New donations to FT charity appeal to be match-funded after deadline extended

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Thanks to your generosity, the FT’s joint seasonal appeal in aid of Financial Literacy and Inclusion Campaign “FLIC” and school food charity Magic Breakfast has now reached its baseline target of raising £100,000.

The appeal, which was launched in early December, was due to close at the end of this week. But we are now extending the deadline by a week, until Friday February 7, thanks to a late intervention from the Rosetrees Trust, which has generously offered to match-fund donations to get us to a new £200,000 target.

The offer is only valuable if readers donate. So if you haven’t yet given, please do consider supporting our work at ft.com/donate. Individual and corporate donations alike will be enormously appreciated.

Proper nutrition via healthy breakfasts at school, such as those provided by Magic Breakfast, boosts the capacity of young people — many of whom would otherwise go hungry and struggle to concentrate — to learn.

FLIC’s work boosts young people’s capacity to prosper in later life, thanks to the charity’s full school curriculum of core financial skills training.

Richard Ross, chair of Rosetrees, said: “Ensuring children from deprived homes start the day with a proper meal is good for their health and gives them the best chance of learning at school. We are also supporting research that is looking at the mental health problems of young people, which [is] growing for a variety of reasons.” Financial stress, often compounded by gaps in foundational financial understanding, is a proven contributor to mental health problems.

Ross, whose charity is a leading backer of “venture philanthropy” in the area of medical research, is convinced of the related relevance of the FT’s appeal and is a passionate advocate for a broader push to increase philanthropy. “People who are well provided [for] financially should contribute to the needs of others,” he said.

Ross’s family fortune stems from his parents’ multiple business start-ups, which range from a market stall to a property investment empire. That wealth once topped £100mn, according to the Sunday Times Rich List, but Ross has since given away a large portion of it. Medical research grants of more than £50mn have generated follow-on funding of £1.2bn, Ross said.

The trust’s match-funding offer to FLIC and Magic Breakfast was conditional on the appeal first reaching its original baseline target of £100,000. Notable donors to the appeal so far include Morgan Stanley International, as well as hundreds of FT readers.

In two months of appeal coverage of the work of FLIC and Magic Breakfast, as well as other organisations operating in related fields, the FT has reported on the growing realisation across the world — from Finland to Indonesia — that both nutritious food and financial education in schools can make a vast difference to future lives.

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