Nelson Mail

Gates gifts open path for Bezos to seize top spot

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UNITED STATES: Bill Gates is losing hold of his title as the world’s richest person, with Amazon founder Jeff Bezos once again mounting a challenge for the top spot. But if Gates weren’t so philanthro­pic, it wouldn’t even be close.

Gates has a net worth of US$86.8 billion (NZ$121.7b) on the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index. But he would be worth US$150b (NZ$210b) if he hadn’t given away almost 700 million Microsoft Corp shares and US$2.9b of cash and other assets to charity, according to an analysis of his publicly disclosed giving since 1996.

And if not for more than a decade of donating Berkshire Hathaway shares to charity, Warren Buffett, who is ranked No 3 in the index with US$80.6b (NZ$113b), would be right behind Gates with US$135b (NZ$189b).

Bezos, who passed Gates for a few hours earlier this year, has a net worth of US$85.3b (NZ$119.6b), according to the Bloomberg index, a daily ranking of the world’s 500 richest people.

‘‘Bill Gates and Warren Buffett have a set a new bar in terms of the raw scale of their giving,’’ said Jacob Harold, chief executive officer of GuideStar, a non-profit that collects informatio­n on charities. ‘‘I hope and anticipate that that’s a bar that’s going to be exceeded some day. Maybe not in the near future, but at some point. The sheer scale of it is truly remarkable.’’

Both Gates, 61, and Buffett, 87, have done most of their giving through the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, which aims to improve global issues like health care and poverty. The foundation has made US$41b in direct grants, including to GuideStar, and holds assets worth US$40.3b, according to the charity’s website.

Gates and Buffett also founded the Giving Pledge in 2010, and have been joined by 168 others who have committed to give most of their wealth to charity.

Still, billionair­e philanthro­py makes up a small piece of total giv- ing. Last year, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation gave away US$4.3b, a little more than 1 per cent of the US$390b donated to charities in the US, according to data from the Giving Institute. American individual­s provided more than 72 per cent of charitable funding.

Bezos, 53, is just starting to focus on philanthro­py, and in June he tweeted a request for ideas on how to help people now.

Since 2002, Bezos has given away Amazon shares worth at least US$400m (NZ$561m) at current prices, according to a Bloomberg analysis of Form 4 shareholde­r filings.

The billionair­e said in April that he sells US$1b worth of Amazon stock every year to fund his space business Blue Origin. He sold that amount one month later.

Bezos and Spanish retailer Amancio Ortega have challenged the hold Gates has had on the top spot since May 2013. Ortega, whose net worth peaked at US$85.9b in June, has since fallen behind Buffett to the No 4 spot with a net worth of US$79.8b (NZ$112b).

- Washington Post

Wildfire toll increases

Firefighte­rs began to gain ground yesterday against wildfires that have killed at least 31 people in northern California and left hundreds missing in the heart of the state’s wine country. The latest casualty figure marks the greatest loss life from a single California wildfire in 84 years. With 3500 homes and businesses incinerate­d, the so-called North Bay fires also rank among the most destructiv­e in the state’s history. The home of Peanuts creator Charles Schulz was among those that burned to the ground in Sonoma County, but his widow escaped, her stepson said.

Chief of staff staying put

White House chief of staff John Kelly yesterday slapped down rumours that he was about to resign or be fired, and said his push to bring more order to the West Wing does not extend to controllin­g US President Donald Trump or his social media habits. Kelly replaced Trump’s first chief of staff, Reince Priebus, after a tumultuous first six months in office and sought to bring order to an often chaotic operation at the White House. Under his watch, Trump parted ways with chief strategist Steve Bannon and other top officials, while new restrictio­ns were set to streamline meetings and material for the president. But reports of both Kelly’s and the president’s frustratio­ns have persisted, sparking continued speculatio­n of pending shakeups.

Activist ‘was murdered’

An anti-apartheid activist who died 46 years ago when he fell from the 10th floor of a Johannesbu­rg police station was murdered by the South African security services, a judge has ruled. The judgment that Ahmed Timol, 29, a teacher and member of the armed wing of the African National Congress, did not commit suicide in 1971 paves the way for similar cases to be reopened. The ruling is the first time that the authoritie­s have overturned an apartheid-era verdict on a death in custody.

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Bill Gates

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