THIS always annoys me.
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Why do they never offer to match donations? I'd probably consider it if they did.
Because you're giving them money that they then donate and claim as their own. It's a way to get around actually donating money from their profits, while making it look like they're donating a ton for the tax write off.
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And who pays the cc fees? And do they have an agreement with the cc provider for a kickback? There are so many hands involved with simple monetary transactions most people wouldn't believe it.
Charity is profitable.
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Because you're giving them money that they then donate and claim as their own. It's a way to get around actually donating money from their profits, while making it look like they're donating a ton for the tax write off.
wrote on last edited by [email protected]That's not how it works, at all. Businesses can't claim donations they collect on behalf of a charity as a deduction.
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The reason they ask for donations is because they can pool the donations together, say they’re donating, and then get a tax write off. They are just trying to make free money.
You should delete your misinformation.
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They likely do donate and this is a way for them to make that money back.
It's not. Literally the only benefit the business gets is bragging rights.
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That's not how it works, at all. Businesses can't claim donations they collect on behalf of a charity as a deduction.
A friend in the field had told me that they preemptively make donations to offset their taxes. Let say it’s 1million dollars. they put up 1 million dollars of their own money, then they gather donations at the till towards this charity to pay themselves back for the money they spent.
Again just what I’ve heard.
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A friend in the field had told me that they preemptively make donations to offset their taxes. Let say it’s 1million dollars. they put up 1 million dollars of their own money, then they gather donations at the till towards this charity to pay themselves back for the money they spent.
Again just what I’ve heard.
Your friend is wrong, or the company he works for is committing fraud.
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A friend in the field had told me that they preemptively make donations to offset their taxes. Let say it’s 1million dollars. they put up 1 million dollars of their own money, then they gather donations at the till towards this charity to pay themselves back for the money they spent.
Again just what I’ve heard.
I had a friend who once told me his brother discovered Alaska while riding in a hot air balloon. I wonder if we have the same friend.
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And who pays the cc fees? And do they have an agreement with the cc provider for a kickback? There are so many hands involved with simple monetary transactions most people wouldn't believe it.
It’s a good question. The flat fee is already covered by your item purchase, so at worst it would be 2.5-3.5% of the donation amount, which isn’t terrible.
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Your friend is wrong, or the company he works for is committing fraud.
company committing fraud
Well yes, it's a corporation.
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I had a friend who once told me his brother discovered Alaska while riding in a hot air balloon. I wonder if we have the same friend.
Possibly, is his name Jeff?
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This post did not contain any content.wrote on last edited by [email protected]
THIS IS PURELY A METHOD OF AVOIDING TAXES.Never donate to charities through one of these big companies. If you want to donate, then do so directly.
Anything else just helps the corporation wash their image by gathering money and then donating to whichever cause.
They do so and also take all of that money off of their taxable requirement.Edit: was wrong.
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Why do they never offer to match donations? I'd probably consider it if they did.
wrote on last edited by [email protected]Why do they never offer to match donations?
Why would they bother? It costs them next to nothing to stick an ad on the screen. But matching donations would be far more expensive.
Besides "matching donations" has always been a scam. These agreements inevitably amount to "Person/Org X agrees to donate up to $X in matching funds". But $X is so small that its trivial to hit. And I've never heard of someone failing to get the whole amount regardless of the donation rate. It's just an excuse for the folks running the donation drive to scream "PLEASE! PLEASE! PLEASE! Your refusal to donate an extra $1 is costing us $10!!!! Why are you being so stingy!!!"
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I wasn't going to comment initially but, thinking again, I will.
According to what I was once explained, the scheme runs like this.
a) organization X starts a fund raising campaign
This alone can be deducted as an expense, as any amount of hours can be attributed to planning, preparing, etc, the entire thing.
As this time as no profitable end, it can be deducted.
b) You donate. But now it's their money.
Your money is siphoned to a separate bank account or just tallied and earmarked as for charitable purpouses but this does not mean the entity needs to hand it over immediatly.
That money is held within the company's vaults, figure of expression, and, as such, counts towards the overall financial assets of the company.
It still needs to be handed to the end recipient but until it does it can be used to leverage loans and be invested into short term investment products, like overnight deposits (with hundreds of thousands or even millions it does gain interest overnight).
c) the money gets donated eventually but not by you
Eventually, all that money gets handed over but it is now their money, not yours. And as such, they get the tax deduction. And, again, with hundreds of thousands to millions in donations, the deduction gets very high.
This deduction, on your expense, goes towards clearing more of their profits.
Want to do something good?
Volunteer. Help your neighbour. With your own efforts, actions and work. Don't hand over money.
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That's not how it works, at all. Businesses can't claim donations they collect on behalf of a charity as a deduction.
They can lie and misreport. And if nobody in the state/federal bureaucracy follow up, they get away with it.
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I had a friend who once told me his brother discovered Alaska while riding in a hot air balloon. I wonder if we have the same friend.
"Had a friend at a business report that the business was casually doing fraud to lower their tax liability."
"Oh yeah? Well I had a friend who reported he is a talking monkey who lives in Mars."
"Damn, both of these stories sound equally far-fetched and unbelievable."
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Why do they never offer to match donations? I'd probably consider it if they did.
Someone correct me, but I understood that donations serve as a tax write-off.
So they don't care about the donations as much as their own savings. -
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Because they use your donations to pay for their parties
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Remember that none of the people working there have any say in the matter either, and are most likely struggling themselves. The system was made broken.
It's not the people , it's the corporations
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You should delete your misinformation.
Yeah they won't. Lemmy is very lax when dealing with published falsehoods which are in support of an ideologically needed narrative.