Philanthropy
Media Tycoon, Former NYC Mayor Continues Mega-Gift Trend

A trend of eye-popping financial bequests to elite US academic and research institutions continues, drawing attention to the business and governance involved with big gifts.
The trend of Wall Street tycoons showering cash on academic and
other institutions continues with reports that former New York
City mayor, media tycoon and a potential Democratic presidential
candidate, Michael Bloomberg,
is giving $1.8 billion to John Hopkins
University.
The university was Bloomberg’s undergraduate alma mater.
Bloomberg has so far given $1.5 billion to the university over
the years and the latest $300 million transfer takes the total to
$1.8 billion.
It follows a number of big gifts to such bodies in the US in
recent years, a process that has also been touched by controversy
when donors fall out with recipients over the alleged original
purpose of their largesse. (See
a story on Family Wealth Report, the US sister news
service to this one.)
The Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health late last
week said that Bloomberg Philanthropies, which Bloomberg created,
will give $300 million to create the Bloomberg American Health
Initiative. The gift coincides with the 100th anniversary of the
founding of the school.
Bloomberg was the chairman of the university’s board of trustees
from 1996 to 2002 and was previously chair of the Johns Hopkins
Initiative fundraising campaign. “Bloomberg is believed to be the
first person ever to reach this level of giving to a single US
institution of higher education. His first Johns Hopkins gift was
$5 in 1965, a year after he received his bachelor’s degree in
engineering from the university,” John Hopkins said in a
statement.
Projects enabled by his money include the Bloomberg Distinguished
Professors, appointed across two or more schools to ensure
collaboration at the highest levels, and the Charlotte R.
Bloomberg Children’s Center, a 12-story, 560,000-square-foot
tower at the Johns Hopkins Hospital, which opened in 2012.
The tycoon and politician has acquired something of a reputation
for speaking out on health issues, such as taking a
hard-line stance while mayor on enforcing anti-smoking bans
in New York City (to the annoyance of more libertarian-minded
voters) and calling for controls on sugar-rich drinks.
The amounts involved in modern philanthropy, even allowing for inflation compared with the era of the Rockefellers, Mellons and Guggenheims, are large. In May last year, 14 billionaires said they had signed the Giving Pledge, formally joining the 154 other billionaires who have pledged to transfer at least half of their vast wealth to philanthropic causes. The Giving Pledge was started in 2010 by Bill and Melinda Gates and Warren Buffett (source: CNBC, May 31). At that time, the Gateses were worth a collective $88.5 billion, and Buffett worth $74.2 billion (source: CNBC, May 31, 2017).