Established donors line up to praise Facebook founder as he
promises to give away his fortune
Mark Zuckerberg’s pledge
to devote 99 per cent of his Facebook shares to philanthropic causes was
immediately notable for its size - US$45billion at the current stock price -
but the way he has crafted the promise may ultimately be as significant as the
amount. By
creating a limited liability company to use the money for political activism
and for-profit investing, as well as traditional giving, Mr Zuckerberg revealed
how a new generation of Silicon Valley entrepreneurs may approach the
philanthropic world.
Irish Times report continues:
Established
donors lined up to praise the 31-year-old Facebook founder’s initiative and to
urge other tech entrepreneurs to follow suit, while philanthropy consultants
said Mr Zuckerberg’s use of an LLC would give him wide latitude to pursue his
goal to “advance human potential and promote equality for all children”.
Mr
Zuckerberg and his wife Priscilla Chan announced their plans on Tuesday along
with the birth of their first child, Max, and wrote a public letter to their
daughter promising to make long-term investments, build new technologies and
shape public policy to solve the world’s biggest challenges.
In
an accompanying video filmed sitting on a couch at home, surrounded by family
photographs, and posted on Facebook, Mr Zuckerberg said that improving
education, advancing science and strengthening communities involved “big
complex systems” and that “it is hard to move these things in the short term”.
His
announcement came a day after he joined the Breakthrough Energy Coalition, a
group of billionaires promising to invest in clean energy technology to bridge
a “near impassable valley of death” between promising concepts and viable
products.
In
contrast to traditional foundations, LLCs are able to engage in public policy
advocacy and for-profit investments that can also advance their favoured
causes. The structure will also allow the Zuckerbergs to keep direct control of
the Facebook stock that is contributed to the company, to be called the Chan
Zuckerberg Initiative. The couple say all investment profits will be ploughed
back into additional philanthropic work.
Chan
Zuckerberg Initiative
“The
Chan Zuckerberg Initiative will pursue its mission by funding non-profit organizations,
making private investments and participating in policy debates, in each case
with the goal of generating positive impact in areas of great need,” Facebook
said.
Their
letter to Max, meanwhile, also talks of the benefits of connecting people to
the internet and, through the internet, to each other — key aspects of
Facebook’s business and in-house philanthropic work.
“The
melding of the toolkit is the most promising outcome of all of this,” said Kimberly
Dasher Tripp, a philanthropy consultant. “It is similar to millennials wanting
to go to work and have it mean something. Their work and their giving are
coming together.”
The
US gives generous tax breaks for donations to charity which can be used to
limit capital gains liabilities in particular, although their value depends on
the vehicles used and the timing of gifts and share sales.
Other
Silicon Valley philanthropists to have set up LLCs include Laurene Powell Jobs,
wife of the late Apple chief executive Steve Jobs, and Dustin Moskovitz, Mr
Zuckerberg’s co-founder at Facebook. Their emergence coincides with increased
interest in “impact investing”, which aims to produce a social good as well as
an investment return.
Mr
Moskovitz and his wife, Cari Tuna, also plan to give the vast bulk of their
Facebook fortune away in their lifetime, and have made for-profit investments
in artificial intelligence, grants to promote immigration reform and support
for homelessness charities.
Silicon
Valley is approaching philanthropy the way that tech entrepreneurs take on any
challenge: using data and trial and error tactics - A/B testing in an
engineer’s language - to come up with ambitious and at times unusual answers to
perennial problems. Sean Parker, an early investor in Facebook, who set up his
own foundation earlier this year, called it “hacker philanthropy”.
Mr
Moskovitz and Ms Tuna have supported work by a venture called GiveWell to rank
the impact of different potential investments or grants. “There are really
strong arguments for giving as soon as we can, balanced against our knowing
that the more we learn, the better we’ll get at this,” Ms Tuna said. “We are
trying to share as much as we can about what we are doing and what we are
learning for the benefit of other people who are trying to learn, too.”
Mr
Zuckerberg echoes the sentiment in his video, saying he expected some of his
philanthropic projects to falter. “Like doing anything you want to well in the
world, it just takes practice, you are not going to be perfect at it the first
time,” he said.
Darren
Walker, president of the Ford Foundation, said the Zuckerbergs’ plan for their
Facebook fortune was a “clarion call to a new generation of millennials” to
encourage them to use their wealth for social justice.
Michael Bloomberg, the
billionaire media owner and former New York mayor, said that Mr Zuckerberg had
shown “30 is the new 70” when it comes to philanthropy. “The traditional
approach to giving — leaving it to old age or death — is falling by the
wayside, as it should,” he wrote. “The question is: how many of his peers in
Silicon Valley and beyond will join him?”
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