Cordery, CarolynSim, Dalicevan Zijl, Tony2014-06-052022-07-062014-06-052022-07-0620142014https://ir.wgtn.ac.nz/handle/123456789/18830The increasing number and influence of charities in the economy, allegations and evidence of fraud and mismanagement, and the need for information to inform policy, are all reasons for the establishment of charity regulators. Public interest and public choice provide underlying theories explaining charity regulation which aims to increase public trust and confidence in charities (and thus increases philanthropy), and to limit tax benefits to specific organisations and donors. Disclosure-based regulatory regimes are a common model for charities regulation in many jurisdictions. Nevertheless, these can be resource intensive for the regulator and regulated charities, and growing pressure on government budgets requires efficiencies to be found. This paper proposes regulation differentiated according to charities’ main resource providers. This could reduce cost and increase the regulator’s effectiveness through focusing effort. In addition, this differentiation segments charity types according to the theories that explain why these organisations form and operate. We demonstrate the feasibility of such segmentation by use of cluster analysis of data on New Zealand registered charities and show which charities could benefit from differentiated regulation.pdfen-NZCharity RegulationNonprofit OrganisationsRegulation EfficiencyDifferentiated RegulationDifferentiated regulation: the case of charitiesText