Asia’s rich flip the script on charitable giving: Instead of mega-foundations, they’re using their family companies
Fortune · Courtesy of the Center for Asian Philanthropy and Society

Ronnie Chan, the former chairman of Hong Kong’s Hang Lung Group, one of the city’s largest property developers, thinks a business mindset is needed for philanthropy—and that’s just as true for future generations as his own.

“I don’t prefer a family that becomes so philanthropic that they lose track of making money,” says Chan, who earlier this year handed the reins of Hang Lung over to his 41-year-old son, Adriel Chan. “I think that the two being together is a better solution,” he says.

In the U.S., philanthropy has long been dominated by wealthy tycoons: Andrew Carnegie and John D. Rockefeller during the Gilded Age; Mark Zuckerberg and Bill Gates in the digital age. Earlier this year, Michael Bloomberg donated $1 billion to Johns Hopkins University through his charity arm, Bloomberg Philanthropies. The gift will allow most medical students to attend the U.S. university for free.

For over a century, U.S. tycoons traditionally chose to give their money through large family foundations, like the Carnegie Corporation of New York (founded in 1911) and the Rockefeller Foundation (founded in 1913). Foundations still drive a lot of U.S. philanthropy, giving $103.5 billion in 2023, out of a total $557.2 billion, according to the Lilly Family School of Philanthropy at Indiana University. (Corporations, by comparison, gave a relatively paltry $36.6 billion)

Asia has its fair share of high-net-worth individuals—think Indian mega-mogul Mukesh Ambani, whose family just threw a wedding reportedly worth $600 million—yet the region's wealthiest tend not to rely on mega-foundations for their charity work.

Instead, the company takes the lead in Asia. “There’s very little distinction between personal philanthropy and corporate philanthropy” in Asia, says Ruth Shapiro, co-founder of the Centre for Asian Philanthropy and Society (CAPS), a Hong Kong-based think tank. “There are no Ford, Gates, Rockefeller foundations here.”

Corporate giving comes with its own set of perks: on-the-ground experience, existing distribution systems, and personal connections. "Companies want to fund where they’re operating,” Shapiro explains. “Why send it through another organization,” when companies can just do it themselves.

For example, Jollibee Foods Corporation, the Filipino fast giant, works directly with small farmers in the Philippines through the Jollibee Foundation. "We try to cut off the middlemen by trying to work with farmers groups to supply vegetables directly to our JFC brands," CEO Ernesto Tanmantiong told Fortune in an interview earlier this year.