Department of Accountancy, Weatherhead School of Management, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio, USA.
World Journal of Advanced Research and Reviews, 2026, 29(03), 1726-1733
Article DOI: 10.30574/wjarr.2026.29.3.0710
Received on 14 February 2026; revised on 21 March 2026; accepted on 24 March 2026
Nonprofit organizations are among the most trusted institutions in American society, yet they operate with far less financial oversight than their corporate counterparts. With over 1.8 million tax-exempt organizations contributing more than $1.4 trillion to the U.S. economy annually, the stakes of inadequate financial governance are significant, not just for individual organizations, but for the donors, communities, and beneficiaries who depend on them. This study examines how financial accountability and governance mechanisms shape transparency and public trust across U.S. public charities, private foundations, and other tax-exempt entities. Drawing on peer-reviewed scholarship, regulatory reports, and documented case studies, including the United Way of America scandal, the American Red Cross post-disaster fund controversy, the Boy Scouts of America bankruptcy, and patterns of small nonprofit embezzlement, the paper identifies the structural conditions that enable financial misconduct and evaluates the tools available to address them. The findings are consistent: board governance weaknesses, inadequate internal controls, limited audit requirements, and fragmented regulatory enforcement are the primary enablers of nonprofit financial misconduct. Organizations that deploy data analytics, robust oversight systems, and voluntary transparency frameworks demonstrate measurably better accountability outcomes and stronger donor trust. The paper proposes policy recommendations for regulators and organizational leaders, including expanded audit thresholds, modernized IRS Form 990 requirements, standardized data governance frameworks, and stronger whistleblower protections. Ultimately, financial accountability is not a constraint on nonprofit mission, it is the foundation on which public trust, donor confidence, and long-term organizational legitimacy are built.
Nonprofit Financial Accountability; Organizational Governance; Financial Transparency; Public Trust; IRS Form 990; Fraud Prevention; Internal Controls; Nonprofit Sector; United States
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Hossana Adeyerimi Olaomotito. Financial accountability and governance in nonprofit organizations: Strengthening transparency and public trust. World Journal of Advanced Research and Reviews, 2026, 29(03), 1726-1733. Article DOI: https://doi.org/10.30574/wjarr.2026.29.3.0710.