As far as I know, large philanthropic foundations often use DAFs to attain public charity status, getting the same tax benefits. And if they’re private foundations, they’re still getting a benefit of ~15%, and possibly a lot more via receiving donations of appreciated assets.
I also don’t think public charity status and tax benefits are especially relevant here. I think public scrutiny is not intrinsically important; I mainly care about taking actions that maximize social impact, and public scrutiny seems much worse for this than figuring out high-impact ways to preserve/increase altruistic assets.
As far as I know, large philanthropic foundations often use DAFs to attain public charity status, getting the same tax benefits. And if they’re private foundations, they’re still getting a benefit of ~15%, and possibly a lot more via receiving donations of appreciated assets.
I also don’t think public charity status and tax benefits are especially relevant here. I think public scrutiny is not intrinsically important; I mainly care about taking actions that maximize social impact, and public scrutiny seems much worse for this than figuring out high-impact ways to preserve/increase altruistic assets.