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8 - Which Generation Decides the Intergenerational Distribution of Benefits?

from Part III - Charities and Accumulation Reformed

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 July 2021

Ian Murray
Affiliation:
University of Western Australia, Perth
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Summary

This chapter explores the issue of how decision-making about the distribution of benefits should itself be distributed across generations. It outlines that under the existing rules, there are gaps in the ability of the present generation to change the rate of accumulation or distribute retained assets, even if they think that to do so would increase public benefit. Thus, the chapter investigates potential normative bases for reforming the decision-making balance between past, present and future decision-makers so as to determine the additional circumstances in which the present generation ought to be able to alter accumulation. It does so by reference to cy-près reform discussions and to principles of intergenerational justice. The chapter then identifies potential ways in which the existing rules might be reformed to better accord with these normative bases, drawing on examples from the United Kingdom and the United States. The potential reforms include broader cy-près and administrative scheme grounds and greater discretion for charity controllers to amend administrative machinery and purposes, but coupled with a period of protection for donor intent.

Type
Chapter
Information
Charity Law and Accumulation
Maintaining an Intergenerational Balance
, pp. 225 - 256
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

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