Bill Gates
"Bill
Gates is one of the richest people in the world. But he and his wife
Melinda aren't interested in keeping their money for themselves, or for
their three children.
"I knew I didn't think it was a good idea
to give the money to my kids. That wouldn't be good either for my kids
or society," he told The Sun in 2010.
Instead, the Bill &
Melinda Gates Foundation was founded in 1994, and today has assets of
over $37 billion. The Foundation even started "The Giving Pledge," which
invites other wealthy individuals to join the Gates' lead and donate
half their money to charity. "
Warren Buffett
"As
an incredibly wealthy investor and philanthropist, Buffett has pledged
to give away 99% of his wealth, either during his life or when he dies.
He started by promising 83% of it to the Gates Foundation, according to
FORTUNE Magazine.
The Oracle of Omaha isn't worried about his
children not getting their fair share. Echoing a common sentiment on
this list, Buffett said in his letter to the Gates Foundation: "I want
to give my kids just enough so that they would feel that they could do
anything, but not so much that they would feel like doing nothing."
EBay founder Pierre Omidyar
Ever
since Omidyar became a billionaire when he was 31 years old, the eBay
founder has made it his life's work to donate the majority of his money
to those less fortunate instead of to his three children, according to
Forbes.
He signed the Gates and Buffett Giving Pledge in 2010,
and continuously gives eBay shares to the Omidyar Network, his
philanthropic investment firm.
He and his wife Pam are also the single biggest private donors to the fight against the human trafficking industry.
New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg
Bloomberg
gets paid $1 a year for his government duties because with a net worth
of $19.5 billion, he's pretty much set financially.
But
Bloomberg is also an avid philanthropist, having donated millions to
Johns Hopkins University, the Carnegie Corporation, and thousands of
other non-profits.
In his letter to The Giving Pledge, Bloomberg
wrote that "nearly all of my net worth will be given away in the years
ahead or left to my foundation."
Bloomberg's two daughters,
however, may be left to foot the bill upon his death. Bloomberg once
said, "the best financial planning ends with bouncing the check to the
undertaker."
Rockstar Gene Simmons
The
bassist for KISS, one of the best-selling American bands of all time,
is a self-made man. He was born in Israel, moved to Queens with his
mother, and started a group that would end up compiling 28 gold records
over the years.
Simmons wants the same path for his two kids,
Nick and Sophie. He told CNBC several years ago: "...in terms of an
inheritance and stuff, they're gonna be taken care of, but they will
never be rich off my money. Because every year they should be forced to
get up out of bed, and go out and work and make their own way."
So the $300 million bucks that belong to Simmons will be headed somewhere else upon his death.
Australian iron magnate Gina Rinehart
Rinehart — the richest woman in Australia — wants to cut her children out of their inheritance.
She herself inherited her company and fortune from her father, Lang Hancock, and her children were also named in his estate.
But
court documents in the Australian media show that Rinehart doesn't
believe her four kids are fit to manage the family fortune.
“None
of the plaintiffs has the requisite capacity or skill, nor the
knowledge, experience, judgment or responsible work ethic to administer a
trust in the nature of the trust in particular as part of the growing
HPPL Group,” she once claimed in court papers.
Actor Jackie Chan
The
movie star announced in 2011 that he had decided to give away half his
money to charity when he dies. Chan added that he was not planning on
leaving his son Jaycee any of the millions of dollars he has made during
his film career.
"If he is capable, he can make his own money.
If he is not, then he will just be wasting my money," Channel NewsAsia
quoted Chan as saying.
Home Depot co-founder Bernard Marcus
Bernard Marcus, left
Marcus
grew up in Newark, New Jersey to Russian immigrant parents, and went on
to start Home Depot. His retail success helped him accumulate $1.5
billion in net worth. His philanthropic efforts include funding the
Georgia Aquarium and starting the Marcus Foundation.
Not wanting
his kids to inherit large sums of money — for their own good, he told
Forbes — Marcus plans on giving the majority of his Home Depot stock to
his foundation, which benefits the handicapped and education.
Businessman Chuck Feeney
Chuck
Feeney is the the co-founder of Duty-Free Shoppers Group (those airport
shops), and was one of the world's billionaires in the late 1980s until
he transferred all his wealth to his foundation, Atlantic
Philanthropies, according to Forbes.
Before giving away their
inheritance, he also went to great lengths to teach his children the
value of saving money, including making his kids chat with their friends
on payphones, work during their vacations, and work through college,
according to The Daily Mail.
Today, it's rumored Feeney doesn't
even own a house or a car. He once famously told The New York Times, "I
want the last check I write to bounce."
British Chef Nigella Lawson
Lawson
is a best-selling author and TV personality, which made her a
millionaire even before she married (and then later divorced) wealthy
advertising tycoon and art collector Charles Saatchi.
Though
Lawson herself comes from a wealthy background, she seems to be a firm
believer in not giving her two children that same advantage. She came
under fire for saying, "I am determined that my children should have no
financial security. It ruins people not having to earn money."
She
followed up that statement by saying she didn't plan on leaving her
kids "destitute," but stood by the idea that they would have to support
themselves after school ended.
Media mogul Ted Turner
Turner is such a prominent philanthropist that he is as famous for giving away money as he is for making it.
After
accumulating his wealth through the founding of media outlets like CNN
and TBS, Turner has gone on to give literally billions of dollars to
causes like the United Nations Foundation.
Turner has five
children from three marriages, but they shouldn't expect a large
endowment once he passes. Whether jokingly or not, Turner was quoted in
2010 as saying he was "almost to the edge of poverty" and just wants
enough money to cover funeral expenses when he dies.
Hedge fund manager John Arnold
John
Arnold may only be 40 years old, but last October he closed his hedge
fund, Centaurus Energy, and retired after amassing an estimated wealth
of $4 billion over the last 10 years.
Now, Arnold and his wife
Laura have dedicated the rest of their lives to giving away that wealth
through their foundation to support innovative ideas, instead of to
their three children.
"Because of our backgrounds and because of
our own experiences, we just don't believe in dynastic wealth," said
Laura Arnold in an interview posted on givesmart.org.
British composer Andrew Lloyd Webber
Having
racked up hundreds of millions of dollars and becoming a knight thanks
to his work as a theater composer, Webber wants to use that money to
encourage teaching the arts.
Webber once said that "(A will) is
one thing you do start to think about when you get to my age. I don't
think it should be about having a whole load of rich children and
grandchildren. I think it should be used as a way to encourage the
arts."
His five children will be "taken care of," but the majority of the estate will go towards arts programs.
Director and producer George Lucas
Lucas
signed on to Bill Gates and Warren Buffett's Giving Pledge back in July
of 2010, promising to give at least half of his wealth away by the time
of his death.
“I am dedicating the majority of my wealth to improving education,” Lucas wrote in his pledge letter.
The
father of four also said in a statement that he would donate the $4
billion+ Disney paid him to acquire Lucas Films to charity as well.
Texas oil and gas magnate T. Boone Pickens
Pickens
spent his whole life — from delivering newspapers to taking over Gulf
Oil — making money via acquisition. The corporate raider now has a net
worth of $1.4 billion because of it.
So it's no surprise that
Pickens isn't in favor of handing his money over for free, even to his
children. Pickens is one of America's billionaires to take The Giving
Pledge, donating at least half of his money to charity.
And when
asked about leaving money for his kids, he had this to say: "I've long
stated that I enjoy making money, and I enjoy giving it away...I'm not a
big fan of inherited wealth. It generally does more harm than good."
No comments:
Post a Comment