Keen On America

Excessive Wealth Disorder: Glen Galaich on the $2 Trillion That Could Save Democracy

Mar 28, 2026
Glen Galaich, CEO of the Stupski Foundation and author focused on philanthropic reform, argues that massive foundation wealth is stuck and favors perpetuity over impact. He discusses tax incentives that entrench donor control, his foundation’s move to return resources to communities, and why unlocking trillions now matters for democracy and public stewardship.
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INSIGHT

Donors Treat Public Stewardship As Private Property

  • Private foundations are legally public stewards even though donors often treat them as personal money, creating a 'control' problem.
  • Galaich emphasizes donors say "it's my money" despite the public tax-forgiving compact behind foundations.
ADVICE

Center Communities To Increase Grant Impact

  • Adopt a public stewardship mindset by centering communities in grant decisions to increase real impact.
  • Galaich recounts his conversion from strategic advisor-led grants to empowering local program officers and community voices.
ANECDOTE

Hawaii Grants Went Fast And Filled Gaps

  • Stupski moved $15 million to Hawaiian community health providers and they spent it within five months on outreach, palliative care, and home visits.
  • These clinics had never had discretionary funds and used them to deliver services Medicaid didn't allow.
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