Thanks, Carolina! Just one note, you do not have to tag me, as I receive email notifications even if you do not.
If I understand correctly, of your spending of 248 k$ on Nourishing Tomorrow in 2023, 80 k$ was unrestricted, and 168 k$ (= (248 − 80)*10^3) was restricted to that program. I think you are saying the program as a whole caused 100 k$ of additional unrestricted donations that year. If so, the program caused 0.403 $ (= 100*10^3/​(248*10^3)) of additional unrestricted donations per $ spent (in reality, it is lower due to overhead[1]). That is less than 1 $, and I think the multiplier for the unrestricted funds is even lower due to diminishing returns[2], so it looks like you should not be spending unrestricted funds on the program. Am I missing something?
Thank you for letting me know about the tags. The methodology we use to allocate resources differs to yours. As I mentioned earlier, our mission and theory of change also play a significant role in the decision-making process.
Thanks, Carolina! Just one note, you do not have to tag me, as I receive email notifications even if you do not.
If I understand correctly, of your spending of 248 k$ on Nourishing Tomorrow in 2023, 80 k$ was unrestricted, and 168 k$ (= (248 − 80)*10^3) was restricted to that program. I think you are saying the program as a whole caused 100 k$ of additional unrestricted donations that year. If so, the program caused 0.403 $ (= 100*10^3/​(248*10^3)) of additional unrestricted donations per $ spent (in reality, it is lower due to overhead[1]). That is less than 1 $, and I think the multiplier for the unrestricted funds is even lower due to diminishing returns[2], so it looks like you should not be spending unrestricted funds on the program. Am I missing something?
I suppose some of the spending on people, operations, finance and management is related to the program.
I guess decreasing the spending on the program by 1 % would decrease the additional donations by less than 1 %.
Hi Vasco,
Thank you for letting me know about the tags. The methodology we use to allocate resources differs to yours. As I mentioned earlier, our mission and theory of change also play a significant role in the decision-making process.