87 research outputs found

    Migration of Wealth in New Jersey and the Impact on Wealth and Philanthropy

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    Provides data on the flow of household wealth and charitable capacity into and out of New Jersey in 1999-2003 and 2004-08. Examines the impact of the net influx and outflow on expected giving, the characteristics of migrating households, and implications

    A Golden Age of Philanthropy Still Beckons: National Wealth Transfer and Potential for Philanthropy Technical Report

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    This report provides estimates of wealth transfer and philanthropic giving by households during the period from 2007 through 2011, with one study focused on the households in North Dakota, and another focused on household wealth transfer and charitable giving at the national level. Includes projections of individual charitable giving during the next half century. With bibliographical references

    Center on Wealth and Philanthropy Charitable Giving Indices: Social Indicators of Philanthropy by State

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    Ranks each state's total charitable giving in 2004 relative to the financial capacity of its population to give, with separate indices for before-tax income, after-tax income, and after-tax income adjusted for two cost-of-living measures

    A Golden Age of Philanthropy?: The Impact of the Great Wealth Transfer on Greater Boston

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    Estimates the baseline household wealth and the expected wealth transfer in the Boston metropolitan area over the next fifty years. Examines the distribution of wealth, final estates, and charitable bequests, and analyzes the transfer's significance

    Wealth and the Commonwealth: new findings on wherewithal and philanthropy

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    Drawing in large part on the 1995 Survey of Consumer Finances, the authors describe the pattern of charitable giving by families at the upper reaches of income and wealth, as well as across the income spectrum. The overriding empirical motif is that the distribution of charitable giving is more highly skewed toward the upper end of the financial spectrum than previously documented, and that there appears to be a trend toward becoming even more so. The overriding theoretical motif is that income and wealth are so thoroughly imbricated, especially at the upper end of the financial spectrum, that the analyses of the determinants of charitable giving need to shift from their current focus on the dynamics of income to a complementary focus on the dynamics of wealth

    Why the $41 Trillion Wealth Transfer Estimate Is Still Valid: A Review of Challenges and Questions

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    Despite the economic downturn and the fall of the equity markets, the nationally noted projection that a wealth transfer of at least 41trillionwilltakeplaceintheUnitedStatesbytheyear2052remainsvalid.Followingathoroughreviewofour1999report"MillionairesandtheMillennium:NewEstimatesoftheForthcomingWealthTransferandtheProspectsforaGoldenAgeofPhilanthropy,"weconcludeinthisarticlethatitsprojectionshavenotbeensignificantlyaffectedbyrecentandprevailingeconomicconditions.Thecurrentreportreviewsthevalidityofthe41 trillion will take place in the United States by the year 2052 remains valid. Following a thorough review of our 1999 report "Millionaires and the Millennium: New Estimates of the Forthcoming Wealth Transfer and the Prospects for a Golden Age of Philanthropy," we conclude in this article that its projections have not been significantly affected by recent and prevailing economic conditions. The current report reviews the validity of the 41 trillion estimate in light of recent economic conditions, as well as several other critical challenges. While the new commentary does not explicitly deal with the middle- and upper-growth scenarios, the arguments made in support of the 41trillionestimateoftenapplytothehigherestimates.Theprincipalconclusionisthatthe41 trillion estimate often apply to the higher estimates. The principal conclusion is that the 41 trillion estimate remains valid as a 2% growth estimate, even in light of recessionary growth, depressed stock market, and several other criticisms discussed in th

    Geography and Generosity: Boston and Beyond

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    Presents findings from a study of the giving patterns of residents of Boston, Massachusetts, and New England, compared with other cities, states, and regions, based on an index created as an alternative to the Catalog for Philanthropy's Generosity Index

    Acetylene terminated aspartimides and resins therefrom

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    Acetylene terminated aspartimides are prepared using two methods. In the first, an amino-substituted aromatic acetylene is reacted with an aromatic bismaleimide in a solvent of glacial acetic acid and/or m-cresol. In the second method, an aromatic diamine is reacted with an ethynyl containing maleimide, such an N-(3-ethynyl phenyl) maleimide, in a solvent of glacial acetic acid and/or m-cresol. In addition, acetylene terminated aspartimides are blended with various acetylene terminated oligomers and polymers to yield composite materials exhibiting improved mechanical properties

    N-(3-ethynylphenyl)maleimide

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    Acetylene terminated aspartimides are prepared using two methods. In the first, an amino-substituted aromatic acetylene is reacted with an aromatic bismaleimide in a solvent of glacial acetic acid and/or m-cresol. In the second method, an aromatic diamine is reacted with an ethynyl containing maleimide, such as N-(3-ethynylphenyl) maleimide, in a solvent of glacial acetic acid and/or m-cresol. In addition, acetylene terminated aspartimides are blended with various acetylene terminated oligomers and polymers to yield composite materials exhibiting improved mechanical properties

    Geography and Giving: The Culture of Philanthropy in New England and the Nation

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    Looks at aggregate household wealth and income at the national level and for Massachusetts as a state, and analyzes levels of charitable giving in relation to household income
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