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Posted 9/28/2004

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The Forbes 400
Who's giving it away?

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It's almost unfair. Every time Forbes 400 members cut a check to charity, they fall in the rankings. Here we add that money back.

By David Whelan, Forbes

In 1999 Bill Gates' net worth briefly topped the $100 billion mark. Today his wealth languishes below the $50 billion barrier. Poor guy.

But placing the blame on a dormant Microsoft stock, which is still down more than 50% from its late-1999 high, provides only part of the answer to Gates' decline. The real reason Gates put in play his title to "world's richest man" is his philanthropic giving. As his net worth marched steadily to the 12th digit, all the louder came criticisms that the then-thirtysomething wasn't giving away enough of his fortune to charity.

So over the next three years he relented, donating $23 billion in Microsoft stock to the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Add those shares back, plus his other gifts, and Gates suddenly becomes a whole lot richer -- $76.3 billion to be exact -- making Warren Buffett once again a distant second.
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The Gates Foundation has since made a number of high-profile gifts. But many of the superrich prefer to give out of the spotlight. "Phil and Penny are intensely private people who rarely divulge their philanthropy," e-mails a Nike spokesman, commenting on the charitable giving of his boss, Phil Knight, and Knight's wife.


The Forbes 400: Americas richest individuals
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Eli Broad, who pledged $60 million last year to the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, is skeptical that big shots give anonymously: "I'm not aware of any large gifts that are anonymous." That doesn't prove anything about Phil Knight or any of the others who claim they give lots to charity anonymously.

One thing is clear: Ours is a charitable nation. Without the creation of wealth our system affords, there would be little of the giving that the world depends on.

 Who gives how much
Donated wealthNet worthAdjusted net worth% of wealth given

Bill Gates
$28.3 billion$48 billion$76.3 billion37%
Warren Buffett$321 million$41 billion $41.3 billion 1%
Paul Allen$798 million$20 billion $20.8 billion 4%
Michael Dell$1.3 billion$14.2 billion $15.5 billion 8%
Larry Ellison$151 million$13.7 billion $13.9 billion 1%
Steve Ballmer$23.4 million$12.6 billion $12.6 billion 0%
John Kluge$504 million$11 billion $11.5 billion 4%
Pierre Omidyar$358 million$10.4 billion $10.8 billion 3%
Sumner Redstone$78.4 million$8.1 billion $8.2 billion 1%
Phil Knight$64.8 million$7.4 billion $7.5 billion 1%
George Soros$5.4 billion$7.2 billion$12.6 billion 43%
Eli Broad$1.6 billion$6 billion $7.6 billion 21%
Michael Bloomberg$132 million$4.9 billion $5 billion 3%
David Geffen$183 million$4.4 billion $4.6 billion 4%
Gordon Moore$6.8 billion$3.8 billion $10.6 billion 64%
Steven Spielberg$96.9 million$2.6 billion $2.7 billion4%
Jon Huntsman$497 million$2.3 billion $2.8 billion 18%
Bernard Marcus$263 million$2 billion $2.3 billion 12%
Ted Turner$799 million$1.9 billion $2.7 billion 30%
Alfred Mann$608 million$1.4 billion $2 billion 30%

Source: Forbes
Note: Totals do not include unpaid pledges. All gifts were adjusted into 2004 dollars.



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