The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has said it will spend all its assets within 50 years of them both dying, as the trustees want to focus the foundation’s work in the 21st century.
In a statement posted on the charity’s website, dated November 29, the foundation said: ”We will be spending all of our resources within 50 years after the last of Bill’s or Melinda’s death.” The news was reported earlier by the Wall Street Journal.
”The decision to focus all of our resources in this century underscores our optimism for making huge progress and for making sure that we do as much as possible, as soon as possible, on the comparatively narrow set of issues we’ve chosen to focus on,” the foundation said in the statement.
Bill Gates, the world’s richest person, co-founded software company Microsoft. Earlier this year he announced plans to step down from his day-to-day role to focus on his foundation, one of the goals of which is to improve access to technology in United States public libraries. It also focuses on fighting diseases such as HIV/Aids, tuberculosis and malaria.
The foundation also announced in the November 29 statement that it will split its internal structure in two, an asset trust and a programme foundation.
The asset trust will hold the foundation’s endowment, including annual installments of funds from Warren Buffett. It will then fund the programme foundation.
Bill and his wife, Melinda, will be the trustees for the asset trust, and the endowment will continue to be managed by a team of outside investment managers, it said.
The programme foundation will conduct the foundation’s operations and grant-making work, and it is the entity from which all grants will be made. Bill and Melinda Gates and Buffett will be the trustees for the programme foundation.
Buffett, who built the world’s second-biggest personal fortune running Berkshire Hathaway, an insurance and investment company, in June signed over much of his $44-billion fortune to the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
Buffett’s gift to that foundation will be in stages and conditioned on money being distributed the year it is donated. — Reuters