The Chronicle examined more than 1,600 endowments of 501(c)(3) organizations that electronically filed Form 990 informational tax documents with the Internal Revenue Service. The analysis included endowments of at least $35 million and counted unrestricted, quasi-restricted (sometimes called board-restricted), and restricted funds.
Unrestricted funds can be spent as nonprofit leaders choose. Quasi-restricted funds are those that a nonprofit’s leaders have chosen to set aside, often with a specific purpose in mind, but legally they can be spent at any time. For restricted funds, the principal is held in perpetuity and earned income is used only as stipulated by the terms of a gift. A donor who gives a large sum might, for example, dictate that it pay for a specific staff position at a nonprofit. Some big universities hold thousands of such restricted gifts.
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