RT info:eu-repo/semantics/article T1 Rethinking Liquidity in Nonprofit Organizations: The Dual Role of Excess Cash in Explaining Financial Vulnerability A1 Elvira Lorilla, Teresa A1 García Rodríguez, Íñigo A1 Romero Merino, María Elena A1 Santamaría Mariscal, Marcos K1 Excess cash holdings K1 Financial vulnerability K1 Mediation K1 Nonprofit organizations K1 Overhead K1 Organizaciones no lucrativas K1 Nonprofit organizations K1 Contabilidad K1 Accounting AB This study examines the dual impact of excess cash holdings on the financial vulnerability of nonprofit organizations (NPOs) through an integrative framework that combines insights from the behavioral theory of the firm and agency theory. From a behavioral perspective, excess liquid assets represent unabsorbed organizational slack that can enhance financial resilience by buffering organizations against funding shocks. From an agency perspective, however, unusually high cash balances may be absorbed into administrative structures, increasing internal costs and weakening financial discipline. Using a large panel dataset of 9177 NPOs in England and Wales (42,350 observations from 2015 to 2022) and generalized structure equation modeling, we find that excess cash is directly associated with a lower likelihood of future financial vulnerability, consistent with its precautionary role as a financial buffer. At the same time, excess cash is associated with higher overhead costs, which in turn slightly increase financial vulnerability. This indirect channel partially offsets, but does not eliminate, the protective effect of excess liquidity. Overall, the findings show that excess cash can strengthen nonprofit financial resilience while simultaneously generating internal cost dynamics that attenuate its benefits. By distinguishing between unabsorbed and absorbed slack, the study clarifies how liquidity accumulation can have both stabilizing and potentially adverse consequences for nonprofit financial health. PB Wiley SN 0267-4424 YR 2026 FD 2026-04 LK https://hdl.handle.net/10259/11579 UL https://hdl.handle.net/10259/11579 LA eng NO This study was supported by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation under Grant PID2022-139777NB-I00. DS Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad de Burgos RD 08-may-2026