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Warren Buffett is one of the richest people in the world. He is the chairman of a big company called Berkshire Hathaway. According to Bloomberg, his net worth was about $147 billion as of Wednesday afternoon.
He recently talked to CNBC’s Becky Quick on a show called “Squawk Box.” In that interview, he said something surprising: a big reason he is so successful is just luck.
Buffett says he is one of the luckiest people out of 8 billion humans on Earth.
He believes luck helped him from the very start:
Important Point: Buffett says all of these good things were accidents of birth or chance — not something he earned by being smarter or better than others.
Seeing how lucky he was made Buffett feel that rich people should help others.
He says some people are very unlucky from birth. He thinks it is wrong to use “I earned everything myself” as an excuse to ignore them.
That is why he believes charity (giving money to help people) is a moral duty for wealthy people — even if they don’t think they were lucky.
Here is what Buffett has done and plans to do:
Important Point: Buffett is speeding up his giving and changing who gets the money — from the Gates Foundation to his kids’ foundations.
Buffett has three children, aged 68 to 72. They run the family foundations.
The rules are:
Buffett says the money “is theirs, and it’s their responsibility to get it done well.”
Not everyone likes how billionaires give money.
Critics say:
But Buffett believes big charitable acts can:
He told Quick: if you appeal to people’s better side, they sometimes respond. The goal is to make life better for the unlucky.
Warren Buffett says his huge success came from luck — being born in the U.S., being healthy, and learning investing early by chance. Because of that, he thinks the wealthy should give back. He pledged to donate 99% of his fortune, is giving away all Berkshire shares by 2034, and is shifting donations to his children’s foundations focused on education, food, and health. He hopes this inspires more help for the unlucky.
1. What is the “ovarian lottery”?
It is Buffett’s phrase for the random chance of being born in a good place (like America) with good health — things you do not control.
2. How much of his money is Buffett giving away?
He pledged 99% of his wealth in 2010 and plans to give away all his Berkshire shares by the end of 2034.
3. Who gets Buffett’s charitable money now?
His three children’s family foundations, not the Gates Foundation anymore.
4. Why do critics dislike billionaire philanthropy?
They say it can be for tax cuts or reputation, not real help.
5. What causes do his family foundations support?
Early education, food security, and health/economic programs for women and children.