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08 September 2025 | Press Release
In a new survey by The Conference Board, 55% of corporate philanthropy leaders say federal scrutiny on DEI has affected their corporate giving strategies.
In this new landscape, many companies are proceeding with caution when it comes to their corporate giving strategies: over a quarter of them are stepping back from socially or politically contested issues, such as giving focused exclusively on specific racial or demographic groups. Additionally, 60% are strengthening compliance and legal oversight of their philanthropy programs.
Budgets, however, appear more resilient: 66% expect their philanthropy budgets to hold steady in 2026. Yet the effect of new US policy changes on how corporate charitable contributions qualify for tax deductions remains unclear—only a third see no material impact, while 57% say it is too early to know.
“Corporate philanthropy programs face heightened pressure to demonstrate resilience and alignment with business priorities. Companies that ensure their giving initiatives reflect financial discipline, strong governance, and close integration into core strategy will be best positioned to sustain their impact,” said Andrew Jones, author of the report and Principal Researcher at The Conference Board.
Findings come from a survey of 82 corporate citizenship and philanthropy leaders at leading US multinational companies, carried out in July and August 2025.
Policy shifts are weighing on corporate giving, with DEI scrutiny cited as the most significant challenge:
Half of companies are rethinking their citizenship strategies—often by stepping back from politically sensitive issues:
Most companies have adjusted their governance, primarily through closer legal/compliance oversight:
Almost 70% of citizenship leaders say their nonprofit partners have changed language to reduce scrutiny:
Citizenship executives see mounting strain among nonprofits in 2025, with over 80% citing financial and operational challenges:
“Political and legal forces are reshaping not only how companies structure and oversee their own corporate citizenship programs, but also how nonprofits operate. The result is an ecosystem recalibrating how it describes and delivers services—driven less by mission priorities than by the demands of a more complex, risk-sensitive environment,” said Jeff Hoffman, Interim Leader of the Governance and Sustainability Center at The Conference Board.
Despite economic uncertainty, most citizenship leaders expect budgets to hold steady in 2026:
Recent US tax policy reforms—making corporate charitable contributions eligible for tax benefits only when above 1% of taxable income—will likely influence corporate giving, although the impacts are not yet clear:
Media Contact:
Daniela Banos
dbanos@tcb.org
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