Posted by antonsirius on 10/11/2010 11:23:00 AM (view original):
It may seem like nitpicking, but you are badly misusing the word profit. NPOs need to bring in enough revenue to cover their operating costs. Any surplus goes into a fund for future use. Their goal should not be to bring in more revenue than they require.
I'd also suggest that a mindset in which organizations like hospitals are required to "turn a profit" is a big part of the problem.
really then - call it what you want - "maximizing monies for future use" if you want.
when organizations stop looking to "maximize monies for future use" or "turn a profit" they become as disfunctional and wasteful as the US government. I don't think "turning a profit" is a bad thing for hospitals. It's not so much the hospitals that are fucked up as is insurance, medicare, medicaid, pharma companies, and medical equipment suppliers. Hospitals are trying to work within the environment the are in which includes slow paying insurance companies and gov't programs, providing care to the uninsured (for a loss), addressing malpractice lawsuits, etc.
If their goal is quote "not to bring in more revenue then they require" - how can they function when the economy turns, less beds fill, or new costs are placed upon them through legislation? They would have $0 in a future use fund if they only bring in enough to cover their current operating costs or "the revenue they require".
Should Unicef not collect more money than they need for operations... or the red cross? What happens when a tsunami, an earthquake, etc happens and they stopped trying to bring in more money than required before disaster struck?