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Ask Bill Gates
What can young people do to make a difference in the world?
—Alex K.
I'd love to see more young people taking action to help the poor and disadvantaged—whether that's in your own backyard or anywhere in the world. If you decide to choose public service as a career, that's phenomenal—but you can also make a big difference by volunteering. Of course, the Internet has made it possible to learn about all kinds of causes and organizations, and to connect with others who have the same interests. Two places to get started are Network for Good and Global Volunteer Network.
What diseases do you think will be eradicated in your lifetime? Do you think AIDS will be?
—Sarah K.
Melinda and I are confident that in our lifetimes we will see major progress on many of the biggest infectious diseases, such as malaria and TB—maybe not complete eradication, but definitely major progress. On AIDS our dream is to see an HIV vaccine in our lifetime. This has proven to be an extremely tough scientific challenge, but we've got to keep pressing forward. Whether it takes 15, 20 or 25 years to get an HIV vaccine, it's our best long-term hope to break the back of the epidemic.
Have you given any thought to funding sustainable-agriculture education and methods in Third World countries, where deforestation is rampant and poverty levels are extreme? If so, which countries have you considered for this effort?
—Tomás H.
We have. Many of the world's poorest people live on small farms and rely on agriculture for their food and income. Melinda and I believe that making agriculture more productive and sustainable is a key to reducing poverty and hunger. It can also help preserve the environment. Last year our foundation launched an initiative that is working with partners to provide millions of small-scale farmers in Africa and South Asia with ways to boost their productivity, increase their incomes, and build better lives for themselves and their families. One of our major grantees, the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa, is funding programs at two universities in Ghana and South Africa that train African crop breeders to develop crops that are sustainable and suited to the needs of local farmers and environments.
In your philanthropic actions you focus on reducing the acute pain of poverty in developing countries. But there are also big problems on the horizon for the world. Specifically I mean the impending water crisis of the next half-century. Is it on the radar of the Gates Foundation? If not, should it be, and do you think it can be prevented?
—Leo B.
Water shortages are already a major problem in parts of the developing world, and, as you observe, they are only projected to get worse. Our foundation is addressing the issue through two of our grantmaking programs, although we are not focusing on the problem directly. Water is of course a crucial resource for farmers, and agriculture accounts for about 75 percent of all the water used by people worldwide. Some of our grants are specifically designed to promote more efficient ways to use water, such as drip irrigation. We also have an exploratory effort to understand more about water, sanitation and hygiene. Water for drinking, cooking and washing is a vital part of daily life, though it represents a fairly small share of overall water use. We are funding several pilot efforts to help more people get safe water, such as low-cost water treatment, and better ways to carry and store water.
In your honest opinion, what do you believe it will take to clean the world's water supply and ensure that all nations have access to clean, safe water? Is that even a true possibility? What can we—the small people—do to help?
—Karen H.
Everyone can do something to help. There are a number of groups doing good work that help people find safe solutions—and these groups need your support. You might look into organizations such as CARE or WaterAid, or find another group that's making a difference. At our foundation we've been studying this issue for the last two years. Unsafe water—and the contamination of water because of poor sanitation and hygiene—sickens and kills millions of people each year, hitting young children the hardest. It also forces people, particularly women and girls, to travel long distances every day to find safe water. There are ways to address this problem that have been demonstrated in Asia, Africa and other places during the last few decades, although usually on a small scale. We want to help these solutions reach many more people and ensure that they work over the long term. One thing we've learned is that approaches that strengthen and respond to people's demands for safer water, sanitation, and hygiene are more likely to be successful than those that focus only on giving people equipment like water taps and toilets.
Considering that you made most of your money in the United States, why are you spending so much time and money helping Third World countries? America seems to have quite a number of problems that someone like you could solve.
—Craig S.
Melinda and I started our foundation because we believe all lives have equal value. Today billions of people never even have the chance to live a healthy, productive life. We think all people—no matter where they live—deserve that opportunity. Around the world one of the worst inequities is health. In the U.S. it's the fact that millions of young people's choices in life are limited not because they aren't talented or motivated but because they don't have access to great schools and teachers. Every year, for the last 20 years, more than a million young people have dropped out of high school. Dropouts are more likely to be unemployed, end up in prison, slide into poverty, and need more assistance from the government. That's why our foundation has committed more than $3 billion in scholarships and grants aimed at ensuring that all students in the U.S. graduate from high school prepared to succeed in college, career and life.
© 2007
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Member Comments
Posted By: LATRAVIS @ 01/05/2008 1:33:39 PM
Comment: I have much respect for you and your wife for the good you are doing, I am from Mississippi,Jackson that is and I want to know for all the good you do, are you involved with the Microsoft CorpWorld Lottery Awards that are in South Africa, Johnnesburg. and the HSBC Bank of London, I am asking because I keep getting e-mails from someone name Joe Chandler +27-83-698-7760 wanting to know all of my personal information in order to claime the money. I t also signes your in service Mr. Richard K. Lloyd., now my point for doing this is to stop people in Africa from using people names for to optain information and use it for other purpouses. Africa is know for doing this to people who they feel are weak for money and fool enough to fall for it. Since i don't know about all of you orginations in Africa, i would like to know more and pray you keep up the good work on helping people who really need it.I hate to say it but Africa is known for scaming american women. And a lot of fall for this, and i reall feel a lot need to be done to inform women of this kind of scam, so many have fallen by the words you are the winner of the MICROSOFT CORP WORLD LOTTERY AWARD.. IS THIS ANOTHER SCAM FROM AFRICA ?? DO YOU HAVE ANYTHING TO DO WITH THIS ORGINATIZION?? YOUR NAME IS BEING USED AS ONE OF THE FOUNDERS AND SPONSERS, JUST BEING CAREFUL AND WANT TO KNOW MORE ...