Dimensions and indicators of non-profit financial condition: Evidence from South African public universities

Background: More than three decades of research have failed to achieve convergence on a method for the measurement of non-profit financial condition, with the literature reporting a bewildering array of financial dimensions, and more than 100 ratios and indicators. Aim: This article offers a contri...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mark Bunting
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2020-03-01
Series:South African Journal of Economic and Management Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://sajems.org/index.php/sajems/article/view/2974
id doaj-b94c7d61077448469037a2d478195103
record_format Article
spelling doaj-b94c7d61077448469037a2d4781951032020-11-25T02:51:47ZengAOSISSouth African Journal of Economic and Management Sciences1015-88122222-34362020-03-01231e1e1710.4102/sajems.v23i1.2974935Dimensions and indicators of non-profit financial condition: Evidence from South African public universitiesMark Bunting0Department of Management, Rhodes University, GrahamstownBackground: More than three decades of research have failed to achieve convergence on a method for the measurement of non-profit financial condition, with the literature reporting a bewildering array of financial dimensions, and more than 100 ratios and indicators. Aim: This article offers a contribution to a broader discourse in non-profit financial analysis by recognising, and taking action in response to, the potential threat to research validity arising from the generally unchallenged presumption that accounting numbers provide a complete, unbiased and error-free representation of an entity’s underlying economic reality. Setting: The 23 South African public universities in continuous existence for the 10 financial years from 01 January 2007 to 31 December 2016. Methods: From the non-profit financial analysis literature, three foundational models are identified, and 24 associated ratios are specified as candidate indicators of financial condition. These are calculated for each university from accounting numbers which have been adjusted in mitigation of inadequacies of the financial reporting rules. Principal component analysis is applied to evaluate the indicators, and eliminate those which lack significant association with the emergent dimensionality of financial condition. Results: The financial condition of South African public universities is positively associated with liquid discretionary financial assets, which are interpreted as representative of financial resilience and defensive capacity in the presence of economic shock. Unrestricted equity has incremental relevance, suggesting that the universities derive financial benefits from a capital structure in which assets are funded through sources that are burdened with neither debt obligations nor donor restrictions. Conclusion: This research appears to be among the first to propose a dimensionality for non-profit financial condition that is developed on a foundation of responding to the need for mitigation of inadequacies in the financial reporting system.https://sajems.org/index.php/sajems/article/view/2974non-profit financial conditionuniversity financial healthhigher education finance.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mark Bunting
spellingShingle Mark Bunting
Dimensions and indicators of non-profit financial condition: Evidence from South African public universities
South African Journal of Economic and Management Sciences
non-profit financial condition
university financial health
higher education finance.
author_facet Mark Bunting
author_sort Mark Bunting
title Dimensions and indicators of non-profit financial condition: Evidence from South African public universities
title_short Dimensions and indicators of non-profit financial condition: Evidence from South African public universities
title_full Dimensions and indicators of non-profit financial condition: Evidence from South African public universities
title_fullStr Dimensions and indicators of non-profit financial condition: Evidence from South African public universities
title_full_unstemmed Dimensions and indicators of non-profit financial condition: Evidence from South African public universities
title_sort dimensions and indicators of non-profit financial condition: evidence from south african public universities
publisher AOSIS
series South African Journal of Economic and Management Sciences
issn 1015-8812
2222-3436
publishDate 2020-03-01
description Background: More than three decades of research have failed to achieve convergence on a method for the measurement of non-profit financial condition, with the literature reporting a bewildering array of financial dimensions, and more than 100 ratios and indicators. Aim: This article offers a contribution to a broader discourse in non-profit financial analysis by recognising, and taking action in response to, the potential threat to research validity arising from the generally unchallenged presumption that accounting numbers provide a complete, unbiased and error-free representation of an entity’s underlying economic reality. Setting: The 23 South African public universities in continuous existence for the 10 financial years from 01 January 2007 to 31 December 2016. Methods: From the non-profit financial analysis literature, three foundational models are identified, and 24 associated ratios are specified as candidate indicators of financial condition. These are calculated for each university from accounting numbers which have been adjusted in mitigation of inadequacies of the financial reporting rules. Principal component analysis is applied to evaluate the indicators, and eliminate those which lack significant association with the emergent dimensionality of financial condition. Results: The financial condition of South African public universities is positively associated with liquid discretionary financial assets, which are interpreted as representative of financial resilience and defensive capacity in the presence of economic shock. Unrestricted equity has incremental relevance, suggesting that the universities derive financial benefits from a capital structure in which assets are funded through sources that are burdened with neither debt obligations nor donor restrictions. Conclusion: This research appears to be among the first to propose a dimensionality for non-profit financial condition that is developed on a foundation of responding to the need for mitigation of inadequacies in the financial reporting system.
topic non-profit financial condition
university financial health
higher education finance.
url https://sajems.org/index.php/sajems/article/view/2974
work_keys_str_mv AT markbunting dimensionsandindicatorsofnonprofitfinancialconditionevidencefromsouthafricanpublicuniversities
_version_ 1724733398245703680