students and faculty would be both impractical and a waste of a tremendous
resource. Instead, Harvard employs nearly two hundred professionals to manage
this hoard in a way that generates a healthy return for the university while
providing capital to the rest of the world.
1
Harvard buys stocks and bonds,
invests in venture capital funds, and otherwise puts $25 billion in the hands of
people and institutions around the globe who can do productive things with it.
From 1995 to 2005, the endowment earned an average 16 percent annual return,
which is a lot more productive for the university than leaving the cash lying
around campus. (Harvard also managed to lose 30 percent of its endowment
during the financial crisis, so we’ll come back to the Harvard endowment when
we talk about “risk and reward.”)
2
Financial markets do more than take capital from the rich and lend it to
everyone else. They enable each of us to smooth consumption over our lifetimes,
which is a fancy way of saying that we don’t have to spend income at the same
time we earn it. Shakespeare may have admonished us to be neither borrowers
nor lenders; the fact is that most of us will be both at some point. If we lived in
an agrarian society, we would have to eat our crops reasonably soon after the
harvest or find some way to store them. Financial markets are a more
sophisticated way of managing the harvest. We can spend income now that we
have not yet earned—as by borrowing for college or a home—or we can earn
income now and spend it later, as by saving for retirement. The important point
is that earning income has been divorced from spending it, allowing us much
more flexibility in life.
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