U.S. Foundation Giving Reaches an Estimated $50.9 Billion in 2012

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Despite Continuing Economic Instability, Giving Grows Ahead of Inflation

New York, NY — October 1, 2013. Even through a period of unpredictability in the national and global economic and political environment, domestic foundation giving has continued to grow at a moderate pace. According to Key Facts on U.S. Foundations, the Foundation Center’s new annual research study, in 2011 the country’s 81,777 foundations held $622 billion in assets and distributed $49 billion, an amount estimated to have reached $50.9 billion in 2012. The outlook for 2013 is for continued modest growth overall.

Key Facts on U.S. Foundations is the primary publication in which the Foundation Center documents the overall size of the U.S. foundation community and provides perspective on the giving priorities of the nation’s largest foundations. The contents of the new report have been condensed and streamlined, and it visually presents findings that can be easily understood at a glance.

Among the key findings in the report:

  • Health and education are the top priorities of the country’s largest foundations, accounting for almost half of all grant dollars.
  • More than one third (35%) of all grant dollars awarded by the nation's largest foundations were specifically intended to benefit the economically disadvantaged.
  • In 2011, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation made the single largest grant: $967 million over five years to the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization.

“It may not be the boom years of the late 1990s or mid-2000s, but the good news is that it looks like U.S. foundations will continue to provide a stable source of support for new ideas and ongoing programs that improve lives around the world,” said Steven Lawrence, the Foundation Center’s director of research and author of the report about the outlook for 2013. “What’s more, this new flagship publication reflects the Foundation Center’s commitment to communicating philanthropy’s contribution to making a better world by delivering relevant knowledge in an accessible format.”

The Foundation Center has long been the authority for data and research on the activities of grantmaking institutions, meeting the need for information on trends in the field and informing decision making at social sector organizations.

Key Facts on U.S. Foundations is accessible at no charge at the Gain Knowledge area of the Foundation Center's web site. To receive future updates on Foundation Center news, sign up here.

Cheryl Loe
Communications Project Manager
The Foundation Center
(888) 356-0354 ext. 701
communications@foundationcenter.org

About the Foundation Center
Established in 1956, the Foundation Center is the leading source of information about philanthropy worldwide. Through data, analysis, and training, it connects people who want to change the world to the resources they need to succeed. The Center maintains the most comprehensive database on U.S. and, increasingly, global grantmakers and their grants — a robust, accessible knowledge bank for the sector. It also operates research, education, and training programs designed to advance knowledge of philanthropy at every level. Thousands of people visit the Center's web site each day and are served in its five regional library/learning centers and its network of more than 470 funding information centers located in public libraries, community foundations, and educational institutions nationwide and around the world. For more information, please visit
foundationcenter.org or call (212) 620-4230.

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Quick facts

81,777 U.S. foundations held $622 billion in assets and distributed $49 billion in 2011, an amount estimated to have reached $50.9 billion in 2012.
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More than one third (35%) of all grant dollars awarded by the nation's largest foundations were specifically intended to benefit the economically disadvantaged.
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In 2011, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation made the single largest grant: $967 million over five years to the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization.
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Quotes

It may not be the boom years of the late 1990s or mid-2000s, but the good news is that it looks like U.S. foundations will continue to provide a stable source of support for new ideas and ongoing programs that improve lives around the world.
Steven Lawrence, Director of Research, The Foundation Center