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Posts tagged ‘David Malan’

8
Feb

19 Employees at Harvard Take Home $75 Million

19 of the most highly compensated employees at Harvard, in 2024 received $75 million in compensation from 2019-2024 (note: highly compensated employees in any of the years 2019-2023 but not in 2024 are not listed below; including Katherine Lapp who received $6 million from 2019-2023): Read more »

6
Feb

Executive Compensation at Harvard (2024)

Harvard is a private teaching and research university with an acceptance rate at about 3% of applicants.  Located in Boston, Massachusetts, Harvard has about 25,000 students (both undergraduate and graduate students). The annual tuition, room, board, and fees is about $95,000 which means a 4-year degree is about $380,000.

There are 13 voting members (Fellows) of the governing body, 10 of whom are independent – although 14 are listed on the Form 990:   6 of the 14 (43%) are male while 8 of the 14 (57%) are female. Read more »

27
Oct

Executive Compensation at Harvard (2023)

Harvard is a private teaching and research university with an acceptance rate at about 5% of applicants.  Located in Boston, Massachusetts, Harvard has about 25,000 students (both undergraduate and graduate students). The annual tuition, room, board, and fees is about $85,000 which means a 4-year degree is about $340,000.

There are 13 voting members (Fellows) of the governing body, 10 of whom are independent, 8 of the 13 (62%) are male while 5 of the 13 (38%) are female. Read more »

28
Sep

Executive Compensation at Harvard (2020)

Harvard is a private teaching and research university with an acceptance rate at about 5% of applicants.  Located in Boston, Massachusetts, Harvard has about 25,000 students (undergrads and graduate students). The annual tuition, room, board, and fees is about $77,000.

There are 12 voting members (Fellows) of the governing body, 9 of whom are independent, 8 of the 12 (67%) are male while 4 of the 12 (33%) are female.

In 2020, Harvard’s total revenue was $7.4 billion (compared to $7.9 billion in 2019) with most of the income coming from 3 sources  :investment income, gains, and royalties ($4 billion), contributions, gifts, and grants ($1.4 billion) and tuition, fees, and services  ($1.9 billion).  Expenses were $5.3 billion (not including $350 million in depreciation).  At year-end, Harvard had $49 billion in net fund assets. Read more »