My guess would be they’re mostly at capacity in terms of mentorship, otherwise they’d presumably just admit more PhD students. Also not sure they’d want to play grantmaker (and I could imagine that would also be really hard from a regulatory perspective—spending money from grants that go through the university can come with a lot of bureaucracy, and you can’t just do whatever you want with that money).
Connecting people who want to give money with non-profits, grantmakers, or independent researchers who could use it seems much lower-hanging fruit. (Though I don’t know any specifics about who these people who want to donate are and whether they’d be open to giving money to non-academics.)
My guess would be they’re mostly at capacity in terms of mentorship, otherwise they’d presumably just admit more PhD students. Also not sure they’d want to play grantmaker (and I could imagine that would also be really hard from a regulatory perspective—spending money from grants that go through the university can come with a lot of bureaucracy, and you can’t just do whatever you want with that money).
Connecting people who want to give money with non-profits, grantmakers, or independent researchers who could use it seems much lower-hanging fruit. (Though I don’t know any specifics about who these people who want to donate are and whether they’d be open to giving money to non-academics.)