It may seem clear that the country’s highest-paid professionals, those who paint in Silicon Valley and Wall Street, are the top benefactors when it comes to charity. That’s only partially true, according to a new Team Blind survey: an un nameless social network for painters from generations prior to this year’s Giving Tuesday.
The survey surveyed more than 2200 professionals from 36 leading corporations in various sectors, adding software, online retail, banking and social media.
In total, nearly three-quarters of respondents report making an annual donation to charities, and most give between $1 and $1,000 a year. In rare cases, some give more than $10,000 while others give nothing at all.
Employees of “FAANG” corporations – Facebook, Apple, Amazon, Netflix and Google – are the most benefited when it comes to supporting charitable causes. On Netflix, for example, 71% of workers donate more than $1,000 a year. Even at least, “FAANG” charity, Amazon, 65% of it provides a certain amount of money.
On the other hand, banking and finance professionals are less philanthropic: at Goldman Sachs, for example, a third of workers don’t donate cash to charities, and 30% of JPMorgan Chase workers don’t. keep in mind that a more or less equivalent number of JPMorgan respondents say they give more than $10,000 or less than $500, with no response between the two.
However, it should be noted that the length of the pattern of these banks is small compared to that of Amazon, Microsoft and Google, which could possibly have produced livered results.
The most benefited donors tend to be very explicit about where their cash is going and how it is spent.
In the survey feedback segment asking respondents how much they plan to give in 2021 and where, an Amazon employee wrote, a Microsoft engineer wrote that he intended to give 10% of his full refund in 2021, “but only to animals. “
“I pay $1,000/month (at least) directly to other people who need my family circle or I to know personally,” an Apple employee wrote. “I also lend interest-free cash to other people who need it (so far, about $55,000). “
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