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The old model of billionaire philanthropy is ending
Weekend Argus on Saturday
|May 24, 2025
TO GIVE OR NOT TO GIVE

BILL Gates is an optimist. He believes the world will be a better place in 20 years, that diseases like polio, measles and malaria will be eradicated, and that there will be other rich people lining up to fill the void when, as he announced last week, his foundation shuts its doors in 2045.
Of all these audacious goals and wishes, it's the last that might be the furthest out of reach. Gates is right that there will be plenty of rich people in two decades. But what's far less certain is just how willing they'll be to give away their money with the abandon and largesse shown by Gates.
The announcement that the Gates Foundation will close in 20 years came on the heels of news that Warren Buffett will soon retire as CEO of Berkshire Hathaway Inc, creating a distinct "end of an era" vibe.
It was Buffett who introduced Gates to the idea of giving it all away, and together they've convinced and cajoled plenty of other billionaires to do the same. In 2010, they announced the Giving Pledge, in which hundreds of the world's richest people have committed to giving away half of their money, ushering in an amped up "with great wealth comes great responsibility" paradigm. (Michael Bloomberg, the founder and majority owner of Bloomberg LP, is a Giving Pledge signatory and his philanthropic organisation has worked with the Gates Foundation.)
Today, that idea seems to be falling out of favour. In its place, a new model is bubbling up, driven by a subset of the Silicon Valley elite. It goes something like this: Why donate your money when you've already given so much to society through the technology you've created?
Gates and Buffett felt they were returning something to a system that had allowed them to amass such wealth. The new guard believes it's already contributed more to the system than it will ever get back in return.
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