The three children of the Oracle of Omaha, already among the nation’s biggest givers, could end up giving away as much as $130 billion of their father’s fortune. Here’s what you need to know about their philanthropy so far.
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LifestyleTranscript
00:00Today on Forbes, meet the most powerful philanthropists in America, Warren Buffett's kids.
00:08Wearing a protective vest, cargo pants, and a helmet, Howard Buffett, the 69-year-old son of billionaire investor Warren Buffett,
00:16holds a camera up to his face with one eye closed.
00:19To his right, a soldier huddles under tarps draped in a tree that forms a makeshift shelter.
00:25A patchy layer of snow covers the ground.
00:28Buffett is in an undisclosed location in the Donetsk Oblast region of eastern Ukraine,
00:33taking photos for a book he published earlier this year via his Howard G. Buffett Foundation.
00:39Called Courage of a Nation, the 220-page book contains pictures that Buffett, an avid photographer,
00:46took in Ukraine during 10 trips to the war-torn country in the first two years after Russia's invasion in February 2022.
00:54His charitable foundation has funneled hundreds of millions of dollars in assistance to the country,
00:59primarily for food security and conflict mitigation.
01:02Just last year, it distributed roughly a quarter of a billion dollars to groups operating in Ukraine.
01:08And it's on track to donate another $800 million to those efforts this year, Buffett told Yahoo Finance last month.
01:15In his foundation's 2023 annual report, Buffett wrote,
01:20In Ukraine, we are currently responding to the humanitarian crisis created by the full-scale invasion by Russia,
01:26but we have ideas of the role it can play when the war ends and the hard work of recovery begins.
01:32For years, Howard and his siblings, Susie and Peter, have quietly given away their father's money in a big but very low-key way,
01:40so much so that few have noted just how much of an impact they've made.
01:45Between 2001 and 2023, the trio received nearly $7.9 billion in Berkshire Hathaway shares
01:52and have given away at least $7.4 billion through their charitable foundations, more than $2.2 billion apiece.
02:00The siblings' lifetime giving would land them on Forbes' 2024 list of the country's 25 Most Generous Philanthropists,
02:07ahead of Charles Koch and Home Depot co-founder Bernie Marcus.
02:11These figures don't include $8.8 billion in charitable distributions from 2001 to 2023
02:18by the Susan Thompson Buffett Foundation, named after Warren's first wife, who died in 2004.
02:24The foundation is reportedly the largest private U.S. donor to reproductive health groups
02:29and is chaired by their daughter, Susie Buffett.
02:32The spotlight is only going to shine brighter on the siblings in the years to come.
02:37Last year, their 93-year-old father said he was appointing them as future distributors of one of the world's largest fortunes,
02:44nearly $130 billion in Berkshire Hathaway stock, as part of his will.
02:49Buffett recently told The Wall Street Journal that the siblings will oversee a charitable trust
02:54that will hold nearly all of Warren Buffett's assets when he dies.
02:58It's not clear why Buffett chose his three children to give away his fortune upon his death,
03:03which has more than 2,000 employees and an infrastructure in place
03:07that enabled it to distribute nearly $8 billion last year.
03:11In 2006, Buffett wrote public letters to Bill and Melinda Gates and to his children,
03:16promising to give each of their foundations a portion of his Berkshire Hathaway shares every June,
03:21with the bulk of the donation going to the Gates Foundation.
03:24At one point in the letter to Bill and Melinda, Buffett referred to it as a, quote,
03:29Later in the letter, he added, quote,
03:42But in late June this year, Buffett told The Wall Street Journal, quote,
03:49His stated reason for the change was that his children have shown they can handle giving away an enormous amount of money.
03:55In a letter to Berkshire Hathaway shareholders last November,
03:58when he first disclosed that his children would be the trustees of a charitable trust
04:02that will receive 99%-plus of his wealth, Buffett wrote, quote,
04:13For full coverage, check out Lindsay Chu and Carrie A. Dolan's piece on Forbes.com.
04:20This is Kieran Meadows from Forbes. Thanks for tuning in.
04:25♪