Anthropic’s billionaire cofounders are giving away 80% of their wealth: ‘The thing to worry about is a level of wealth concentration that will break society’
Jan 27, 2026
In recent months, Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei has made head-turning predictions about the threat of artificial intelligence: that it could eliminate half of all entry-level white-collar jobs, with software engineers just a year out from being obsolete.
Now, the billionaire tech titan behind Clau
de is sounding the alarm that there’s an even bigger danger coming for the everyday worker.
“The thing to worry about is a level of wealth concentration that will break society,” Amodei wrote in a letter published yesterday.
Already, he noted, Elon Musk’s nearly $700 billion net worth exceeds that of John D. Rockefeller at the height of the Gilded Age; and that, Amodei argued, is before most of AI’s economic impact has even materialized.
Against that backdrop, all seven of Anthropic’s cofounders—including Dario and his sister, Daniela Amodei—are pledging to donate 80% of their wealth. Each cofounder’s net worth is estimated at about $3.7 billion, according to Forbes, though that figure does not account for recent fundraising talks that reportedly valued Anthropic at $350 billion—nearly double its prior $183 billion valuation. Based on this estimate alone, the pledge could direct tens of billions of dollars toward philanthropy.
Other Anthropic employees have also committed to donating shares that could be worth billions, with the company saying it will match those contributions.
As the future of work is questioned, billionaire wealth is soaring to record highs
While there have long been worries about rising wealth inequalities in the world, the AI boom is only raising the stakes.
Anthropic, which launched ChatGPT rival Claude in March 2023, is a case study itself. In spring of that year, the company was already valued at $4.1 billion. But less than three years later, its valuation grew 87-fold to its current $350 billion figure. In the same period, OpenAI has surged to a $750 billion valuation and become a household name.
These soaring valuations are minting new billionaires at record speed. Last year alone, billionaire wealth jumped by 16% to $18.3 trillion—the highest level in history, according to Oxfam.
Amodei warned these wealth dynamics may eventually force a fundamental rethink of work and income.
“In the long term, in a world with enormous total wealth, in which many companies increase greatly in value due to increased productivity and capital concentration, it may be feasible to pay human employees even long after they are no longer providing economic value in the traditional sense,” Amodei wrote—adding that his company is considering a range of pathways for Anthropic employees.
Elon Musk has echoed these predictions that technology’s rapid innovation will completely change the workforce—and cause a need for “universal high income” to sustain individuals.
“My prediction is that work will be optional. It’ll be like playing sports or a video game or something like that,” Musk said in November at the U.S.-Saudi Investment Forum. “If you want to work, [it’s] the same way you can go to the store and just buy some vegetables, or you can grow vegetables in your backyard. It’s much harder to grow vegetables in your backyard, and some people still do it because they like growing vegetables.”
Anthropic’s seven cofounder billionaires
Dario Amodei, $3.7 billion
Daniela Amodei, $3.7 billion
Tom Brown, $3.7 billion
Jack Clark, $3.7 billion
Jared Kaplan, $3.7 billion
Sam McCandlish, $3.7 billion
Christopher Olah, $3.7 billion
Estimates according to Forbes; their net worths are likely to increase with Anthropic’s growing valuation.
The ultrarich have an ‘obligation’ to address wealth disparities, according to Amodei
While leaders debate what the future of work could look like, Amodei stresses that action is needed now.
“Wealthy individuals have an obligation to help solve this problem,” Amodei wrote. “It is sad to me that many wealthy individuals (especially in the tech industry) have recently adopted a cynical and nihilistic attitude that philanthropy is inevitably fraudulent or useless.”
Many tech leaders, including Mark Zuckerberg, Elon Musk, and Larry Ellison, have already signed the Giving Pledge—the initiative launched by Bill Gates, Melinda French Gates, and Warren Buffett to give the majority of their wealth to charitable causes. But critics have noted that not most signers have not followed through with their promise yet. Last year, reports suggested billionaire investor Peter Thiel encouraged Musk to abandon the Giving Pledge, arguing Gates would otherwise give the money “to left-wing nonprofits.”
Ultimately, Amodei said many near-term solutions are just ways to manage a transition rather than stop what’s coming.
“In the end, AI will be able to do everything, and we need to grapple with that,” Amodei said. “It’s my hope that by that time, we can use AI itself to help us restructure markets in ways that work for everyone, and that the interventions above can get us through the transitional period.”
Fortune reached out to Anthropic for further comment.
This story was originally featured on Fortune.com
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