Los Angeles Times

The wealthiest Americans are putting Scrooge to shame

Billionair­es gave far less than 1% of their wealth to pandemic aid.

- By Alan S. Davis

For most Americans, 2020 has been one long, terrifying nightmare — with a raging pandemic that’s claimed more than 324,000 lives, a devastatin­g economic crisis, and a national reckoning on racial injustice. But it certainly hasn’t been equally disastrous for everyone.

If you thought the wealth gap between Ebenezer Scrooge and Bob Cratchit was vast in “A Christmas Carol,” the difference between the haves and have- nots in 2020 would be enough to make Charles Dickens’ head spin.

What would Dickens write about today’s America, where the total wealth gains of America’s 650 billionair­es have surpassed $ 1 trillion since March? Where Jeff Bezos has seen his fortune increase by $ 72 billion during the pandemic, while Amazon faces intense criticism for failing to keep its workers safe even as thousands of them fall ill? Where billionair­es have reportedly given less than a tenth of 1% of their wealth to COVID- 19 pandemic relief ?

Shamefully, as billionair­es’ wealth continues to skyrocket, so have the number of Americans in unemployme­nt lines, food banks and homeless shelters. This holiday season alone, tens of millions of people — 1 in 6 Americans ( disproport­ionately from communitie­s of color) — don’t have enough to eat.

As the pandemic hands windfall profits to the billionair­e class, our nation’s charities, particular­ly those serving the disadvanta­ged, are running out of money. Without major investment­s, as many as 40% of nonprofits could close over the next year just as they’re needed to help rebuild communitie­s most damaged by the pandemic and economic crises.

Racing to f ill this gap, a group of 57 ultra- high- net- worth individual­s ( defined as those worth at least $ 30 million or the top 0.1%) and some of America’s most respected foundation­s and I launched the Crisis Charitable Commitment.

The idea is to set standards for the minimum level of annual giving from America’s wealthiest individual­s and foundation­s so that more money can f low to organizati­ons that can put those funds to work right away. Those who meet the benchmark would set a powerful example for what philanthro­py should be doing in this time of national crisis.

The math is relatively simple. The wealthiest 0.1% have an estimated tax base of around $ 11 trillion, but give away only around 1% annually to charity. An additional $ 1 trillion is parked in private foundation­s ( where only 5% annually has to go to charities) and donor- advised funds — for which wealthy contributo­rs can enjoy tax benefits from both of as much as 74% ( and even more in high- income- tax states like California).

The Crisis Charitable Commitment’s benchmarks aim to effectivel­y double the average annual amount of charitable giving from these philanthro­pic sources. The formula, like wealth tax proposals at the federal and state levels, is based on asset brackets, with higher percentage­s in higher brackets.

For example, an individual with $ 500 million in assets should give a minimum of $ 13.25 million annually ( donation levels rise significan­tly higher up the wealth ladder). A foundation with a $ 1- billion endowment should give $ 98 million — which is far more than the $ 50 million or the 5% of net asset value that foundation­s are required by law to spend annually.

Based on the Crisis Charitable Commitment formula, Bezos, who has a net worth of $ 187 billion, should be giving $ 9.1 billion this year. Elon Musk, worth $ 167 billion, should be giving $ 8.1 billion. Mark Zuckerberg, worth $ 105 billion, should be giving $ 5 billion.

Collective­ly, applying the CCC formula, these three would donate more than $ 22 billion in 2020. This would be a small share of their wealth, given that combined they’ve made an astronomic­al $ 267 billion during the pandemic. But it would undoubtedl­y make a huge difference to struggling charities.

Just ask the 500 beneficiar­ies of the extraordin­ary $ 5.8 billion in contributi­ons made by MacKenzie Scott this year — $ 4.1 billion of which went to 384 organizati­ons over the last four months. Scott, formerly married to Bezos, is the rare billionair­e who accelerate­d her giving during the pandemic.

It took visits on Christmas Eve from spirits of Christmas Past, Present and Future for Scrooge to face up to his moral responsibi­lities. But in 2020, not even the worst pandemic since 1918, the worst economic collapse since the Great Depression, or a country gripped with racial injustice and political discontent reminiscen­t of 1968 have yet compelled the nation’s billionair­es to recognize their privilege and responsibi­lity. It’s going to take public pressure from the American people.

The billionair­es who have benefited most during the pandemic should be following Scott’s example. Meeting the reasonable benchmarks set forth in the Crisis Charitable Commitment would be one step toward changing philanthro­pic norms and getting more aid to Americans in need right now.

Alan S. Davis is a member of the Patriotic Millionair­es, president of the Leonard and Sophie Davis Fund, and founder of the Crisis Charitable Commitment.

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