With less charitable giving flowing directly to charities, a tax policy scholar suggests some policy fixes
- Written by Ray Madoff, Professor of Law, Boston College
Law professor Ray Madoff[1] is the co-founder and director of the Boston College Forum on Philanthropy and the Public Good. In an interview with Emily Schwartz Greco, The Conversation U.S. philanthropy and nonprofits editor, Madoff sums up some of the main points about charitable giving she makes in her 2025 book, “The Second Estate: How the Tax Code Made an American Aristocracy[2].” This interview has been edited for length and clarity.
How has charitable giving changed over the past 50 years?
Giving has pretty much remained flat as a percentage of personal disposable income. It’s been stable by that measure at about 2%[3]. What’s changed is where that charitable giving is going.
In the early 1990s, about 6% of all giving[4] was going to intermediaries[5], like foundations and donor-advised funds, and 94% was going directly to charities: hospitals, universities, churches, organizations curing diseases, all sorts of things.
Donor-advised funds[6], or DAFs, are charitable investment accounts that can serve many of the functions of a foundation – but with fewer rules and regulations.
Fast-forward to today, and there’s been a huge transformation with dramatic growth in giving to intermediaries. Today, around 40% of U.S. giving from individual donors goes instead to charitable intermediaries[7], and 60% of those donations go straight to charities.
References
- ^ Ray Madoff (www.bc.edu)
- ^ The Second Estate: How the Tax Code Made an American Aristocracy (press.uchicago.edu)
- ^ at about 2% (www.vanguardcharitable.org)
- ^ about 6% of all giving (theconversation.com)
- ^ going to intermediaries (johnsoncenter.org)
- ^ Donor-advised funds (theconversation.com)
- ^ giving from individual donors goes instead to charitable intermediaries (ips-dc.org)
- ^ University of Chicago Press (press.uchicago.edu)
- ^ 5% payout rule (pfs-llc.net)
- ^ no payout rules that apply to donor-advised funds (www.nptrust.org)
- ^ foundations can meet their payout minimum (www.fiduciary-trust.com)
- ^ benefits that are worth up to 74% (scholarship.law.edu)
- ^ took the standard deduction (taxpolicycenter.org)
- ^ get any tax breaks (theconversation.com)
- ^ deduct up to US$1,000 of their taxable income (theconversation.com)
- ^ a tax credit (taxfoundation.org)
- ^ some set time period (scholarship.law.edu)
- ^ subject to limitations on their tax benefits (www.taxnotes.com)
- ^ Warren Buffett (www.nextgen-wealth.com)
- ^ Brad Pitt, maybe with good intentions (theconversation.com)
- ^ falling apart (www.wdsu.com)
- ^ helping pay for the construction of Trump’s new ballroom (www.cbsnews.com)
- ^ philanthropy’s original sin (www.thenewatlantis.com)
- ^ sought to encourage "fit” people (theconversation.com)
- ^ nonprofit pre-K-8 school for low-income children (www.kcra.com)
- ^ Mark Zuckerberg and his wife, Priscilla Chan, funded (www.sfchronicle.com)
- ^ given about $26 billion (abcnews.go.com)
- ^ giving to existing organizations (yieldgiving.com)
Authors: Ray Madoff, Professor of Law, Boston College

