A new report by The Bridgespan Group, supported by the Institute of Philanthropy, The Rockefeller Foundation, and the Gates Foundation, highlights the world’s largest corporate givers and examines how they align social impact with business strategy. Among the top 20 global corporate donors, four Asian companies—The Hong Kong Jockey Club and its Charities Trust, Samsung, Tencent, and China Three Gorges Corporation—together contribute more than US$1.6 billion annually to philanthropic causes. The report emphasizes that corporate giving today extends beyond traditional philanthropy to initiatives that generate measurable social and environmental outcomes.
The report, the second in a multi-year series, explores why companies give, how they structure their giving, and what differentiates high-impact corporate philanthropy. It underscores that corporate giving is increasingly central to business strategy, not just a function of CSR teams. Forward-thinking firms embed social impact into core business operations, leveraging scale, reach, and intent to drive meaningful societal change.
The research highlights how Asia’s corporate philanthropy differs from global norms, shaped by unique business structures and cultural factors. In Asia, founder-, family-, and state-linked leadership is more prevalent, with 60 percent of top givers being family-led and 25 percent state-linked, compared to far lower global proportions. Conglomerates dominate the Asian landscape, making up 60 percent of top givers, while only 10 percent globally. Asian companies also tend to prioritize direct giving through their own projects, contrasting with the global reliance on external partners, reflecting either a hands-on approach or gaps in local partnerships.
The report identifies three high-impact giving approaches: place-based giving, which invests in communities near company operations to address local needs; capability-led giving, which leverages core business strengths to create shared value; and business-aligned giving, which delivers high-value products or services to underserved populations in ways that reinforce the company’s mission. The research concludes that when corporate giving is strategically aligned and thoughtfully executed, it can produce substantial social and environmental benefits, offering practical guidance for companies seeking to maximize the impact of their philanthropy.