Chloe Hunt

Authors at Philanthropy.org

Sanjay Bindra

In 2025, 42 students earned medical scholarships through one of the toughest need-and-merit screens anywhere. Median family income: $1,102 a year. Median exam rank: top 0.25% of over two million test-takers. These are students who studied under kerosene lamps, commuted hours to reach coaching centers, and still outperformed nearly everyone. Without support, their families face impossible choices—sell land, take predatory loans, or watch talent go to waste. The scholarship doesn't just help. It prevents harm before it happens.

Viken Mikaelian

Featured Cover Preview Securing The Future, Sustaining Growth Susan Abtouche, Executive Director, White Horse Village Other Articles Your Story Matters: “Giving Back …

Viken Mikaelian

American philanthropy isn't suffering from donor stinginess—it's suffering from institutional betrayal. As universities lose billions in federal funding and private donations simultaneously decline, the pattern is clear: high-capacity donors haven't stopped giving, they've stopped trusting. Nonprofits that traded mission for ideology, accountability for rhetoric, and partnership for entitlement are now doubly vulnerable. The path forward isn't another initiative—it's a return to basics: measurable outcomes, donor autonomy, and respect for the people whose generosity built these institutions.

Sanjay Bindra

Philanthropy isn't dying—it's consolidating. Americans gave $592B last year, but participating households plummeted from 65% to 45%. The culprit isn't donor apathy; it's nonprofit incompetence.

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