More Than Money. Cole Michael A.
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CHAPTER 2
Wealth Is More Than Money
In the introduction to his transformational guidebook Family Wealth: Keeping It in the Family, James Hughes mentions that a family's wealth “consists primarily of its human capital (defined as all the individuals who make up the family) and its intellectual capital (defined as everything each individual family member knows), and secondarily of its financial capital.”3 Later in the book, he mentions a fourth type of capital: social capital, which I define as the networks of people of means who use their wealth and influence for the benefit of society.
If, in fact, human, intellectual, and social capital make up 75 percent of a family's actual wealth, giving 90 percent of the family's and advisors' attention to only 25 percent of the assets doesn't make a lot of sense. Yet this is the way traditional wealth managers and those they advise tend to view their roles.
Hughes makes exactly this point. In his view, a family that loses its wealth usually does so because of too great a concentration on financial capital and too little attention paid to the other types of capital the family possesses. Hughes goes on to say that “a family's financial capital is a tool to support the growth of the family's human and intellectual capital.”4 In other words, money is simply a means to a more important and meaningful end. Money, rightly considered, can empower an entire family, but if there is too much emphasis on balance sheets and not enough on family relationships, talents, roles, and strategic planning, the family can be enfeebled as its wealth trickles away.
Families who focus strictly on their financial assets usually do not sustain wealth over time and enjoy the fruits of their labor. They frequently have deep‐rooted resentments about the uses of money, as well as relationship challenges, values clashes, and arguments about the place of money in their personal value systems. As a result, the wealth may disappear by the third generation, even if it is well‐managed and invested.
If the Vanderbilt clan is the exemplar of wealth planning run amok, then the Rockefeller family is the other side of the coin. Although the Rockefellers no longer stand at the top of the heap of America's richest families, they still control more than $11 billion, settling in at #22 on the 2015 Forbes list of America's wealthiest families.
John D. Rockefeller, although probably no more ruthless than the other titans of his era – Vanderbilt, Carnegie, and Morgan, for example – could be savagely competitive, but buried within him was also a strand of philanthropy that grew as his assets expanded. An article in Philanthropy Roundtable highlights Rockefeller's charitable bent.
The article mentions that a few days after the sixteen‐year‐old Rockefeller landed his first job, he bought a ledger in which he accounted for virtually every cent of income and outgo. What is noticeable is that even when he was working for pennies each day, he already was sharing his resources. “‘When I was only making a dollar a day,’ Rockefeller later recalled, ‘I was giving [away] five, ten, or twenty‐five cents.’”5
As Rockefeller's wealth increased, so did his charitable donations. By 1865, he was giving away more than $1,000 annually. Not surprisingly, Rockefeller was inundated with requests for money. “At breakfast, he made it a habit to say grace and then open review of requests for charity.. asking his children to further investigate promising appeals,”6 thus setting the stage for their understanding of the need both for making money and making an impact; this understanding has continued into the succeeding generations.
Because of his immense fortune, Rockefeller's philanthropy, much of which was orchestrated and shepherded by his son, John D. Rockefeller Jr., was virtually boundless, from his founding of the University of Chicago to the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research (now Rockefeller University) to the General Education Board to funding for Morehouse College and Spelman College (which was named for his wife, Laura Spelman Rockefeller). The contributions of the various organizations he funded are staggering to contemplate: a vaccine for yellow fever; prevention and cure of hookworm diseases; and support of sixty‐four Nobel Prize winners in the fields of chemistry and medicine, to mention only a few. By the time of his death at age 97, Rockefeller had given away approximately $540 million and had changed countless lives forever.
In his adulthood, John D. Rockefeller Jr. also gave more than $500 million to conservation causes, historic preservation, art, and religious – primarily Baptist – institutions. He was the driving force behind New York's Rockefeller Center. Through the establishment of the Rockefeller Brothers Fund (which also included their sister by 1954), the family continued the legacy of philanthropy, making grants to “organizations working to expand knowledge, clarify values and critical choices, nurture creative expression, and shape public policy.”7 Some of the trustees of the fund today are fourth and fifth generations of the Rockefeller family.
Not surprisingly, with the family's emphasis on public service, some of the third generation of Rockefellers found their way onto a larger stage – the political arena. Nelson Rockefeller served four terms as governor of New York and three years as vice president of the United States under Gerald Ford. His brother Winthrop was governor of Arkansas from 1967 to 1971.
In the minds of many, David Rockefeller was the embodiment of the Chase Manhattan Bank and later the Chase Manhattan Corporation. Beginning his affiliation with Chase Manhattan in 1946, he became chairman of the board of directors of Chase Manhattan Bank, NA, in March 1969 and CEO of Chase Manhattan Corporation in May of that year. He wielded immense influence in both corporate and international affairs.
Laurance Rockefeller carried on his father's work in conservation and was also an early venture capitalist. According to the Washington Post, “[he] also was a chief advocate for investing family money in new, often bold enterprises. Particularly fascinated by aviation, he poured money into new projects so they would not be snuffed out by a merger because of a lack of financing.”8 He was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest civilian honor, for his unparalleled work in conservation.
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