Takers FreGAbons. and IRS Forms and Peaklike's.
Among the three types of charitable-giving vehicles, donor-advised funds
allow donors to create a long-term vehicle for supporting charities with
relatively less administrative burden because the fund is managed by a
third party. Furthermore, donor-advised funds are not required to file
separate tax returns, file for tax-exempt status, or adhere to private
foundation rules. The donor can make a gift and take an income tax
deduction for that tax year, and at that time or later, advise which charities
should receive the distribution. However, in doing so, the donor gives up
control over the distribution of the gift to charities.
Page 12 GAO-06.799 Tax Compliance
EFTA01104434
IRS program managers report that some donor-advised funds and
Private Benefit, supporting organizations cases highlight concerns about private benefit,
Inurement, and Donor inurement, and donor control. Some of these cases demonstrate clear
Control Have Been noncompliance, allowing IRS to propose appropriate corrective actions.
However, IRS is confronted with many cases that require detailed
Found in Some Cases assessments of evidence, which makes addressing noncompliance
Involving Donor- challenging. Additionally, IRS contends with activities involving donor-
advised funds and supporting organizations that do not violate laws or
Advised Funds and regulations, yet do not seem to benefit charities. Entities or individuals,
Supporting such as financial advisers or attorneys, sometimes facilitate abusive
schemes, introducing additional complexities to IRS's examination
Organizations, with process.
Promoters Sometimes
Facilitating Schemes
Page 25 GAO-06-799 Tax Compliance
EFTA01104435
Private Benefit, Inurement, Private benefit, inurement, and donor control are common concerns for
and Donor Control Are IRS in examinations of potential noncompliance involving donor-advised
Prevailing Concerns in funds and supporting organizations. IRS is unable to provide estimates
about the prevalence of this noncompliance, and noncompliance in
Donor-Advised Fund and general. Thus, the examples presented are intended to illustrate known
Supporting Organization cases of private benefit and donor control, and do not represent the entire
Noncompliance Cases range of noncompliance."
Private Benefit and Inurement Private benefit occurs when a 501(c)(3) organization is not operated or
Lead to Personal Gains organized exclusively for exempt purposes because it serves a private
rather than public interest. Because they are subject to section 501(c)(3),
both donor-advised funds and supporting organizations must avoid private
benefit that is more than incidental to the charitable purpose being served;
if private benefit is substantial enough, it may jeopardize an organization's
tax-exempt status. If the organization's assets or income are transferred to
an individual who is a charity insider, the benefit is called Inurement. "
Private benefit and inurement schemes involving donor-advised funds and
supporting organizations may benefit various individuals and may vary in
complexity.
IRS has encountered multiple cases of private benefit where donors to
donor-advised funds are able to regain some or all of their contribution.
For example, IRS has concerns about one fund offering a loan program,"
where donors were able to repossess their donation, with no obligation for
repayment. IRS also sees inurement cases, in which individuals other than
the donor receive private benefit. For example, IRS is examining one
exempt organization and donor-advised fund operated by a for-profit
company. The company offered the fund as a charitable giving vehicle for
its employees. The exempt organization lacked an independent board,
with the president-who also served as president of the for-profit
company-receiving potentially high commissions and fees from contracts
with the donor-advised fund.
mall examples in this section are from ongoing or past IRS investigat ions, and were
described by IRS officials.
"A charity insider Ls an individual such as an officer, board member, or other persons able
to exercise substantial influence over a tax-exempt organization. Donors to donor-advised
fluids are rarely considered to be insiders, while donors to supporting organizations can be
insiders, for example, if they also serve on the supported organization's board.
Page 26 GAO.99.799 Tax Compliance
EFTA01104436
While donor-advised fund schemes often involve private benefit, schemes
involving supporting organizations more often result in inurement and are
typically more complex, according to IRS management. Schemes can
involve direct payment of benefits to donors or, more indirectly, payments
routed through offshore entities. One direct payment scheme, designed to
benefit a donor's children, funneled school tuition payments through a
supporting organization intended to support their child's school. More
complex schemes enable the donor to regain his or her donation after it is
routed offshore. One typical scheme begins with a donation to a
supporting organization, which is then transferred to an account in an
offshore investment firm controlled by a financial planner, accountant, or
other knowledgeable insider working with the donor. The money is then
transferred to a domestic mortgage lender, also controlled by the insider,
giving the donor access to the money for use toward an interest-only
mortgage. As a result, the donor benefits from a tax deduction on his or
her contribution, while still retaining access to the donation. To justify the
scheme, the supporting organization claims that earnings from their
investment in the offshore firm will benefit charity.
Donor Control May Involve Donor control arises when a donor holds authority that exceeds what is
Assets or Charity Operations permissible for donor-advised funds or supporting organizations. Illegal
control can occur when a donor or disqualified person has control over
the charity's assets, operations, or governance, or the organizations
receiving supports' It is possible for donor control to occur without
private benefit. A donor may control a function or operation of a
supporting organization or donor-advised fund without receiving benefits,
according to IRS management. Donor control involving donor-advised
funds and supporting organizations manifests in different ways.
Donor control of a donor-advised fund occurs when the donor oversteps
his or her advisory role and retains ultimate authority over the distribution
of fund assets. One IRS manager told us that, although more common in
supporting organization cases, a donor-advised fund donor may also
achieve control by controlling the exempt organization receiving the
benefits of their donation. For example, IRS is pursuing a case where a
donor-advised fund appears to be maldng distributions to a public charity,
which is controlled by the donor-advised fund's donor. If the donor-
0'ln order for a charitable contribution to be considered a donation eligible for a tax
deduction, the donor must relinquish control of the asset. IRC sect ion 170 defines
charitable contributions and provides the ntles and limits for tax deductions for individuals
and corporations.
Page 27 GAO-0G.799 Tax Compliance
EFTA01104437
advised fund did not exist, the public charity recipient would likely be
classified as a private foundation. IRS is investigating whether the charity
has other support sources.
For supporting organizations, control of the organization's board or the
donor's ability to designate charitable recipients can constitute donor
control.' Board control can occur directly by controlling more than 50
percent of board voting power or veto power granted to disqualified
persons. Alternatively, board control can occur indirectly through a
disqualified person influencing board members who are not disqualified
persons, according to IRS managers. Retaining access to assets can also
signify direct or indirect control of a supporting organization. In one case,
IRS has questioned whether or not a donor controlled the operations and
investments of the supporting organization that the donor founded,
although the donor did not receive private benefit. Donor control can also
occur indirectly through control of an asset donated to the supporting
organization. For example, in one case, IRS is concerned that a donor is
continuing to collect and retain rent from building tenants after the
building was donated to a supporting organization.
Other Types of Noncompliance Although private benefit, inurement, and donor control are reoccurring
Exist themes in IRS's caseload, other types of noncompliance involving donor-
advised funds and supporting organizations can occur. Specifically, a
supporting organization could fail to maintain a relationship with its
supported organization(s)." A representative from the tax-exempt
community told us of situations where charities listed as supported
organizations were unaware of a purported relationship with a supporting
organization. The Panel on the Nonprofit Sector also recognized this
problem in its June 2005 report. Similarly, IRS managers told us that a
major issue in supporting organization examinations is whether or not the
organization maintains a sufficient relationship with its supported
organization. Form 990 only requires that supporting organizations report
the name of their supported organizations; it does not require them to
report the EIN of the supported organization. IRS managers told us that
''Definitions of 'control' and the limits of power for disqualified persons are found in
Treas. Reg. Ii1.509(a)-4(J)(1). Also see Rev. Rid. 80-207 for analysis of Indirect influence on
a board.
"Because of required structures and board oversight for Type I and II supporting
organizations, this problem is more likely for Type III supporting organizations.
Page 28 GAO-06-790 Tax Compliance
EFTA01104438
not knowing the EIN makes it harder for IRS staff to track the relationship
between the two organizations.
IRS Has Various Efforts to IRS uses resources from a variety of units to identify and examine
Identify and Correct noncompliance involving donor-advised funds and supporting
Noncompliance, but Does Not organizations. Toward these ends, IRS created two teams, one on donor-
Know the Rate of advised funds and one on supporting organizations." As of June 2006, the
Noncompliance donor-advised fund team had opened but had not yet closed 27
examinations, according to an IRS manager? As of June 2006, the
supporting organization team had opened 102 examinations and closed 20
of them; 18 of which were found to be noncompliant, according to IRS.
IRS managers also told us that other programs-including the Tax
Examination Program and the Excessive Compensation Program—have
also examined and closed supporting organization cases, and are currently
examining 655 supporting organizations?
Regardless of the type of noncompliance found, IRS can propose
corrective actions when the evidence shows that a law or regulation has
been unmistakably violated. IRS is developing criteria for proposing
corrective actions for donor-advised funds as the related team finishes its
examinations; many of the examinations are in the early stages. For
supporting organization cases, IRS officials said, in general, they will
propose a change to private foundation status for issues of donor control.
Intermediate sanctions or revocation of the tax-exempt status are typically
proposed for inurement cases, according to IRS? Criminal charges may be
brought upon individuals found to be exhibiting criminal behavior while
"Each team will report on noncompliance trends and possible regulatory or legislative
actions. The donor-advised fund team, which formed in 2002, plans to issue a report by the
end of 2006, according to an IRS manager. The supporting organization team, which formed
in 2003, told us it plans to issue reports-the first of which would be released in August 2006
and the last of which would be released at the end of fiscal year 2007-on each of the three
waves of cases they are investigating.
3!The 27 examination cases involved 27 tax returns for 22 different organizations.
39Between October I, 2001, and September 30, 2005, these other IRS units have closed 715
cases involving supporting organizations, 400 of which were found to be noncompliant. For
fiscal year 2006, 94 cases have been closed so far 64 of which were found to be
noncompliant.
i°"Intermediate sanction? in this context generally refers to excise taxes paid by a
disqualified person receiving private benefit or a charily manager with knowledge of a
scheme, as defined in IRC section 4958. IRS officials said that, in the most egregious cases,
IRS may recommend intermediate sanctions in conjunction with revocation of the
supporting organization's tax-exempt status.
Page 29 GAOAG•799 Tax Compliance
EFTA01104439
participating in abusive schemes, and may occur in conjunction with
corrective actions resulting from examinations. In cases where the donor.
advised fund or supporting organization is believed to be beneficial overall
but needs correction in order to be fully compliant, IRS managers told us
they may also initiate a closing agreement, which provides a set of
requirements intended to correct flaws in the donor-advised fund or
supporting organization structure or operations.
For various reasons, IRS does not know the overall rate of noncompliance
or the prevalence of different forms of noncompliance involving donor-
advised funds and supporting organizations. Fust, IRS did not use a
random sample to identify cases for examination. Instead, it used methods
that led to examining the most egregious noncompliance schemes. For
example, the manager for the donor-advised fund team told us it selected
cases for examination based on large asset size or other unusual
characteristics, such as high compensation or high fees." Supporting
organizations cases were selected based on referrals from other IRS units,
according to the team's manager. Second, IRS has no established
population of donor-advised funds for which to estimate a noncompliance
rate. An IRS manager said IRS is unable to identify the population because
exempt organizations have not been required to report their use of donor-
advised funds, which prevents IRS from employing statistical sampling
methodology to estimate donor-advised fund noncompliance. Third,
examinations by IRS's teams are relatively new; examinations began in
2005 for donor-advised funds and began in 2004 for supporting
organizations, according to IRS managers."
IRS Faces Challenges in Not all cases involving donor-advised funds and supporting organizations
Addressing are clear; IRS faces challenges in identifying and examining potential
Noncompliance Involving noncompliance. In part, these challenges are due to uncertainty about
whether the evidence unequivocally points to noncompliance, and to the
Donor-Advised Funds and difficulty in exhaustively collecting evidence on the facts and
Supporting Organizations circumstances of a case.
'IRS identified donor-advised funds for potential examination using (1) data from IRS's
Rulings and Agreements office, which assesses organizations' applications for tax-exempt
status, and (2) outside sources, including The Chronicle of Philanthropy.
"Although the donor-advised fund and supporting organizations teams began in 2002 and
2003, respectively, examinations did not begin until later.
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To evaluate facts and circumstances, IRS managers said that agents may
evaluate minutes of meetings, correspondence among trustees, contracts
or agreements on loans or rent, news articles, or the organization's trust
document. Although exempt organizations must maintain documentation
that they operate exclusively for exempt purposes, the existence and
quality of these documents may differ among organizations, according to
IRS managers. Therefore, IRS may need to collect evidence that is time- or
resource-intensive to uncover. Evidence that does not readily exist or that
is difficult to uncover, combined with the practical limits of the
examination process, make some noncompliance nearly impossible to
detect, as the following examples illustrate.
• In determining influence on or control of a board, regulations define
permissible relationships between disqualified persons and supporting
organization boards. Despite regulatory guidance, IRS is unable to
identify all noncompliant situations because it cannot always identify
influence on board members by disqualified persons, especially when
attempting to identify a disqualified person's indirect influence.
Nomination of a majority of board members by a disqualified person
may signify this influence, but IRS cannot consistently track the
origination of a board nomination. Only in some cases are trust
documents and meeting minutes available that may document the
nomination process, according to IRS. Additionally, IRS may have
difficulty identifying a disqualified person's indirect influence on a
board when this influence may occur in private conversations.
• It may also be challenging to find evidence that ensures that donor-
advised funds are operating on "donor advice" rather than "donor
control." To establish that donors are not exercising undue control, IRS
may examine the process by which a donor makes a funding
recommendation, according to the manager of IRS's donor-advised
fund team. Specifically, IRS managers said this examination could
include verification of an independent board, the process by which the
fund operator investigates donor recommendations or provides
documents that show that a donor's recommendations are not all
accepted. However, similar to the challenges of identifying board
control, IRS may not be able to detect subtle coercion occurring in
payout decisions.
• Detecting control of assets may also be difficult. For example, a donor
may contribute a large portion of interest in a business partnership to a
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supporting organization." The donor, serving as the business's general
partner, retains some ownership of the partnership and has a
management responsibility or controls voting stock. According to an
IRS manager, unless the supporting organization has other assets, this
situation would likely allow the donor to have effective control over
the assets of the supporting organization. In some situations, the
business may claim that the general partner lacks controlling power, in
which case IRS managers said examiners must rely on available
evidence, such as partnership agreements, to determine the
donor/partners control over the business. Once again, evidence of
more subtle control may not be available or practical for IRS to pursue.
Some Compliant Activities Not all cases involving donor-advised funds and supporting organizations
Involving Donor-Advised are clear cases of private benefit, inurement, or donor control, or involve
Funds and Supporting the challenges of gathering evidence. IRS managers said they encounter
scenarios where no statute or regulation was violated, but where activities
Organizations Do Not involving donor-advised funds or supporting organizations do not seem to
Seem to Benefit Charity, benefit charity. In these situations, noncompliance cannot be alleged, but
Thus Introducing Areas for IRS may still question an organization's or individual's charitable
Potential Future Scrutiny purposes. A general lack of data as well as a lack of legal definitions and
regulations for donor-advised funds contribute to these uncertainties for
IRS, which have prompted both IRS and Congress to consider different
solutions for reform, as the following examples illustrate.
• One IRS manager told us that IRS is uncertain about whether or not
donor-advised funds with low payout rates are supporting charitable
purposes. No laws or regulations require annual minimum payouts to
charities from donor-advised funds, but according to IRS management,
idle assets are unlikely to result in benefits. Conversely, a donor-
advised fund may be idle in paying out to build an endowment. If a
supporting organization has a low payout rate, however, IRS said this
can sometimes signify that it is not fulfilling its requirement. Legislation
has been introduced in Congress to impose a minimum payout on
donor-advised funds and supporting organizations. As of early July
2006, legislation on this issue had not passed.
• IRS managers told us that examiners have discovered loans made from
a supporting organization to a donor or insider. Loans made by public
u
A donor-advised fund can receive a donation of interest in a partnership, but the legal
analysis required to determine donor control differs front that for a supporting
organization.
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charities to officers, directors, donors, and others are legal, provided
that they are repaid and not made at terms lower than the market rate."
According to IRS, charities could justify these loans as an investment.
However, these loans may carry risk or introduce a conflict of interest.
For example, if a borrower has some form of control over the
organization, such as that of a board member or executive, it is less
likely that the organization will take legal action if the loan is not
repaid. Also, loans may prevent assets from being paid out to charitable
purposes. Furthermore, if a loan is made as part of an employee
compensation package, in some cases it may be classified as an excess
benefit under IRC section 4958, according to IRS management.
Additionally, these loans may signify control by disqualified persons.
Even if a loan's interest rate is reasonable, or the borrower is not an
employee or in control of the organization, the terms of the loan may
give a borrower other benefits, thus making a case that the
organization serves private rather than public purposes. In recognition
of such potential improprieties, 19 states have banned such loans,
according to The Chronicle of Philanthropy. As part of a broader study
of executive compensation at public charities, IRS is examining loans
made to insiders, but is not specifically focusing on supporting
organizations.
Promoters May Aid in In addition to examining donor-advised funds, supporting organizations,
Abusive Schemes, and May and donors, IRS investigates the promoters—creators and facilitators of
Be Difficult to Identify and abusive schemes. Some abusive schemes are organized or participated in
by professionals or entities who work in concert with the donor.
Examine Identifying and examining the roles of these professionals or entities can
be difficult and therefore may exacerbate the challenges in examining
donor-advised fund and supporting organizations cases.
A promoter is an individual or entity that organizes or ascists in the
organization of a partnership, trust, investment plan, or any other
arrangement to be sold to a third party and designed to be used or is
actually used in obtaining illegal tax benefits." Accountants, financial
planners, attorneys, community foundations, and tax preparers could
"IRS encounters transactions between supporting organizations and donors that are
labeled as loans" but do not result in repayment. These transactions are likely cases of
inurement and are a separate issue from true loans, which result in repayment. As
described In IRC section 4941, loans made from a private foundation to a disqualified
person are subject to excise taxation.
"The definition of promoters is for purposes of 1RC section 6700.
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serve as promoters, and may not just be involved in schemes involving
exempt organizations. Cases involving promoters address both the
material used to promote noncompliance, which must adhere to tax law,
as well as the actual activities implementing a scheme.' Because
promoters may be committing fraud, promoters could face criminal
charges. See appendix IV for a discussion of materials and methods for
publicizing donor-advised funds and supporting organizations which are
not intended to lead to abusive schemes.
According to IRS managers, some schemes, particularly those benefiting
high-income donors, originate with a financial planner, accountant, or
lawyer. Other promoters may play a role in facilitating schemes, such as
the mortgage inurement scheme previously described in this report.
According to the manager of IRS's donor-advised fund team, promoters
are typically more involved in schemes involving supporting organizations
than donor-advised funds due to the complexity of supporting
organizations' schemes.
For some cases IRS is able to identify the promoter, noncompliant
material, and transactions that promote noncompliance." For example,
material from a financial planner offered a hypothetical estate plan
proposing that a supporting organization hold a wealthy donor's personal
assets, thus facilitating a reduction in estate taxes upon the donor's death.
The plan proposed transferring land owned by the donor to the supporting
organization, who would offer the sale of the land to the donor's heirs at
about 10 percent of its fair market value. Furthermore, the plan proposed
that the supporting organization also lease the estate assets back to the
donor's business. If the plan were carried out, inurement, private benefit,
excess benefit, and donor control would be significant legal concerns.
However, according to IRS managers identifying and investigating
promoters is often challenging. IRS managers said they rely on referrals
and Internet searches to find promoters. Although some promoters
advertise on the Internet, they may sometimes only share details about the
promotion in conversations with a donor. IRS's donor-advised fund and
supporting organization teams have investigated nine promoters involved
in potentially abusive schemes, according to IRS managers. In addition to
"Promoters are subject to laws prohibiting the promotion of abusive tax structures,
covered in IRC sections 6700 and 6701.
is unable to determine the extent of the role of promoters In noncompliance.
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EFTA01104444
the work of the issue teams, IRS's civil Lead Development Center is tasked
with identifying promoters and coordinating promoter investigations. IRS
managers told us that once IRS identifies potential promoters, examiners
must seek information that is typically carefully hidden among complex
transactions involving multiple entities. This requires that IRS carefully
craft document requests and summonses, which can be a lengthy process.
Furthermore, once IRS refines its examination process to target certain
schemes, promoters quickly alter their approaches.
Finally, like some of the cases described earlier in this section, some
marketing material may not violate a law or regulation, but may have a
questionable purpose which may indicate potential noncompliance by
misleading donors with incomplete information. This may occur when
marketing material may be providing incomplete information on the limits
of donor-advised funds and supporting organizations versus private
foundations. We found examples of Web sites that describe a donor-
advised fund or supporting organization as a giving option with all the
benefits and advantages of a private foundation, which may mislead
potential donors into believing they can retain control over their donation.
Donor-advised funds, supporting organizations, and private foundations
Conclusion are vehicles for charitable giving. Donors can use these approaches for
long-term giving or to accumulate assets to address some larger need.
They also may create donor-advised funds or supporting organizations to
avoid the costs, burdens, excise taxes, and restrictions associated with
private foundations.
However, concerns have been expressed about the potential for abuses by
those who create and operate donor-advised funds and supporting
organizations, prompting legislative proposals to deter abuses. IRS has
found examples of abuses in these funds and organizations involving those
who do not give up control of their donations and who benefit privately at
the expense of the charitable interest. Although IRS has efforts to focus on
such abuses, IRS examiners lack sufficient data, which complicates efforts
to identify and address the noncompliance.
Congress is considering proposals to require donor-advised funds and
supporting organizations to annually pay out a certain percentage of their
assets to serve charities, which would roughly mirror the requirement for
private foundations. However, no defined way exists to calculate a payout
rate for these funds and these organizations, and current Form 990 data do
not allow for full or consistent analyses of the payout rate for donor-
advised funds or supporting organizations. Guidance is needed on what
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types of support should be included in a payout rate so that the Form 990
collects the necessary data If a payout rate requirement is not adopted,
these Form 990 requirements would provide data to inform future
congressional decisions about whether a requirement should be instituted.
If a payout rate is adopted, the data would help in tracking compliance and
determining whether the requirement may need to be adjusted.
Collecting payout information on the Form 990, however, would not be
possible for donor-advised funds due to limitations in annual Form 990
reporting. Starting in tax year 2003, IRS has been able to identify Forms
990 that report donor-advised fund activity. However, IRS will not have
data that separate the fund activity from other activity. Adding a
requirement to separately report the donor-advised fund activity from
other activity on the Form 990 would allow IRS to check the payout rate as
well as other fund activity that looks suspicious.
IRS also has concerns with supporting organizations that do not support
their supported organizations or that make loans to individuals or
organizations. IRS would be better able to track the flow of funds to the
charities to be supported and loan recipients if it knew their TINs, which
are generally Social Security numbers for individuals or EINs for
organizations. Collecting the TINs of loan recipients raises concerns about
the potential costs and burdens and the protection of the TINs from
unauthorized use. IRS could address these concerns by only requiring TIN
reporting for loans above a certain dollar threshold and by not making the
information publicly available. If the Form 990 is changed to separately
report data on donor-advised fund activity, IRS should consider extending
this TIN reporting to donor-advised funds.
Given the concerns about payout rates for both donor-advised funds and
Matters for supporting organizations, Congress should consider directing IRS to revise
Congressional the Form 990 to collect sufficient information so that a consistent payout
rate can be calculated for both types of charitable-giving vehicles. This
Consideration information could help inform decisions about whether to adopt a
minimum payout requirement and if any required rate should be adjusted.
To help IRS in making these revisions, Congress should direct IRS about
the types of support that should be included, as it has for private
foundations. In addition, so that IRS can modify the Form 990 to require
TINs of loan recipients from supporting organizations, Congress should
also consider providing IRS authority to protect that information from
public disclosure.
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