Why Jeff Bezos should say no to the Billionaires’ Pledge

Why Jeff Bezos should say no to the Billionaires’ Pledge

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Jeff Bezos, the founder and CEO of Amazon, recently became the richest person in the history of the world, as his net worth climbed to $150 billion, thanks to the jump in Amazon’s share price. Amazon’s stock has been on a steep upward trend: Bezos’ wealth increased by $50 billion this year alone.

Such wealth creation is to be congratulated and celebrated as well earned. In Amazon, Bezos has created something truly spectacular. As I, and others, have written before, by rapidly delivering an amazing variety of affordable goods—ordered and paid for conveniently by a click of mouse—worldwide, Amazon is creating a tremendous value for its customers. This, in turn, creates value for Jeff Bezos and the rest of the company’s shareholders.

This is an excellent example of a win-win exchange: a voluntary trade between Amazon (its shareholders) and customers that benefits both, as well as others involved in the trade, such as employees and suppliers.

Alas, as soon as Mr. Bezos surpassed Bill Gates as the richest man in the world last year, the calls urging more philanthropic giving from him intensified. Media pundits were suggesting Bezos should join the Giving Pledge initiated by Bill and Melinda Gates and Warren Buffett, in which the world’s richest people—over 150 billionaires—commit to give most of their wealth away during their lifetime. Columnists have fantasized about all the wonderful things Jeff Bezos’ wealth could do to philanthropy and are salivating for him to make a major charitable commitment, such as joining the Pledgers.

While it’s Mr. Bezos’ right to do whatever he wants with the wealth he has earned, I would urge him not to bow to the social pressure to make the Giving Pledge. Even if his goal is not to live the best life possible for himself—which is the moral goal—the Giving Pledge is immoral. It is immoral because it is based on the idea that those who have legitimately created wealth by trading values with others have not earned it and must “give it back.”

Give back for what and to whom?

“Giving back” implies that one has taken something away from others and therefore must return it. But what have wealth creators taken from others and to whom should they return it? By creating and operating Amazon, Jeff Bezos has not taken anything away from others—he is trading with them; therefore, he owes no debt to anyone and has no duty to “give back” anything.

Jeff Bezos has not taken anything away from others—he is trading with them.

Amazon’s shareholders have voluntarily invested their money in the company, expecting to earn a return (which they have, beyond all expectations). Customers aren’t donating their money to Amazon by a charitable impulse; they pay money to receive a value in exchange, which they have. Employees aren’t volunteering their time without pay by working for Amazon; they trade their productive efforts for pay and other intangible benefits, such as learning and interesting work. Suppliers aren’t donating their products and services, either; they trade them for payment from Amazon. And government isn’t giving (and properly, shouldn’t give) anything to Amazon, either; Amazon pays taxes and fees for government services (which, outside of the police, military, and the law courts, should be privatized).

Even if Bezos’ goal is to make the world a better place for others and not for his own satisfaction and enjoyment, joining the Giving Pledge will significantly diminish his impact. While diverting his wealth to charity will arguably advance many good causes, such as decreasing poverty and disease and increasing literacy, huge progress has been made in those areas, not because of charity but because of wealth creation by business.

When the wealth creators stop being productive, charitable resources will diminish. But charity is not the main goal or the means of making lives and the world better—business creating and trading material values is. By creating and trading material values, business increases the opportunities and wealth for everyone, making flourishing possible for all.

Amazon is a prime example of such value creation and trade, the impact of which no Giving Pledge, no matter how large, can ever match. If Jeff Bezos enjoys running and developing Amazon, as he seems to be, he should relish it without an ounce of unearned guilt. Morally, he should pursue his own self-interest and not to bow to pressure to give up what he loves for the sake of alleged benefit to others.

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One Response

  1. Does he think he needs the publicity bennies?

    Much charity is quiet, given on merit.

    \Some benefactors, like the Rotary West Shore who help orphanages in Haiti, and the Buffalo fraternal society in Langford, only seek publicity to get more donors to help their efforts.

    If all the wealth of the top 1% were distributed evenly across the world’s population each person would get very little money.

    The proper way to help people is recommended by the Christian maxim that says if you give a person a fish you feed that person for a day, if you teach that person to fish you feed them for a lifetime.

    Indeed, the renowned HBC explorer John Rae taught a hungry tribe how to catch fish in a nearby lake. Without the HBC teaching they’d have starved.

    Today, ungrateful youth in Haiti are rioting because the government reduced its subsidy for fuel. That’s the neo-Marxist (Communist)/Post-Modernist teaching, probably exploited by activists whose real agenda is revolution.

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Jaana Woiceshyn teaches business ethics and competitive strategy at the Haskayne School of Business, University of Calgary, Canada.

She has lectured and conducted seminars on business ethics to undergraduate, MBA and Executive MBA students, and to various corporate audiences for over 20 years both in Canada and abroad. Before earning her Ph.D. from the Wharton School of Business, University of Pennsylvania, she helped turn around a small business in Finland and worked for a consulting firm in Canada.

Jaana’s research on technological change and innovation, value creation by business, executive decision-making, and business ethics has been published in various academic and professional journals and books. “How to Be Profitable and Moral” is her first solo-authored book.

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