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Bill Gates wants billionaires to give more to fight the COVID-19 virus

lpetrich

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Bill Gates’s new coronavirus plan involves refreshing the Giving Pledge - Vox - "The small messages that Gates sends the signers of the Giving Pledge could have big effects."
Bill Gates has emerged as one of the most important leaders of the coronavirus era, building factories for future vaccines, pushing to expand testing around the world, and occasionally rebuking the president of the United States.

The philanthropist is also doing something else, far more behind the scenes: exploring ways to get his fellow billionaires to give substantially more of their money away right now. That could mean changing the role played by the Giving Pledge, a public declaration crafted just over a decade ago by Gates and Warren Buffett and signed by some of the world’s wealthiest people.

In recent weeks, Gates and his aides have discussed plans to possibly pool voluntary donations from over 200 billionaires and direct the money on their behalf toward the coronavirus crisis, Recode has learned from people familiar with the matter. Another, likelier idea centers on creating a “marketplace” for Giving Pledge signers, and possibly other ultra-rich people who have yet to sign it, to pitch one another on projects.
I'll believe it when I see it. Like finance a massive expansion of testing and contact tracing and protective-equipment manufacturing. Stuff that is vital for reopening workplaces. Otherwise, it will be all talk and no action.

Teddy Schleifer on Twitter: "Scoop — Bill Gates is exploring ways to convince other billionaires to donate more for coronavirus. ..." / Twitter
Scoop — Bill Gates is exploring ways to convince other billionaires to donate more for coronavirus.

Ideas that Gates has considered include launching a new COVID fund for billionaires who signed the Giving Pledge, per sources.

The Giving Pledge has long been attacked as a toothless promise that has ushered in more publiclity than philanthropy.

Now, the Giving Pledge is thinking about the role it plays — and whether it should subtly push harder on the billionaires who signed it

The likelier play from the Giving Pledge is to create a “marketplace” where billionaires could share ideas for what to fund and coordinate giving.

But that would require them to disclose their grand plans to one another — something that might not happen.

Bill and Melinda Gates have taken calls in recent weeks from billlionaires asking them to be connected to other signers of the Giving Pledge — and the Gateses have been making these connections by hand.

This "marketplace" is seen as a possible solution.
 
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez on Twitter: "This is policy head for @BudgetHawks, btw. They lobby both parties for austerity policies in DC (aka cutting public safety nets when ppl need it most).
I call it out bc it matters when people who seek to influence policy are flippant + misogynistic towards members of Congress. https://t.co/ynyh94ZreT" / Twitter

Marc Goldwein

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez on Twitter: "If you’d like to learn more about how this austerity class of mostly dudes at vague, esteemed-seeming DC think tanks launder harmful policies to influence lawmakers of both parties, you can read about it here via @thenation: https://t.co/gdO8d0F3UF" / Twitter
noting
How the Austerity Class Rules Washington | The Nation - 2011 October 19 - "A powerful, bipartisan coalition of deficit hawks has manufactured a center-right consensus that dominates the Beltway."
n September the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget (CRFB), a bipartisan deficit-hawk group based at the New America Foundation, held a high-profile symposium urging the Congressional “supercommittee” to “go big” and approve a $4 trillion deficit reduction plan over the next decade, which is well beyond its $1.2 trillion mandate. The hearing began with an alarming video of top policy-makers describing the national debt as “the most serious threat that this country has ever had” (Alan Simpson) and “a threat to the whole idea of self-government” (Mitch Daniels). If the debt continues to rise, predicted former New Mexico Senator Pete Domenici, there would be “strikes, riots, who knows what?” A looming fiscal crisis was portrayed as being just around the corner.

The event spotlighted a central paradox in American politics over the past two years: how, in the midst of a massive unemployment crisis—when it’s painfully obvious that not enough jobs are being created and the public overwhelmingly wants policy-makers to focus on creating them—did the deficit emerge as the most pressing issue in the country? And why, when the global evidence clearly indicates that austerity measures will raise unemployment and hinder, not accelerate, growth, do advocates of austerity retain such distinction today?

An explanation can be found in the prominence of an influential and aggressive austerity class—an allegedly centrist coalition of politicians, wonks and pundits who are considered indisputably wise custodians of US economic policy. These “very serious people,” as New York Times columnist Paul Krugman wryly dubs them, have achieved what University of California, Berkeley, economist Brad DeLong calls “intellectual hegemony over the course of the debate in Washington, from 2009 until today.”

...
Even President Obama’s new jobs plan—a long overdue break with austerity-class orthodoxy—has been pitched in the context of deficit reduction. Every debate over measures to improve the economy begins with the question “How much will it cost, and can we afford it?” rather than “How many jobs will it create, and how will it help the country?” Far from possessing the solution to our economic crisis, the austerity class represents a major impediment to finding one.

...
The goal of much of the austerity class is to see government funds redirected to the private sector. (Their ideology, which accepts the accumulation of private debt but opposes government debt, explains why the austerity class ignored the massive housing and credit bubble, which more than any single factor contributed to an explosion of debt worldwide.)
A big financier of their efforts is billionaire Pete Peterson, who once served as Richard Nixon's Commerce Secretary. He seems to want his hands on Social Security money.

This is worth mentioning, because many of the billionaires that Bill Gates wants to give more are likely billionaires who have supported such policies that enrich themselves at the expense of the rest of society.
 
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