Philanthropy as Infrastructure?
As a society, we should not encourage the replacement of public responsibilities by private philanthropy.
Philanthropy as infrastructure is a bad idea. As a society, we should not encourage the replacement of public responsibilities by private philanthropy. Philanthropy is fickle, it’s too small and fragmented, and it’s under the control of a few—it’s not democratic. Philanthropy’s strengths, in an ecosystem of funding options (public funding, commercial capital, and philanthropy), are choice, independence, and experimentation. But those strengths become its weaknesses when one posits it as a replacement for public funding.
Of course, the key issue of our day is what is the “public responsibility?” Libertarians such as Ron Paul argue that the list of public responsibilities should be as small as possible—smaller government is what we need, and we should leave business to do as much as possible. For example, today’s NY Times reports that Paul wants to do away with the TSA and have airlines provide security. He believes that market pressures would induce the competing airlines to provide just enough security screening to be safe but not so much as to be intrusive. Given that security is a present day operating cost balanced against a potential future threat, I’d argue that the airlines would cut, slice, and eventually abandon security measures as quickly as possible, as they incur costs against the bottom line.
Yesterday’s Wall Street Journal ran an op-ed suggesting that philanthropists start building bridges and investing in the nation’s physical infrastructure. Just a few weeks ago I had a conversation with two colleagues about the “minimal viable role” of government. Defense spending was in there. So were roads. I guess I overestimated.
How about loans for businesses? Starbucks is working with Community Development Institutions (CDFIs) to launch what could become a significant loan program for small businesses. The “create jobs” plan is good—it has good leverage, gives everyday people a chance to engage, and could actually provide meaningful resources. But don’t fool yourself into thinking that a $5 donation to your coffee vendor is going to save the economy. CDFIs grew out of the mutual aid efforts of immigrant communities a century ago, they were boosted significantly by government support in the 1960s and have drawn significant private capital ever since. Their existence reflects a relationship between government, private capital, communities, and philanthropy. They’ve become core parts of the nation’s commitment to communities and small businesses (even if Howard Schultz had not ever heard of them until recently). Starbucks’ philanthropy can expand this, build on it, and engage everyday people in it—that’s all good. But it can only do so because of the base of institutions that government itself helped build and the regulations that require banks to pay some attention to communities.
Philanthropy has a role in the ecosystem of funding for public goods. It is one key way that we use private resources for public goods—volunteering and impact investing are two others. Claims that philanthropy can replace public funding fail to understand its actual scope and potential. Counting on it to provide core public services is, among other things, simply undemocratic.







Proposed new rules by the Treasury Department and the IRS would make it easier for philanthropies to make Program Related Investments.
How do we ensure that philanthropic subsidies in impact investing are put to productive use?
Foundations are shifting the conversation about their work and impact.




COMMENTS
BY Ash Roughani, California Moderate Party
ON October 19, 2011 03:16 PM
There are some good points here, but people want a government that works and they’re not going to support more investment in a system that they perceive to be broken. And it’s not necessarily the case that the private sector is inherently “better” at managing toward results, but they generally don’t have to deal with the red tape and bureaucracy that inhibits innovation in the public sector. Supporting political, fiscal, and public management reforms would go a long way toward restoring the public trust necessary for greater investment.
BY Aaron Hurst, Taproot Foundation
ON October 20, 2011 07:54 AM
Michael Bloomberg, at an event I attended a few years ago, shared a story that really illustrates your point. I don’t remember all the details but here is the basic outline.
A hedge fund CEO approached the mayor and shared his concerns about the state of education in NYC. He announced that he was going to raise $25 million to fix education in the city.
Bloomberg thanked him for his pasison and concern. He then shared that there are over 1 million students in NYC public schools and the school budget is $21 billion. While he appreciates all the help he can get, no noprofit or philanthropists can “fix education in NYC.” While $25 million is a lot of money, compared to the $21 billion budget it is only 1% and can’t address the fundemental issues.
He then stated the imporant role however that foundations and nonprofits can play in R&D, civic engagement, advocacy and supplemental programs.