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We'll be richer if our last cheque bounces - Andrew Taylor
April 1, 2012
"Wealthy
Australians need to start giving more" ... Simon Mordant. Photo: Danielle Smith
The 19th-century American steel baron Andrew Carnegie said:
''The man who dies rich dies
disgraced.'' It might become a fitting epitaph for Simon Mordant, the
Sydney financier and leading philanthropist who plans to take none of his
fortune with him.
Mr Mordant is rich. He is a multi-millionaire. But he does not plan to die that
way.
''I hope my last cheque bounces,'' he told The Sun-Herald. ''I want to die with
nothing.''
So Mr Mordant plans to give it all away before he dies. And he has made a good
start. He and his wife, Catriona, gave $15 million to the Museum of Contemporary
Art two years ago, rescuing the gallery's long-delayed plans to redevelop the
1940s former Maritime Services building at Circular Quay. The Mordants'
generosity was instrumental in pushing the federal and NSW governments to each
contribute $13 million to the $53 million MCA extension, or Mordant Wing, which
opened on Thursday and attracted big crowds yesterday.
Mr Mordant, 52, wants to encourage other rich Australians to start giving more
of their wealth to charities and philanthropic causes. The MCA chairman is
disturbed by research that suggests 40 per cent of Australians earning more than
$1 million a year give nothing to charity.
''That is an appalling statistic,'' he said. ''I hope over the next short while,
and I really mean short while, the culture starts to change.
Wealthy Australians need to start giving
more.''
Mr Mordant is equally determined on the question of bequeathing wealth. ''My
wife and I don't believe in inheritance,'' he said. Their 21-year-old son,
Angus, a photographer, ''understands what our philosophy is and he respects our
view''.
''We're hoping that his passion and ambition will lead to his own successes.
We're putting back into the community while we're alive and the success of our
endeavours will be measured by whether our last cheque bounces.''
Only six in 10 of the wealthiest
Australians give money to charity and philanthropic causes, according to a 2008
report by researchers at the Australian Centre of Philanthropy and Nonprofit
Studies at the Queensland University of Technology.
''Given the propensity of this group to benefit from professional tax advisers
and utilise the tax system, some 40 per cent are likely to be engaged in minimal
- if any - giving,'' the report said.
Mordant, the co-chief executive of corporate advisory firm Greenhill Caliburn,
is among a small but growing chorus of wealthy individuals make this call.
The 2011 Australian of the Year and
investment banker Simon McKeon says the lack of generous giving by Australia's
richest individuals is ''the elephant in the room''. Last year, the millionaire
entrepreneur Dick Smith threatened to name and shame the selfish rich who aren't
giving back to their community. However, he told The Sun-Herald his campaign had
not had much effect. ''It makes me sick to 'out' people,'' Mr Smith said. ''I
don't like it. But I see it as an obligation. If you've done well, it's only
because of the social capital of this country.
''It's beyond comprehension to me how someone could be worth $100 million or
even a billion dollars and not be delighted to give at least 10 per cent of
their income away.''
Mr Smith has previously said that he and his wife, Pip Smith, donate about $1
million or more a year. He told The Sun-Herald that he too hoped to give away
all of his money before he died. Asked what his children thought of this, he
responded: ''Well, they haven't disowned me.''
Wealthy Americans were considered social
pariahs if they did not give generously, Mr Smith said.
The billionaire investor Warren Buffett
has pledged to donate 99 per cent of his net worth, while Bill and Melinda Gates
are giving away 95 per cent. Mr Buffett and the Gateses have challenged
America's other billionaires to give half of their wealth to charity. According
to Mr Buffett, ''a very rich person should leave his kids enough to do anything,
but not enough to do nothing''.
The Mordants' wealth is not in the same league as Mr Buffett's. Mr Mordant, one
of three founders of the Caliburn Partnership, shared a third of $200 million
when the US boutique investment bank Greenhill & Co bought their independent
advisory firm M&A.
Australia topped the 2010 World Giving
Index of 153 countries in terms of people's willingness to give money, and was
third-most generous last year. Mr Mordant said the millions donated to tsunami,
bushfire and flood victims showed Australians as a whole were ''extremely
generous''. But the wealthy were not giving enough.
''I'm very passionate to see wealthy people in Australia, and there are a lot,
start to give back to the community,'' Mr Mordant said. ''I don't have a view
about what people should give back, but a great deal of wealth has been created
in Australia, particularly over the last 20 years.''
That assessment is supported by a senior researcher at the Australian Centre of
Philanthropy and Nonprofit Studies, Wendy Scaife. However, Dr Scaife cautions
against demonising rich Australians who are not yet involved in philanthropy.
''Giving should be voluntary and joyful, and people may not have been asked in
the right way by the right person for the right cause that is important to
them.''
The former Microsoft executive Daniel
Petre was less forgiving when he told The Sydney Morning Herald last year: ''Our
wealthy in Australia are morally bankrupt. Generally speaking, they don't see a
moral obligation to give generously to the society in which they've built their
wealth.''
An analysis in Harold Mitchell's review of private sector support for the arts,
by the social researcher Hugh Mackay, supports the view that wealthy Australians
are tight. Mr Mackay said the ''ultra-rich'', earning more than $1 million a
year, gave less than 2 per cent of their income to charity, compared with a
global average of 10 per cent. ''The explosion in high earnings over the past 25
years means the nouveau riche have appeared in large numbers, often behaving as
newly wealthy people typically do - wallowing in a sense of entitlement, being
self-indulgent, being reluctant to help those less fortunate then they … and
being inclined to equate wealth with worth.''
Mr Mordant is Australia's commissioner for the 2013 Venice Biennale and sits on
the boards of the Sydney Theatre Company and the Garvan Research Foundation. He
applauds the Mitchell review for suggesting ways to make philanthropy easier,
including tax benefits for cash gifts in a will and reducing red tape in the
Cultural Gifts program.
But he said: ''Governments have generally done terrific things to facilitate an
effective giving environment. The key thing is the culture needs to change and
people need to feel a sense of social responsibility.''
Apart from the MCA, the Mordants have given to Beyond Empathy, which runs arts
programs for disadvantaged youth. Mr Mordant was made a Member of the Order of
Australia in this year's Australia Day honours for service to the arts and to
the cultural environment.
''We believe strongly in the arts and get a great deal of pleasure in trying to
effect change in areas we are passionate about,'' he said.
Sharing their riches
Bill Gates, 56
Net worth: $61 billion*
Ranking among world billionaires: 2 on theForbes list
Has given away $28 billion, with a focus on eradicating polio, developing a
malaria vaccine and preventing meningitis, pneumonia and diarrhoea in developing
countries. In 2009, Gates and Warren Buffett challenged America's billionaires
to pledge at least 50 per cent of their net worth to charity during their
lifetime or death.
''Is the rich world aware of how 4 billion of the 6 billion live? If we were
aware, we would want to help out, we'd want to get involved.''
Warren Buffett, 81
Net worth: $44 billion*
Ranking: 3
Has pledged to give more than 99 per cent of his wealth to charity.
''The reaction of my family and me to our extraordinary good fortune is not
guilt, but rather gratitude. Were we to use more than 1 per cent of my claim
cheques on ourselves, neither our happiness nor our wellbeing would be enhanced.
In contrast, that remaining 99 per cent can have a huge effect on the health and
welfare of others.''
Larry Ellison, 67
Net worth: $36 billion*
Ranking: 6
The Oracle founder started the Ellison Medical Foundation in 1997 for biomedical
research. In 2010 he donated $45.1 million.
''I have long believed that charitable giving is a personal and private matter.
So why am I going public now? Warren Buffett … said I would be 'setting an
example' and 'influencing others' to give. I hope he's right.''
Michael R. Bloomberg, 70
Net worth: $22 billion*
Ranking: 20
The founder of Bloomberg LP and mayor of New York City has given more than $100
million annually since 2004 to nearly 1000 not-for-profit groups.
''The reality of great wealth is that you can't spend it and you can't take it
with you. Making a difference in people's lives - and seeing it with your own
eyes - is perhaps the most satisfying thing you'll ever do. If you want to fully
enjoy life - give.''
David Rockefeller snr, 96
Net worth: $2.5 billion*
Ranking: 491
Rockefeller gives to institutions linked to his family. Beneficiaries have
included New York's Museum of Modern Art (which his parents helped establish),
Rockefeller University, Harvard University, the Americas Society and the Council
on Foreign Relations.
''Our family continues to be united in the belief that those who have benefited
the most from our nation's economic system have a special responsibility to give
back to our society in meaningful ways.''
* Figures for March 2012.
Source: Forbes; givingpledge.org
Read more:
http://www.smh.com.au/national/well-be-richer-if-our-last-cheque-bounces-20120331-1w53p.html#ixzz1qxLgR85N
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