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The institutions of society within the United States are generally classified as governmental, for-profit, or nonprofit entities. These three sectors of society are seen as critical for a democratic state—or, as it is sometimes termed, a civil society. Governmental entities are the branches, departments, agencies, and bureaus of the federal, state, and local governments. For-profit entities constitute the business sector of this society. Nonprofit organizations, as noted, constitute what is frequently termed the third sector, the voluntary sector, the private sector, or the independent sector of U.S. society. These terms are sometimes confusing; for example, the term private sector has been applied to both the for-profit sector and the nonprofit sector.

      A for-profit entity, however, has owners: those who hold the equity in the enterprise, such as stockholders of a corporation. The for-profit organization is operated for the benefit of its owners; the profits of the enterprise are passed through to them, such as the payment of dividends on shares of stock. This is what is meant by the term for-profit organization; it is one that is intended to generate a profit for its owners. The transfer of the profits from the organization to its owners is considered the inurement of net earnings to the owners in their private capacity.

      These elements of the nonprofit sector may be visualized as a series of concentric circles, as shown below.

Schematic illustration of the Tax-exempt charitable organizations.

      The definition in the law of the term nonprofit organization and the concept of the nonprofit sector as critical to the creation and functioning of a civil society do not distinguish nonprofit organizations that are tax-exempt from those that are not. This is because the tax aspect of nonprofit organizations is not relevant to either subject. Indeed, rather than defining either the term nonprofit organization or its societal role, the federal tax law principles respecting tax exemption of these entities reflect and flow out of the essence of these subjects.

      This is somewhat unusual; most tax laws are based on some form of rationale that is inherent in tax policy. The law of charitable and other tax-exempt organizations, however, has very little to do with any underlying tax policy. Rather, this aspect of the tax law is grounded in a body of thought quite distant from tax policy: political philosophy as to the proper construct of a democratic society.

      There are six basic rationales underlying qualification for tax-exempt status for nonprofit organizations. On a simplistic plane, a nonprofit entity is tax-exempt because Congress wrote a provision in the Internal Revenue Code according tax exemption to it. Thus, some organizations are tax-exempt for no more engaging reason than that Congress said so. Certainly, as to this type of exemption, there is no grand philosophical principle buttressing the exemption.

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