GYEL Funding Model

The Global Youth Excellence & Leadership Program (GYEL) mirrors a well-established self-funded model used by numerous reputable UN, nonprofit organizations and other program types worldwide. GYEL’s mandate from its Coalition Partners to the United Nations is to nurture and mentor exceptionally promising students from under-resourced backgrounds. We do so by:

  • Offering direct, specialized mentorship from high-level diplomats, business leaders, scientists, and innovators
  • Providing fully or partially subsidized positions to students with demonstrated financial need
  • Charging an equitable share of costs to families who can afford to contribute, ensuring that program quality and staff expertise remain world-class

By adopting a model akin to Model United Nations—another renowned self-funded program—and aligning with other leading educational nonprofits, GYEL ensures long-term sustainability without depleting resources intended for urgent humanitarian crises.

This approach enables us to hire dedicated professionals (often with advanced degrees from leading universities), maintain rigorous program standards, and offer individualized attention to each student.

GYEL’s funding strategy ensures that all participants, regardless of income, have the chance to benefit. Our tiered contribution approach allows higher-income families to cover administrative costs, thereby creating a stable base of financial support that sustains our entire operation, even through challenging periods like the global pandemic.

GYEL’s funding structure was inspired by several leading organizations including:

  • Global Citizen Year (GCY): A nonprofit providing leadership gap-year programs ($30,000) with sliding-scale tuition based on family income. Approximately 80% of GCY students receive financial aid, with 30% attending tuition-free. Their model ensures that families only pay what they can afford, with higher-income families contributing more to subsidize those who cannot pay.
  • Manhattan Country School (MCS): A renowned independent K-8 school with annual tuition of $50,000 using a tiered tuition system. Approximately 75% of families receive some form of financial aid, with many attending for free. Tuition is set on a family-by-family basis, ensuring economic diversity and accessibility in private education.
  • Groundwork: An environmental education nonprofit employing a transparent 22-tier pricing model based on household income. Families in the lowest income brackets pay only 65% of base tuition, while those with household incomes of $150,000 or more pay up to 178%, allowing many students to attend at reduced or no cost.
  • United Nations Primary Funding Model: Details here

High-Income Families

  • Contribute between 0.1% and 2.5% of their annual income to administrative and operational costs
  • Guarantee the program can employ expert mentors and maintain its globally recognized standard of excellence

Families Earning Under $200,000 Annually

  • Qualify for significant need-based tuition assistance or full subsidies, ensuring no talented student is turned away for financial reasons

This mirrors the principles behind many UN-affiliated, nonprofit and other programs types, where those who can pay do so thus subsidizing those who cannot. The tiered pricing model ensures that financial limitations do not prevent students from accessing high-quality education and mentorship

By adopting a self-funded, equitable contribution model, GYEL ensures that the future Nobel laureates, Pulitzer Prize winners, Turing Award computer scientists, and Fields Medal mathematicians receive the mentorship they need today—so they can transform our world tomorrow. This strategy aligns directly with proven funding models used by both UN, nonprofit organizations and other program types that focus on education, equity, and leadership development.

We continue to work closely with our Coalition Partners to the United Nations to ensure that talented students from all income levels have access to world-class leadership development opportunities.

For a deeper understanding of how leading programs are funded, visit UN Funding Overview.

The Global Youth Excellence & Leadership Program (GYEL) mirrors the same self-funded structure employed by numerous reputable UN bodies and initiatives. Unlike UN agencies that focus strictly on emergency relief—where donations must flow directly to high-risk areas—GYEL’s mandate is to nurture and mentor exceptionally promising students from under-resourced backgrounds. We do so by:

  • Offering direct, specialized mentorship from high-level diplomats, business leaders, scientists, and innovators.
  • Providing fully or partially subsidized positions to students with demonstrated financial need.
  • Charging an equitable share of costs to families who can afford to contribute, ensuring that program quality and staff expertise remain world-class.

This approach enables us to hire dedicated professionals (often with advanced degrees from leading universities), maintain rigorous program standards, and offer individualized attention to each student. By adopting a model akin to Model United Nations—another renowned self-funded program—GYEL ensures long-term sustainability without depleting resources intended for UN missions addressing urgent humanitarian crises.

Understanding how the United Nations itself structures funding can provide useful context for why self-funded initiatives like GYEL exist. To learn more about the broader UN funding system and how different programs sustain their work, see UN Funding Overview.

Just as UNICEF collects donations to feed and educate children globally, or WIPO charges fees for patent filings, GYEL’s funding strategy ensures that all participants, regardless of income, have the chance to benefit. Our tiered contribution approach allows higher-income families to cover administrative costs, thereby creating a stable base of financial support that sustains our entire operation—even through challenging periods like the global pandemic.

  • High-Income Families
    • Contribute between 0.1% and 2% of their annual income to administrative and operational costs—comparable to standard utility expenses.
    • Guarantee the program can employ expert mentors and maintain its globally recognized standard of excellence.
  •  Families Earning Under $200,000 Annually
    • Qualify for significant need-based tuition assistance or full subsidies, ensuring no talented student is turned away for financial reasons.

This mirrors the principle behind many UN-affiliated programs where those who can pay do so, thus subsidizing those who cannot.

If you are a parent evaluating GYEL, please understand that our approach—charging fees to families who have the means—does not contradict UN principles. On the contrary, it is a well-established and vital funding model within the UN system, allowing agencies and programs to:

  • Expand access to specialized services (such as advanced mentorship and leadership training).
  • Maintain high-quality programming led by seasoned professionals.
  • Sustain operations year after year, unaffected by fluctuations in charitable giving or global crises.

By adopting a self-funded, equitable contribution model, GYEL ensures that the future Nobel laureates, Pulitzer Prize winners, Turing Award computer scientists, and Fields Medal mathematicians receive the mentorship they need today—so they can transform our world tomorrow. This strategy aligns directly with UN ECOSOC priorities and the broader United Nations mandate to uplift communities through education, leadership development, and sustainable innovation.

We continue to work closely with our UN member partners, who recognize that global progress requires not only providing immediate humanitarian aid (food, water, sanitation) but also nurturing the brightest minds across all income levels. In doing so, GYEL stands firmly within the proven and essential funding structures embraced by the wider UN system.

For a deeper understanding of how UN-affiliated programs are funded, visit UN Funding Overview.