The Altruism Budget: Measuring and Encouraging Charitable Giving

Working Paper: NBER ID: w25938

Authors: Laura K. Gee; Jonathan Meer

Abstract: Much of the research on charitable giving has concentrated on how to increase monetary donations to a single organization. But do activities that increase donations to one non-profit or through one method come at the expense of others? This chapter examines the state of the literature on the “altruism budget.” We first discuss whether an act needs to be totally unselfish to be counted in the altruism budget. We then examine the various components that go into the altruism budget, including but not limited to monetary donations, volunteered time, and in-kind gifts. The remainder of the chapter discusses the research on whether the altruism budget is fixed across gifts to different non-profits, in different forms, or at different times. Overall, the evidence is decidedly mixed on whether the altruism budget is fixed or flexible. Perhaps surprisingly, gifts at one point in time do not seem to be neutralized through lower giving later. But the impact on contemporaneous gifts to other charities, or through other forms of giving, is more difficult to summarize.

Keywords: No keywords provided

JEL Codes: D64; H41


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
nature of charitable acts (D64)classification within the altruism budget (D64)
current donations (D64)future charitable behavior (D64)
gifts at one time do not constrain future giving (D64)flexibility of the altruism budget (D64)

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