National Post

Bezos fund will make ‘the child the customer’

Amazon CEO, wife launch $2B initiative

- Molly Schuetz

Jeff Bezos and his wife MacKenzie Bezos launched a US$2-billion fund to help homeless families and create a network of non-profit preschools in low-income communitie­s.

The move catapults the world’s richest person into a rarefied group of billionair­e mega-donors at a time when his company, Amazon.com

Inc., faces growing scrutiny over its rising power and impact on the economy.

The Bezos Day One Fund will focus on two initiative­s, the billionair­e announced in an online post Thursday. The first will fund existing non-profits and issue annual awards to organizati­ons doing “compassion­ate, needlemovi­ng work” to shelter and support the immediate needs of young families. The second will operate a network of high-quality, full-scholarshi­p Montessori-inspired preschools. The fund’s vision statement comes from nonprofit Mary’s Place in Seattle: no child sleeps outside.

“We’ll use the same set of principles that have driven Amazon,” wrote Bezos. “Most important among those will be genuine, intense customer obsession. The child will be the customer.”

With a personal fortune of US$163.8 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index, the Amazon chief executive had been largely invisible in the world of philanthro­py. His net worth has risen by US$64.7 billion this year alone as Amazon’s shares surged. Bezos’ relative silence was a stark contrast to peers like Bill Gates, whose foundation is the world’s largest, and Warren Buffett, who has vowed to give away the majority of his wealth.

Last year, Bezos solicited advice from the public via Twitter, asking how he could best use his wealth to help people “right now.” At the time, he said he was interested in projects that address urgent need but also produce lasting impact. The missive set off a frenzy of responses, including pleas to support health care, loan forgivenes­s and even offbeat appeals to back a leather fetish museum in Chicago.

Until now, Bezos, 54, had only taken small steps into philanthro­py. The Bezos Family Foundation, best known for supporting children’s education, has been largely funded by his parents from Amazon holdings they acquired as early investors in their son’s enterprise. Outside of that, Bezos and his family’s known donations have included gifts to Princeton University and Seattle’s Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, according to the Chronicle of Philanthro­py.

It’s not surprising that the world’s richest person “is finally getting serious about philanthro­py,” said David Callahan, founder of website Inside Philanthro­py. “With big fortunes like that, the only thing you can really do is give it away — unless you want the government to take half of it through estate tax.”

The staggering fortunes of the likes of Bezos, Gates and Facebook Inc. CEO Mark Zuckerberg have created a second Gilded Age in the U.S. and “a new generation of mega-givers,” Callahan said. “It was only a matter of time before Bezos would join this new era of big philanthro­py.”

The Bezos gift is one of the biggest single donations ever announced for preschools, if not the biggest, said Avo Makdessian, director of the Silicon Valley Community Foundation’s Center for Early Learning. As with most investment decisions by the Amazon founder, this one was likely grounded in data and science. Research shows 90 per cent of a child’s brain developmen­t occurs before the age of five, yet most charitable gifts pegged for education target older children, according to Makdessian.

Some of the world’s richest people have begun giving away their wealth while still running companies, while others embrace philanthro­py full-time after stepping away from day-to-day business. Increasing­ly, the wealthy want to see their charitable giving put to work on immediate needs.

Gates didn’t fully throw himself into philanthro­py until he stepped down as CEO of Microsoft Corp. in 2000. Since then, he and his wife have built the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, which had an endowment of US$51 billion at the end of 2017 and pledges to spend all its resources within 20 years of its founders’ deaths. Zuckerberg, 34, and his wife Priscilla Chan said in 2015 that they planned to give away 99 per cent of their Facebook stock. Zuckerberg’s shares in the social network are currently valued at about US$61 billion.

Some 184 of the world’s wealthiest individual­s and families, including Tesla Inc.’s Elon Musk and the co-founders of Airbnb Inc., have joined The Giving Pledge, a commitment started by Gates and Buffett to give away at least half their wealth. Michael Bloomberg, the owner of Bloomberg LP, parent of Bloomberg News, also is a signatory.

 ?? GALIT RODAN / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Uber CEO Dara Khosrowsha­hi at the company’s Toronto offices on Thursday. A new product — dubbed “Uber Express Pool” — launched Thursday in Toronto.
GALIT RODAN / THE CANADIAN PRESS Uber CEO Dara Khosrowsha­hi at the company’s Toronto offices on Thursday. A new product — dubbed “Uber Express Pool” — launched Thursday in Toronto.

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