$1.8 billion donation to Johns Hopkins University will be devoted exclusively to financial aid, allowing it to permanently offer need blind admissions and eliminate the need for student loans in financial aid packages

“America is at its best when we reward people based on the quality of their work, not the size of their pocketbook,” Bloomberg says in New York Times op-ed

Bloomberg has given $6.4 billion over his lifetime to philanthropic causes prior to this commitment

November 18, 2018 – Today, Michael R. Bloomberg and Johns Hopkins University announced an unprecedented $1.8 billion philanthropic commitment, representing the largest ever contribution to an academic institution in American history. The historic gift will be devoted exclusively to undergraduate financial aid at one of the world’s leading education, research and patient care institutions, allowing Johns Hopkins University to permanently commit to need-blind admissions and ensure unparalleled educational opportunities for the next generation of global leaders.

“America is at its best when we reward people based on the quality of their work, not the size of their pocketbook. Denying students entry to a college based on their ability to pay undermines equal opportunity. It perpetuates intergenerational poverty. And it strikes at the heart of the American dream: the idea that every person, from every community, has the chance to rise based on merit,” said Bloomberg. “Now, I want to be sure the school that gave me a chance will be able to permanently open that same door of opportunity for generations of talented students, regardless of their ability to pay. I am donating an additional $1.8 billion to Hopkins that will be used solely for financial aid to low and middle income students. That will make admissions at Hopkins forever need blind. It will allow the school to offer more generous scholarships. It will ease the burden of student debt for many graduates. And it will help open up the American dream to more young people.”

The full text of Mike Bloomberg’s New York Times op-ed published today can be found here and appended below.

At dozens of selective colleges, there are more students from incomes in the top one percent than there are from the bottom 60 percent, even though many middle and lower-income students have the qualifications to get in, according to a New York Times analysis. Schools without the funds to support need-blind admissions policies deny seats to middle and low-income, high achieving students, impeding social mobility and creating barriers in cultivating talent from every background. Studies show that high achieving students who attend the most selective colleges — no matter what their family’s background — have similar graduation rates and career earnings. Making matters worse, middle and low-income students who are qualified to get loans are burdened by debt upon graduation, exacerbating income inequality. There is a total of $1.5 trillion in outstanding student loans in the U.S., making it the second-largest consumer debt segment in the country after mortgages, according to the Federal Reserve.

By building an extraordinary financial aid program to fuel student access and mobility, Johns Hopkins will rank among the top ten universities in per student financial aid support, with a focus on first generation/low-income (FLI) students and taking up the often overlooked challenge of access for middle-income students as well.

“Our university was founded in 1876 by a visionary $7 million gift from the Baltimore merchant Johns Hopkins. When it was announced, it was the largest gift of its kind. It created America’s first research university and changed the face of American higher education. With today’s announcement of Mike Bloomberg’s $1.8 billion investment in financial aid, history has repeated itself,” said Ronald J. Daniels, Johns Hopkins University President. “Hopkins has received a gift that is unprecedented and transformative. This gift powerfully affirms Mike’s belief in the promise of this country and the power of accessible higher education. We are truly blessed.”

“Mike Bloomberg’s historic contribution will open the doors wider to college for talented students from every background,” said John B. King Jr., former United States Secretary of Education. “It also sends a message that all of us can and must do more to ensure that higher education fulfills its responsibility to be an engine of economic mobility for students from every background.”

“Johns Hopkins is profoundly grateful to Mike Bloomberg for his unbounded vision and generosity,” said Jeffrey Aronson, Chair of the Johns Hopkins University Board of Trustees. “Like his alma mater, Mike strives to make the world a better place, always leading by example. His unparalleled gift opens up a world of equal opportunity for generations of Hopkins students to come.”

As a direct result of the Bloomberg commitment, Johns Hopkins University will be able to implement the following changes to its admissions and financial aid practices, effective fall semester 2019:

Become permanently need-blind. This endowment will allow the University to permanently commit to need-blind admissions, admitting the highest achieving students from all backgrounds, regardless of their ability to pay.

This endowment will allow the University to permanently commit to need-blind admissions, admitting the highest achieving students from all backgrounds, regardless of their ability to pay. Offer no-loan financial aid packages. Currently, 44% of Johns Hopkins students graduate with some form of loan debt, averaging more than $24,000. Student loans will now be eliminated from financial aid packages and replaced with scholarships that do not need to be repaid, providing more support to students at a time when a college education is becoming harder for families to afford.

Currently, 44% of Johns Hopkins students graduate with some form of loan debt, averaging more than $24,000. Student loans will now be eliminated from financial aid packages and replaced with scholarships that do not need to be repaid, providing more support to students at a time when a college education is becoming harder for families to afford. Reduce family contributions. The financial burden placed on working families will be eased by reducing what families who qualify for financial aid have to pay towards their child’s education. This is particularly meaningful in middle and low income families trying to balance tuition for multiple children.

The financial burden placed on working families will be eased by reducing what families who qualify for financial aid have to pay towards their child’s education. This is particularly meaningful in middle and low income families trying to balance tuition for multiple children. Provide comprehensive student support. Johns Hopkins will dramatically increase recruitment and programs for first generation and lower-income students, including support for research experiences, internships, and study abroad.

Increase Enrollment of Pell Eligible Students . Johns Hopkins will build a more socioeconomically diverse student body, with low-income students who qualify for federal Pell Grants comprising at least one fifth of the student body by 2023.

In addition, Johns Hopkins will help address the critical national issue of college “under-matching”, whereby talented high school students from middle and lower income backgrounds are not matched with competitive college choice options. Johns Hopkins will implement an intensive outreach and recruitment program to ensure that academically qualified students from middle and low income backgrounds understand that a world-class education at an institution like Johns Hopkins is attainable and affordable. Bloomberg Philanthropies is also addressing the issue of under-matching through two education initiatives, CollegePoint and the American Talent Initiative, which aim to directly help high-achieving, lower-income students apply to, enroll in and graduate from top institutions.

“By ensuring that Johns Hopkins University will offer in perpetuity need-blind admission and then replace need-based loans with scholarships for admitted students, Mike Bloomberg has made the most significant philanthropic investment in higher education since the dawn of the university era,” said Dan Porterfield, President and CEO of the Aspen Institute and founding member of the American Talent Initiative Steering Committee. “With this historic donation Mayor Bloomberg is issuing a clarion call that America must invest in talent. For generations to come, Johns Hopkins University, one of the greatest universities in the world, will now be able to seek out talent from every community and every zip code, benefiting all students at Johns Hopkins and our larger society.”

Prior to this extraordinary gift, Johns Hopkins, relative to its top ten peers, had one of the lowest endowed funds available for student financial aid and one of the smallest average need-based awards, making it increasingly difficult for families to afford Hopkins. While the university has been able to admit the past several classes in a need-blind manner, using internal and donor funds, it has been without the security of funding that would allow the university to commit to this strategy publicly and permanently.

Bloomberg is a 1964 graduate of Johns Hopkins, the founder of Bloomberg L.P. and Bloomberg Philanthropies, and the 108th Mayor of New York City. He also served as the Chairman of the Johns Hopkins University Board of Trustees from 1996 to 2002. Bloomberg’s total lifetime giving to philanthropic efforts is $6.4 billion to date, which does not include this latest commitment.

Bloomberg made his first gift of $5 to Johns Hopkins University in 1965. His long term commitment and leadership has had an extraordinary impact on the school in every way – in terms of facilities and infrastructure, research and academic achievement, student body quality, and diversity. Johns Hopkins University is also a strategic partner for many of Bloomberg Philanthropies’ programs, including public health initiatives focused on improving life expectancy in the U.S., road safety, drowning prevention, improving public health data, and tobacco control. Bloomberg Philanthropies’ What Works Cities Initiative, which helps cities use data and evidence to make better decisions and improve lives, also relies on the expertise of Hopkins faculty and staff.

Bloomberg’s investments in undergraduate life for the university – ranging from financial aid support to physical revitalization of the campus – has also played a key role in propelling Johns Hopkins to an unrivaled jump in the national ranking by U.S. News & World Report, moving from #16 in 2007 to #10 in 2018. The School of Medicine ranks first among medical schools in receipt of extramural awards from the National Institutes of Health, and the Bloomberg School of Public Health, which recently celebrated its 100th anniversary, was the first public health school in the nation and is the top ranked in the field.

For additional information on Mike Bloomberg’s giving to Johns Hopkins, his work on college access and affordability, and related multimedia, click here.