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Progressive Philanthropy Failing Communities: What Real Leadership Looks Like
May 1 -
4 minutes, 5 seconds
Progressive philanthropy is failing communities because too many leaders prioritize career comfort over real change. After a decade in this space, I have watched program officers avoid funding bold ideas, foundations pour money into safe projects, and millions of dollars get stuck in bureaucracy instead of reaching people in need. Real leadership in philanthropy means giving up control, trusting communities, and measuring success by impact—not by how comfortable we remain.
The Core Problem: Symbolic Capitalists
Sociologist Musa Al-Gharbi calls the people running progressive philanthropy "symbolic capitalists." These are highly educated professionals—program officers, foundation executives, consultants—who confuse career advancement with social impact. They want six-figure salaries and four-day work weeks while demanding grantees keep overhead under 15%. These goals clash. The result? A system that serves itself first.
How This Hurts Communities
- Money goes to the wrong places: A foundation gives $1 million to a university for maternal health in Africa. The university keeps $900,000 for overhead and salaries. Only $100,000 reaches the local group doing the work.
- Funders fund who they know: Foundation leaders hire people from the same schools, speak the same language, and sit on each other's boards. Community groups without those connections get left out.
- Short-term thinking: Progressive dollars surge during crises, then vanish. Racial justice pledges from 2020? Most never materialized.
Leadership Gaps No One Wants to Name
This failure is not about bad intentions. It is structural. Data from the Lily Family School of Philanthropy shows that organizations serving communities of color received just 2.9% of all charitable giving in 2022—even though people of color make up 44.3% of the U.S. population. Meanwhile, Matthew Desmond found that for every dollar aimed at poverty, less than 25 cents reaches people in need. The rest funds the professional class.
What Real Leadership Looks Like
Real leadership means stepping aside. Leaders like Glen Galaich (Stupski Foundation) and Carmen Rojas (Marguerite Casey Foundation) openly push money out the door faster. Groups like Magic Cabinet and Kataly Foundation make multi-year, flexible grants. They trust communities. They measure success by how much power moves, not by how comfortable they stayed.
How to Fix Progressive Philanthropy
If you work in philanthropy, here is what you can do:
- Fund directly. Cut out intermediaries. Give money straight to community groups.
- Trust grantees. Stop requiring endless reports. Let them lead.
- Give up control. Accept that real impact might not need your management.
- Measure what matters. Ask: Did lives improve? Not: Did we fill out the right forms?
The Choice Is Ours
Chantelle Ohrling, Chair of Equity & Right Relations at the Canadian Association of Gift Planners, puts it perfectly: "Real leadership requires us to stop making fear-based decisions that extract and instead to step bravely into discomfort." The professional class in philanthropy holds the power to change how funds flow. We can keep building comfortable careers—or we can lead with courage. The leadership failure we have created can no longer be ignored.
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