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How America’s richest donate their money

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Every year, Forbes magazine releases

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a list of America's biggest givers.

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And in 2023, these 25 individuals or pairs made the list.

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It includes people like Google co-founder Sergey Brin...

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and Mark Zuckerberg and his wife, Priscilla Chan.

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These are the piles of money

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Forbes reported each of them has given away.

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Collectively, a whopping $196 billion

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of lifetime giving.

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That's bigger than the GDP of most countries.

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This giant pile of money has done a lot of good...

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but it's hiding a more complicated and problematic story

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of billionaire philanthropy in America.

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We'll show you how.

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The Forbes list ranks the biggest givers

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by how much they've given over a lifetime.

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Biggest to smallest.

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And they only measure dollars given to charitable recipients.

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That means it excludes money parked in a foundation.

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We'll get back to that.

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And money pledged, but not paid out.

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You’ll see here that Warren Buffett and

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Bill and Melinda French Gates are standouts.

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This chart we're making

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measures the givers current net worth.

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Adding their philanthropic giving to that

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we came up with the percentage of their net worth

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they've given away.

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So Forbes puts Buffett's current net worth at $106 billion...

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and he's given away $51.5 billion in his life...

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which puts him at 33%.

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Bill and Melinda French Gates

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who are divorced but still do philanthropic work together...

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have a collective net worth of $109 billion...

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and have given $38.4 billion away.

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Most of this group's donations go to poverty

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and public health around the world

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and education in the US.

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And together, Buffett and the Gates's

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created the Giving Pledge.

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A promise by the world's wealthiest individuals and families

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to dedicate a majority of their wealth to charitable causes.

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That's over 50%.

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They're almost there, but not quite.

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These 13 givers have signed it, too

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including Facebook co-founder

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Dustin Moskovitz and his wife, Carrie Tuna....

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Jeff Bezos’s ex-wife, Mackenzie Scott and Michael Bloomberg.

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The other signatories fall around here.

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Only two of them have made it over the 50% line.

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The banker — T. Denny Sanford — has given 53% of his net worth away.

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And Duty Free Shoppers founder Chuck Feeney...

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almost every last penny of his fortune.

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George Soros hasn't signed the Giving Pledge

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but he belongs here, too.

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He's given 73% of his wealth away.

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The eBay founder and his wife go here

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and everyone else on the Forbes list falls roughly in this area.

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Over the course of their lives

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they've given 12% or less of their net worth away.

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In the least flattering zone of the chart

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the highest net worth

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but the lowest proportion of it given away...

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is Jeff Bezos.

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The founder of Amazon is the richest person on this chart.

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His $117 billion net worth dwarfs

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his $2.7 billion of philanthropic giving.

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It's only 2.3% of his wealth over his lifetime.

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For context

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that's about as much as what Americans, on average

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consistent only give as a proportion of their disposable income

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per year: About 2%.

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Bezos’s money has gone to various causes

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like fighting climate change, education...

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he even gave $100 million directly to Dolly Parton.

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Bezos’s philanthropic reputation at this point

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is kind of that he doesn't have one.

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It's kind of hazy is what a lot of experts have told me.

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That's Whizy Kim

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senior reporter for Vox, who covers billionaires.

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A lot of people speculate that that's one of the reasons

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he’s made this recent announcement

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of “I’m eventually going to give my net worth away.”

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There was a lot of pushback, a lot of speculation around

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“Hey Jeff, why aren't you more involved in philanthropy?”

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This chart helps us see who the real standout givers are...

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those who give most of their wealth away

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and those who hold onto their enormous fortunes.

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Even if a certain individual is very generous.

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If overall, this class of people

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just keeps amassing more and more money

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we've got to look at ourselves and ask

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“Okay, what are we doing wrong here and how do we reverse this?”

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All this money creates what the Institute for Policy Studies

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has called top heavy philanthropy:

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Where individual wealthy donors

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make up a large portion of charitable giving.

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Since 2011, mega gifts of $1 million or more

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from single donors have been growing.

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If you are a relatively small institution...

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that receives funding from a very large philanthropist...

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they take their money away, you are in trouble.

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This chart breaks down charitable tax deductions

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by household income level since the early 90s.

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Nonprofits used to rely on the broad support of the population.

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In 1993, 77% of charitable deductions

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were taken by households making less than $200,000.

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Today, that chart has almost flipped:

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Households making more than $1 million

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were taking the most charitable deductions.

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So just a handful of people are deciding

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what merits philanthropic money

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and how these causes should be solved.

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Ultra wealthy donors

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tend to give to different causes then the rest of us.

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An analysis of the Chronicle of Philanthropy’s top 50 donors

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shows that they give to education more than the causes

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non-wealthy donors give to: Like to health...

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a lot to religion, the environment, and international affairs.

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That could mean a billionaire giving $500 million

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to his alma mater for a new building on campus...

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or another giving $750 million

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in one single donation to charter schools in 20 US cities.

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A relatively small amount of money can have a great impact

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on a specific school district or a single charter school.

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The top 50 donors are also more likely

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to give through a private foundation.

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Most of the people on the Forbes list

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have had their own private foundations or they give to them.

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Here's how they work.

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Donors make large charitable gifts to a foundation

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in the form of cash, assets, or stocks.

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In return, they get huge tax benefits immediately.

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But the foundation only has to give money

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to actual charities at a rate of 5% a year.

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That means money can stockpile in here

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donors reap the tax benefits...

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while charities may only get a trickle over time.

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The Forbes list only counts this money

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that foundations have already given to charity.

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Not the money parked here.

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Meanwhile, this money continues to enrich donors.

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There's another way billionaires donate

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that the Forbes list doesn't count at all.

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Donor advised funds

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which are more secretive by design.

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These are charitable savings accounts

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that allow the donor to be anonymous

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and offer even bigger upfront tax benefits.

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More importantly

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they have no reporting or payout requirements...

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so it's difficult to tell

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whether the money is going somewhere good

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or just lowering the donors tax bill.

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Donor advice funds have been rising in popularity...

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meaning collectively they are housing

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billions of dollars yet to be paid out to charities.

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As of 2020, that figure was $160 billion.

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And the huge multibillion dollar endowments of foundations

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means they have a lot of power.

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Like the Gates Foundation.

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In terms of global public health...

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the Gates Foundation does got a lot of credit...

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for their work in improving vaccine access

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for preventable diseases for very young children.

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Since they've been doing their work in child mortality rates

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like infant mortality under 5 has gone down a lot.

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Their foundation is also the largest private donor

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to the World Health Organization.

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Which tells you a lot about just

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how much agenda setting power they have.

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And what kinds of public health problems to prioritize.

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The biggest criticism is that it's undemocratic.

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Former Enron executive John Arnold and his wife, Laura

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have been advocating for reform of donor advised funds.

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By lobbying Congress to require them

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to distribute funds within 15 years...

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or for donors to only get a tax deduction

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upon distribution to charities.

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Others advocate to increase

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the payout requirements at foundations from 5% annually to 10%.

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These types of reforms are small fixes to the system.

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But if our country didn't have such dramatic wealth inequality...

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we wouldn't have to rely on the charitable whims

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of these billionaires to begin with.

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