The Daily Telegraph

Gates: Brexit UK can excel

In an exclusive interview, Bill Gates, the world’s richest man, is more passionate than ever about eliminatin­g global disease

- By Harriet Alexander in Seattle

BRITAIN can retain its place as a world-leading science and technology hub after Brexit, Bill Gates has said, provided the country continues to attract talent and invest in research and developmen­t.

The Microsoft founder, whose philanthro­pic organisati­on has $1 billion (£750 million) invested in British research institutio­ns, warned before the referendum that a vote to leave the European Union could jeopardise the UK’S booming science community. But in an interview with The Daily Telegraph, the world’s richest man said he felt the excellence of Britain’s scientific research could continue, provided care is taken.

Mr Gates, 61, highlighte­d universiti­es in Liverpool, Edinburgh, and London, as well as Cambridge and Oxford – institutio­ns his foundation invests in heavily “because they’re the best at doing lots of this important work”.

Even as a self-proclaimed optimist, Bill Gates must have known it was going to be a hard sell. The man who spent billions reducing poverty worldwide and who last year launched a $1billion clean energy venture fund, was about to meet Donald Trump for the first time – a man who campaigned on an “America First” platform and who criticised the concept of climate change.

When Gates, 61, came out of that meeting last November with his fellow billionair­e, he was hopeful – even likening Mr Trump to JFK.

Ten months later, Gates is seated in the Seattle headquarte­rs of the Gates Foundation, a philanthro­pic organisati­on into which he and his wife, Melinda, have poured more than $31 billion (£25.4 billion) since its inception in 2000.

Donald Trump has since ripped up the Paris climate change deal, restricted the entry of refugees and demanded a budget cut of almost a third to internatio­nal programmes, including the state department and the US Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (USAID).

So, was his initial optimism misplaced?

“Well, everybody wants the president of the US to adopt their cause and get engaged in it,” he said. “And I’ve only had two meetings with him, the one in November and then one in March.”

Gates told The Daily Telegraph that he and his wife are focusing on convincing congressme­n, who ultimately pass the budget, and taking solace from the fact that H.R. Mcmaster and Jim Mattis, the two generals serving as national security adviser and defence secretary, have both made it clear they appreciate that developmen­t is cheaper and more effective than waging war.

“In the US, the executive branch and the congress are somewhat more independen­t of each other than in a parliament­ary system, which in this case is working to our advantage,” he said, “because the executive branch recommenda­tion was a significan­t cut including in HIV, polio, and reproducti­ve health.

“It’s clear that congress prioritise­s this overseas spending – even if you say OK, we only want to do this if we see direct benefit to Americans in reducing pandemics, maintainin­g security, trying to help avoid mass migration…

“Even the Republican­s in congress are very good on: ‘no, we don’t want to withdraw from this leadership that we have’.”

Abandoning the Paris climate change agreement, Gates admitted, was a setback. But he hoped that the US might return, adding: “It is impressive that most other countries have maintained their commitment – including China, including Europe as a whole.”

Today, the Gates Foundation launches its first “Goalkeeper’s Report” on global developmen­t targets and a rallying cry for world leaders to keep up the fight. It is designed to show a sceptical world that money is making a difference.

For example, it says if HIV funding is cut by 10 per cent, 5.6 million people would die.

Malaria deaths fell 60 per cent between 2000 and 2015, to 29 new cases per 1,000 people. If funding was cut, the number would rise to 39 per 1,000 by 2030; if funding continues, it could fall to just five.

Next week Gates will have Barack Obama, Queen Rania of Jordan, and pop star will.i.am behind him as he hosts talks in New York, during the United Nations general assembly.

“Objectivel­y the world is improving,” Gates said. “We say that not because we think people should just blithely take that for granted. It does hang in the balance.

“Often you miss the story of improvemen­t… a natural disaster has a milestone. But a reduction in childhood death? When is it a headline?

“It’s always very gradual… because it’s one life at a time.”

The foundation has 1,500 employees, mainly in Washington state but with offices in London, Washington DC, Beijing, Delhi, Abuja, Addis Ababa and Johannesbu­rg.

The Seattle employees have an airy, Scandinavi­an-style office surrounded by ferns and grass, and courtyards with trickling pools. A living roof covers the car park; the lavatories flush using rainwater.

The campus hums with efficient serenity; Gates himself is said to divide his time into five-minute blocks.

The highest-profile campaign, and biggest single investment, has been against polio. It was eliminated in the US in 1970, but in 1988 there were still 350,000 cases worldwide each year. Last year, there were 37.

The world’s richest man, with a fortune estimated by Forbes at $85.3 billion (£64.8 billion), accepts

‘You have to prove the money is worth spending. My answer is yes’

that times are changing. “We are being questioned more than ever, and the budget framework is tighter than ever. You have to prove the benefit even if you take an American-centric point of view of if the money is worth spending. And my answer is yes.” He paused.

“But we haven’t been forced to make the argument that way quite as strongly as we have now.”

 ??  ?? Entreprene­ur and philanthro­pist Bill Gates is pressing his case for fighting diseases such as Aids and malaria by banging on the doors of the powerful and the influentia­l
Entreprene­ur and philanthro­pist Bill Gates is pressing his case for fighting diseases such as Aids and malaria by banging on the doors of the powerful and the influentia­l
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