“Why is it that giving money is good?” Plonkee asked in the newly-revived Get Rich Slowly forums. Brad replied citing a December 2006 article from the New York Times Magazine: “What should a billionaire give — and what should you?” (If this is behind a paywall for you, try this mirror.)

In this essay, philosopher Peter Singer discusses the magnitude of recent donations from the two richest men in the world: Warren Buffet contributed $37 billion to charitable foundations, and Bill and Melinda Gates gave $30 billion. What does this mean?
Philanthropy on this scale raises many ethical questions: Why are the people who are giving doing so? Does it do any good? Should we praise them for giving so much or criticize them for not giving still more? Is it troubling that such momentous decisions are made by a few extremely wealthy individuals? And how do our judgments about them reflect on our own way of living?
I expected Singer to pounce on rich men like Gates and Buffet, to criticize them for an unethical road to riches. Instead he writes:
Sniping tells us more about the attackers than the attacked. Giving away large sums, rather than spending the money on corporate advertising or developing new products, is not a sensible strategy for increasing personal wealth.
Singer philosophizes about our moral obligation to help the poor, and explores whether this is properly the role of the government or of the individual. He concludes that philanthropy is best left to the individual.
Unconstrained by diplomatic considerations or the desire to swing votes at the United Nations, private donors can more easily avoid dealing with corrupt or wasteful governments. They can go directly into the field, working with local villages and grass-roots organizations. Nor are philanthropists beholden to lobbyists.
The rich should give, Singer decides — the real question is, “How much should they give?” He compares Gates to the world’s sixth-richest man: Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen. Gates is worth $53 billion. Allen has $16 billion. Gates has donated 35 percent of his wealth to charitable causes; Allen has donated 5 percent. Each has indulged in seemingly obscene luxuries. Gates owns a 66,000-square-foot house in Seattle — Allen owns a 413-foot yacht that carries two helicopters and a submarine. In what way should we judge these men? Should we judge them at all?

As a comparison, Singer cites Zell Kravinsky. In his mid-40s, Kravinsky gave away most of his $45 million real estate fortune to medical charities. Then he donated a kidney to a stranger. “Kravinsky says that the hard part is not giving away the first $45 million but the last $10,000, when you have to live so cheaply that you can’t function in the business world.” This is noble, Singer writes, but should such nobility cause us to condemn the actions of men like Gates and Buffett?
Even if Buffett left each of his three children a million dollars each, he would still have given away more than 99.99 percent of his wealth. When someone does that much — especially in a society in which the norm is to leave most of your wealth to your children — it is better to praise them than to cavil about the extra few hundred thousand dollars they might have given.
Based on all of this (and more — it’s a long article), Singer performs a thought experiment: How much should the rich donate in order to ensure that the poor have a decent chance at life? His conclusions:
- The top 0.01 percent of U.S. taxpayers — 14,400 people earning more than $5,000,000 — ought to donate 33% of their income.
- The rest of the top 0.1 percent of U.S. taxpayers — 129,600 people earning a minimum of $1.1 million/year — ought to donate 25% of their income.
- The top 0.5 percent of U.S. taxpayers — 474,900 people earning at least $407,000 — ought to give 20% of their earnings.
- The rest of the top one percent — 719,900 taxpayers earning at least $276,000 — should donate 15%.
- The rest of the top 10 percent — nearly 13 million taxpayers who earn an more than $92,000 — should give 10%.
“You could spend a long time debating whether the fractions of income I have suggested for donation constitute the fairest possible scheme,” Singer writes. That’s not his point. He’s trying to demonstrate that these levels of charity are unlikely to impose hardship on those who make the contributions. He says that the rich in other countries should share the burden. Ultimately he believes that “it should be seen as a serious moral failure when those with ample income do not do their fair share toward relieving global poverty.”
This article makes several other notable points. Plonkee recently wrote at her site that atheists should tithe. Singer has something to say about this, too:
Interestingly, neither Gates nor Buffett seems motivated by the possibility of being rewarded in heaven for his good deeds on earth. Gates told a Time interviewer, “There’s a lot more I could be doing on a Sunday morning” than going to church. Put them together with Andrew Carnegie, famous for his freethinking, and three of the four greatest American philanthropists have been atheists or agnostics. (The exception is John D. Rockefeller.) In a country in which 96 percent of the population say they believe in a supreme being, that’s a striking fact.
Though Singer strays dangerously close to an irrelevant “moral superiority of atheists” argument here, it’s possible to derive a larger point: philanthropy is not the exclusive domain of a specific creed or set of beliefs. Altruism is a larger ideal, one that seems to be intrinsic in most ideologies (Ayn Rand aside).
The article also features a number of quotes from Warren Buffett, each of which elevates him further in my eyes. (As you know, he’s one of my financial heroes.) For example, Buffett acknowledges that his success is largely a product of the time and place in which he lives. His financial acumen would be useless under other circumstances.
“If you stick me down in the middle of Bangladesh or Peru,” he said, “you’ll find out how much this talent is going to produce in the wrong kind of soil.”
I’ll be the first to admit that I don’t do enough charitable giving. For too long, I’ve been my own favorite charity. But as my situation improves, as I eliminate my debt and fund my retirement, philanthropy is going to take on greater importance in my life. For more information on this subject, please explore the following links:
- The charity navigator is “America’s premier charity evaluator”. Many people I trust recommend this for finding charities that are worth supporting. (I plan to review the charity navigator fully sometime soon.)
- Two charities I see praised often are Oxfam and Direct Relief International.
- At Money Smart Life, Ben has some simple strategies for donating as you shop.
- Free Money Finance, an openly Christian money-blogger, has an extensive selection of articles on The Bible and money. (In fact, he posts a new article on the subject every Sunday.)
- Trent at The Simple Dollar urges his readers to put their donations where they count.
- Some thoughts on the contrast between the ideals of Peter Singer and Ayn Rand.
All of this is interesting as a philosophical discussion, but what does it mean to you and me? Does it mean anything? How do we account for charitable giving in our daily lives?
Obviously, each of us is going to have “pet” causes to which we contribute. Singer’s definition of charity probably wouldn’t extend to some of the organizations to which I give money. (I contribute regularly to the National Trust for Historic Preservation, the Oregon Historical Society, and to the local classical music station.) My wife supports OSPIRG and public radio.
Where do these fit into Singer’s notion of philanthropy?
How does one decide which charities are worth supporting? Moreover, how do we find a balance between supporting charities with money and supporting them with time? For many organizations, time is the more valuable of the two. And even people without disposable income can find time to volunteer for causes they believe in.
[New York Times Magazine: What should a billionaire give — and what should you?]
This article is about Odds and Ends
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Peter Singer received a lot of letters after his NY Times article was published, and many of them raised issues that were also raised in comments to this blog post. You can read his answers here
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[...] and save smartly. The blog also seeks to present moral and ethical issues involving money such as “What Should a Billionaire Give, and What Should You?” and “How One Father Taught His Son About Money.” You may or may not agree with the [...]
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I am so grateful for this incredible conversation. It is really enjoyable to come to a place where people with different values can have educated discussions without such negativity you see elsewhere.
I think no one can doubt the unfathomable amount of money that was given in this event. 37 billion. Imagine a parking lot full 37,000 Bugatti Veyrons with just Buffet’s donation, tithe, offering or whatever you wish to call it.
I love what Matt said, “How many people were employed to build their houses.” Or clean and upkeep them? Thats a lot of grass folks. And you know the neighborhood children don’t knock on his door and ask to cut it.
Me personally, I am impressed that someone in this world has that kind of heart to give away billions. So unselfishly. They worked hard and changed the world with their innovation, you solve the billion dollar problem and you’ll get the money too.
And now the infamous but…I always think about the final scene of Schindler’s List were he was
heart broken over what more he could have done.How many lives he could have saved by selling a pin on his lapel. That scene will stick in my head forever when I make my first million, ten million, and hopefully billion. What will I do with what I have? Or, as us christians ask, what do I do with what I have been given?
Gos has blessed America. Just a side note, I dont believe its the govt’s job to manage my livelihood. They have enough on their hands trying to make sure people don’t blow each other up and attempting to take care of those who can’t help themselves. What a world we live in.
A little story I received via email…
A Sad Parallel…
I bought a bird feeder. I hung it on my back porch and filled it with seed. Within a week we had hundreds of birds taking advantage of the continuous flow of free and easily accessible food. But then the birds started building nests in the boards of the patio, above the table, and next to the barbecue. Then came the poop. It was everywhere: on the patio tile, the chairs, the table…everywhere.
Then some of the birds turned mean: They would dive bomb me and try to peck me even though I had fed them out of my own pocket. And others birds were boisterous and loud: They sat on the feeder and squawked and screamed at all hours of the day and night and demanded that I fill it when it got low on food. After a while, I couldn’t even sit on my own back porch anymore.
I took down the bird feeder and in three days the birds were gone. I cleaned up their mess and took down the many nests they had built all over the patio. Soon, the back yard was like it used to be…quiet, serene and no one demanding their rights to a free meal.
Now lets see…our government gives out free food, subsidized housing, free medical care, free education and allows anyone born here to be a automatic citizen. Then the illegals came by the tens of thousands. Suddenly our taxes went up to pay for free services; small apartments are housing 5 families: you have to wait 6 hours to be seen by an emergency room doctor: your child’s 2nd grade class is behind other schools because over half the class doesn’t speak English: Corn Flakes now come in a bilingual box; I have to press “one” to hear my bank talk to me in English, and people waving flags other than “Old Glory”, are squawking and screaming in the streets, demanding more rights and free liberties.
Maybe it’s time for the government to take down the bird feeder.
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Yikes. I know I’m late to the convo, but I have to reply to this last post — it’s sad that someone needs to make up such a dramatic fiction like that to get their anti-immigration point across, and it’s similarly disappointing that this be the “note” that such a lively and thorough discussion of the beauty and ethics of giving should end on. There are so many things wrong with that Forward that I really don’t know where to begin — but I have followed that bit of vitriol off-topic as far as I am willing.
The Schindler’s parallel is very apt, I think. So many Americans who believe they cannot afford to give their money or don’t know how to give their time may think that they do not have anything to offer. How untrue this is! I have found that the more I give of my time, the more time I find that I have to use for myself. The more I give of my money, the more my personal Plenty seems to grow. Tangible or no, the difference it makes to one’s psyche when they give time or resources to a worthy person or group has a distinct impact on their life, and should be encouraged at all levels of life, all religions, and in all families.
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Former billionaire Chuck Feeney gave it all away while still alive. There’s a new book out about how he made his money and then gave it all away. I wrote about it here: http://smartstartup.typepad.com/my_weblog/2007/10/how-billionaire.html
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I know I’m resurrecting a long-dead conversation here, but I was shocked and appalled at Allie’s statments about “patients who never have and never will make any functional or useful contribution to anything.” Was that some kind of weird sarcasm, or do you think disabled people don’t deserve to live because they don’t “contribute” to society (through working)?
How can you blame them? What are they supposed to do? Don’t they have as much right to life as anyone else? It’s a sad day when the only value a human being has is in the amount of work s/he can produce.
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