How to be a charitable billionaire

Quote:
[size=18]Buffett donates $37bn to charity[/size]

Billionaire investor Warren Buffett has said he had been waiting for decades to make a huge charitable donation.

Speaking for the first time since revealing he would donate about $37bn (£20bn) to Bill Gates' charitable foundation, he said he was overjoyed.

"This has been coming for fifty years," Mr Buffett said. "There's never really been any other plan in terms of where the money should go."

The donation is thought to be the largest charitable gift ever in the US.

[b]Giving people a chance[/b]

Mr Buffett will hand 10 million shares in his Berkshire Hathaway firm to the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

News of the donation comes shortly after Mr Gates announced he is to step away from his day-to-day role at software giant Microsoft.

The man known as "the sage of Omaha" for his relentless success in investments said he always wanted to give the bulk of his fortune away.

However, he said the appropriate vehicle for doing so do had only become apparent in the past year.

"I am not an enthusiast of dynastic wealth, particularly when the alternative is six billion people having that much poorer hands in life than we have, having a chance to benefit from the money," he said.

Mr Gates said it was Mr Buffett's support for philanthropy which had persuaded him to set up the foundation in the first place.

"It is a big challenge to make sure this money gets used in the right way," he said of the donation.

"But it is one we are thrilled about."

The foundation aims to fight disease and promote education around the world.

By July 2008 Mr Gates, the world's richest businessman, will concentrate on the foundation, which is currently worth just under $30bn.

BBC business editor Robert Peston said the size of the foundation's cash pile dwarfed that of other organisations, and compared it with the $12bn annual budget of the United Nations.

He added that the foundation was "an extraordinary new force in the voluntary sector".

[b]New will[/b]

Mr Buffett is worth an estimated $44bn, according to Forbes magazine.

As well as donating to the Gates foundation, he also pledged shares for his three children and a substantial gift for a foundation named for his late wife, Susan Thompson Buffett.

All the gifts will be awarded yearly, with 5% of each donation passed on each year, it was announced.

He confirmed his decision in letters to the recipients, and said he would write a new will to ensure the money continues to be distributed after his death.

In making his award, Mr Buffett - who plays bridge with Mr Gates - said he chose to distribute his wealth to an existing foundation out of respect for its current work.

One of the terms of the donation is that at least one of Bill or Melinda Gates continues to be involved with the foundation.

The foundation has evolved into one of the leading philanthropical organisations in the world, listing as one of its primary goals "reducing the 'unconscionable disparity' that exists between the way that we live and the way that the people of the developing world live".

[b]Simple life[/b]

Stacy Palmer, editor of the Chronicle of Philanthropy, said that Mr Buffett's donation was the largest made by one person in the US.

She explained that Mr Buffett's largesse eclipses the charitable donations of such well-known givers as John D Rockefeller and Andrew Carnegie.

Despite his huge wealth, Mr Buffett has modest tastes, is called a "cola and hamburger kind of guy", plays the ukulele, and still lives in the same house he bought in his home town of Omaha, Nebraska, in 1957.

Mr Buffett has stated that the death of his wife Susan was one of the reasons behind his donation to the Gates Foundation, because he had thought she would outlive him and handle the dispersal of his wealth.

[url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/5115920.stm]BBC News[/url]

Great work!

[size=10]I feel I'm gonna move on back down south
you know where the water tastes like cherry wine[/size]

{Mr Burns Impression}

excellent

Back in BLACK

I wish I had £37 billion dollars to give away.

:twisted:

But on a serious note, that is hard. Gotta give it to him. He worked hard, and then when he no longer needs it, he plays hard.

Only question is if the Gates Foundation is the best place to donate. Needless to say its his choice.

"For too long, we have been a passively tolerant society, saying to our citizens 'as long as you obey the law, we will leave you alone'" - David Cameron, UK Prime Minister. 13 May 2015.

bill gates is pretty generous too

apparently after his death charity will get more then his kids will