logo logo
Donate
    • Membership
    • Donate
  • Social Justice
    • Racial Justice
    • Climate Justice
    • Disability Justice
    • Economic Justice
    • Food Justice
    • Health Justice
    • Immigration
    • LGBTQ+
  • Civic News
  • Nonprofit Leadership
    • Board Governance
    • Equity-Centered Management
    • Finances
    • Fundraising
    • Human Resources
    • Organizational Culture
    • Philanthropy
    • Power Dynamics
    • Strategic Planning
    • Technology
  • Columns
    • Ask Rhea!
    • Ask a Nonprofit Expert
    • Economy Remix
    • Gathering in Support of Democracy
    • Humans of Nonprofits
    • The Impact Algorithm
    • Living the Question
    • Nonprofit Hiring Trends & Tactics
    • Notes from the Frontlines
    • Parables of Earth
    • Re-imagining Philanthropy
    • State of the Movements
    • We Stood Up
    • The Unexpected Value of Volunteers
  • CONTENT TYPES
  • Leading Edge Membership
  • Newsletters
  • Webinars

Is a Renewed Economy Based on the Nonprofit Model in our Future?

John Brothers
June 27, 2013

 

Gaps

June 25, 2013; Pro Bono Australia

Current challenges have caused some to seek alternatives to our present economic model. Some have drawn inspiration from the Occupy Wall Street movement and the growing debate over income inequality, while others are excited by the periodic anti-consumerism efforts that pop up and gain in popularity during tough times. One new idea from an Australian-based international organization called the Post Growth Institute (PGI) looks to the nonprofit sector to become the dominant economic strategy in the near and distant future. PGI believes that a nonprofit model will have multiple benefits, including “decentralizing wealth and power, while maintaining incentives for innovation and increasing people’s desire for meaningful work.”

Sign up for our free newsletters

Subscribe to NPQ's newsletters to have our top stories delivered directly to your inbox.

By signing up, you agree to our privacy policy and terms of use, and to receive messages from NPQ and our partners.

According to a story by Pro Bono Australia, researchers and community workers have joined together to work on a book that takes as its central premise that the world financial model should learn and adopt much of its future direction from the nonprofit sector. The book is scheduled to come out by the end of 2013, and PGI has taken to another economic engine, an online crowdfunding campaign, to help raise the $20,000 needed for its eventual release. (To date, the campaign is $2000 short of its goal.) Once published, the book aims to showcase the advantages of nonprofits as the preferred economic model.

Dr. Donnie Maclurcan, who is both the book’s lead author and the leader of PGI, believes that unfairness in current economic realities has led to a more serious look at the nonprofit sector. “Economic growth has become uneconomic growth, driving up inequality and eroding natural resources faster than nature can replace them.” In Maclurcan’s 2011 TEDx Talk, he expressed the belief that the eventual evolution into a nonprofit world would mean that every business would have, as its primary objective, the fulfillment of social needs.

Share The World’s Resources, a policy research organization, describes PGI’s nonprofit financial theory as a “not-for-profit model that could spur greater innovation and individual creativity, and even make more sense in the near future for international conglomerates like IBM or Coca Cola.”

With the growth in corporate social responsibility efforts, social enterprises and hybrid organizations like L3Cs, and such recent strategies as social impact bonds, is the Post Growth Institute onto something when they look to the nonprofit sector as a guiding economic model? Let us know your thoughts.—John Brothers

Our Voices Are Our Power.

Journalism, nonprofits, and multiracial democracy are under attack. At NPQ, we fight back by sharing stories and essential insights from nonprofit leaders and workers—and we pay every contributor.

Can you help us protect nonprofit voices?

Your support keeps truth alive when it matters most.
Every single dollar makes a difference.

Donate now
logo logo logo logo logo
About the author
John Brothers

John Brothers is the president of the T. Rowe Price Foundation.

More about: Economic DevelopmentNonprofit NewsPolicy
See comments

You might also like
New Student Loan Limits Could Threaten Diversity in Nursing and Public Health Programs
Lauren Nuttall
‘I’m Heartbroken’: Trans Kansans Reckon with Their Driver’s Licenses Being Invalidated
Sherman Smith and Morgan Chilson
After Years of Waiting, She Wanted to Start Gender-Affirming Care. Politics Interfered.
Orion Rummler
In the Face of Authoritarianism, Connection Is Resistance
EJ Juárez
Nonprofits Can Help Fight Trump’s Persecution of Immigrants
Matthew Rozsa
Can the Fight Against AI Revitalize the US Labor Movement?
Ted Siefer

Upcoming Webinars

Group Created with Sketch.
March 19th, 2:00 pm ET

Open Board Search

How Casting a Wide Net Transforms Nonprofit Governance

Register
Group Created with Sketch.
March 26, 2:00 pm ET

Learn Out Loud

How Every Philanthropy, Nonprofit, and Community Member Can Leverage Power in Our Fight Against ICE

Register

    
You might also like
A close shot of the front of the US Department of Education in Washington, DC.
New Student Loan Limits Could Threaten Diversity in Nursing...
Lauren Nuttall
The blue, pink, and white trans flag drawn in chalk on dark pavement.
‘I’m Heartbroken’: Trans Kansans Reckon...
Sherman Smith and Morgan Chilson
A person holding up a hand-painted sign reading, “Make Trans Healthcare Accessible”
After Years of Waiting, She Wanted to Start Gender-Affirming...
Orion Rummler

Like what you see?

Subscribe to the NPQ newsletter to have our top stories delivered directly to your inbox.

See our newsletters

By signing up, you agree to our privacy policy and terms of use, and to receive messages from NPQ and our partners.

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Careers
  • Contact
  • Copyright
  • Donate
  • Editorial Policy
  • Funders
  • Submissions

We are using cookies to give you the best experience on our website.

 

Nonprofit Quarterly | Civic News. Empowering Nonprofits. Advancing Justice.
Powered by  GDPR Cookie Compliance
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.

Strictly Necessary Cookies

Strictly Necessary Cookie should be enabled at all times so that we can save your preferences for cookie settings.