Though just .003% of the 2012 federal budget, President
Obama’s $100 million allocation to “Pay for Success” projects could
significantly alter the way our government funds the social sector. Eager to
explore impact investing, specifically Social Impact Bonds/Pay For Success
projects, NFF is working with the Rockefeller Foundation to examine their
feasibility in communities across the United States. (For a quick primer, my
colleague, Jessica LaBarbera, gave a concise overview of the project and key
ideas here.) As part of this work, NFF has established a hub of information on
Social Impact Bond (SIB)/Pay For Success (PFS) projects for stakeholders
nationwide, which we hope will spur a dialog that informs and enables their
implementation. But that’s just where the challenge starts.
In theory, SIBs allow the government to focus limited
resources on social programs that are proven to work through “reliable,
objective outcome-measurement methodologies.” But how will nonprofit
practitioners prove it? Outcome measurement has long-stymied nonprofits and
their funders, but as the field seeks to build a model that can work for the
long term, defining and measuring what constitutes a “successful program” is
key.
In the blogosphere, there is ample debate on measuring SIB
outcomes. While reading recent posts at Tactical Philanthropy by Sean
Stannard-Stockton and others, I was surprised at how often the commenting fray
simply rehashes the basic pros and cons surrounding nonprofit outcomes
measurement. It’s a well-worn argument: “Data will revolutionize the sector!”
vs. “Nonprofits can’t afford to track this information!”
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