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Updated: Analysis of MacKenzie Scott’s Charitable Giving Shows Where the Money Is Going

By  Maria Di Mento and 
M.J. Prest
July 19, 2021
MacKenzie Scott poses at the headquarters of publisher Axel-Springer on April 24, 2018 in Berlin. (Jorg Carstensen, dpa, AFP, Getty Images)
Jorg Carstensen, dpa, AFP, Getty Images
MacKenzie Scott ‘s $8.5 billion in charitable contributions to nearly 800 nonprofits has been mostly unrestricted. She left it up to the groups to decide whether to publicize the amount, and about a fourth have done so.

Since last summer when she announced her first round of big giving, MacKenzie Scott has donated a total of nearly $8.5 billion to 798 nonprofits, including those she announced in June.

Many of her contributions have had a ripple effect by prompting recipients to donate some of what they received to their affiliates or related charities. While Scott announced most of the organizations that received gifts, all of which were unrestricted, she left it up to the groups to decide whether to publicize how much she gave them.

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Since last summer when she announced her first round of big giving, MacKenzie Scott has donated a total of nearly $8.5 billion to 798 nonprofits, including those she announced in June.

Many of her contributions have had a ripple effect by prompting recipients to donate some of what they received to their affiliates or related charities. While Scott announced most of the organizations that received gifts, all of which were unrestricted, she left it up to the groups to decide whether to publicize how much she gave them.

As of July 15, nearly a fourth of her nonprofit beneficiaries from the past 12 months have disclosed the amounts either publicly or in response to requests from the Chronicle. The Chronicle‘s research was based on information provided by organizations that have distributed news releases or otherwise disclosed the information in media interviews.

A Chronicle analysis of those 200 groups shows that Scott gave the most — almost $1.5 billion — to 62colleges and universities, and of those she gave a total of $503 million to 21 historically Black colleges and universities and a total of $429 million to 22 community colleges. The three higher education institutions that received the most are Prairie View A&M University, which got $50 million, and North Carolina A&T State University and Indian River State College, which each received $45 million. Both Prairie View and North Carolina A&T are historically Black institutions.

Colleges and Social Services

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Colleges and universities were the most willing to disclose Scott’s gift amount. Next were social-service charities: Eighty-nine received a total of nearly $140 million. They supported a variety of causes including direct relief to people affected by the pandemic; feeding the hungry; advancing racial-equity and social-justice efforts in low-income neighborhoods; helping women, girls, and families; and supporting community and economic development programs.

The largest gift she made to a social-service group was $50 million to Enterprise Community Partners, which works to expand the supply of low-cost housing and advance racial equity and economic resilience. Local Initiatives Support Corporation, which provides loans, grants, and management assistance to local charities, received $40 million. Twenty other social-service groups received $15 million to $25 million each.

Among other types of nonprofits announcing big gifts from Scott, eight community foundations received a total of $94 million, and seven arts groups a total of $51 million. Four organizations that serve the nonprofit world have announced the amounts they have received: GivingTuesday received $7 million, Grantmakers for Effective Organizations got $4 million, and the National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy and the United Philanthropy Forum each received $3 million. (After this article was published the Center for Effective Philanthropy noted that it had received $10 million and BoardSource said it had received $5 million.)

To view more of Scott’s contributions see our database of gifts of $1 million or more, which is updated regularly. And if we missed your organization, send us a note at gifts@philanthropy.com.

Update (July 20, 2021, 10:22 a.m.): We have added to our description of how we compiled this information and noted a detail about GivingTuesday that we missed in our original reporting. We have also added information about Enterprise Community Partners, the Center for Effective Philanthropy, and BoardSource that were provided after this article was published online.
We welcome your thoughts and questions about this article. Please email the editors or submit a letter for publication.
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Maria Di Mento
Maria Di Mento directs the annual Philanthropy 50, a comprehensive report on America’s most generous donors. She writes about wealthy philanthropists, arts organizations, key trends and insights related to high-net-worth donors, and other topics.
M.J. Prest
M.J. Prest is senior editor for advice at the Chronicle of Philanthropy, where she highlights how nonprofit leaders navigate and overcome major challenges. She has covered stories on big gifts, grant making, and executive moves for the Chronicle since 2004.
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