In order to provide you with a better experience, netivist uses a limited amount of cookies. Learn more about the way we use them by reading our Cookies Policy. By continuing to browse netivist you are agreeing to our policy.

Helping the poor: do we have a moral obligation to give money to charity?



helping the poor

Peter Singer's ethics suggest that helping the poor is our moral obligation. We focus the normative dimension of the problem of poverty and inequality and discuss if giving money to charity is simply our duty or a sign of generosity. Do you think charity any good?

This debate is based on the module “How should we address poverty and inequality?"  of LSE100 at The London School of Economics and Political Science.

 

Helping the poor as a moral obligation

Australian philosopher Peter Singer (see video below) popularized a moral argument about the extensive individual duties of aid to the global poor. For Peter Singer we ought to save the lives even of those we don't know or live very far away as soon as we can do it at very little cost to ourselves. On of the main ethical implications of Singer's reasoning is that giving money to charity is neither generous or charitable, it is simply our duty and not giving would be wrong. Thus, we have a moral obligation to help reduce poverty and prevent hunger, disease and death simply because we can. The failure of people in rich nations to make significant sacrifices to help the poorest, which usually live in developing countries, is ethically indefensible. Being charitable wouldn't make us "good", but failing to be charitable would make us "bad".

Peter Singer's is based on a moral and on an empirical premise:

  • Moral: if it is in you power to prevent something bad, without thereby sacrificing anything of comparable moral importance, you ought to do it.
  • Empirical: if you can save a life by giving a certain amount of money to charity, and giving this amount will not require you to give up anything of comparable moral importance, you ought to do it.

Singer invokes the Pond Case: if you are walking past a pond and see a child drowning in it, you ought to jump in the water and save it, although that would imply ruining your clothes and watch. The cost for you would be insignificat compared to the harm you would prevent.

We can reduce death and suffering by contributing to famine relief and development aid, we ought to do it.

Contrasting views

However, Peter Singer's ethics is not universally accepted. These are some of the most important objections:

  • Responsibility: singer makes no distinction between people who are responsible for the child (or the poor) and those who aren't. Have the citizens of all countries the same moral obligation to contribute?
  • Burden sharing: what if the others are not helping or contributing? Are you still supposed to bear burden?
  • Distance: Singer makes no mention to distance. People tend to care more about those close to them than about distant anonymous people they have never encounter ("out of sight, out of mind")
  • Duties to those "near and dear": some argue that you should prioritize alleviating harm to those that are closer to you. Should people be concerned about the global poor or first try to solve the problem in their own town or country?
  • Freedom to act: Singer's reasoning makes people to pursue always the general good rather than their own interests and projects.
  • Charitable organizations' administrative costs are very high. A big share of the money given for charity does not reach the poor but is spent in salaries, trips, promotion and marketing. 
  • Is charity hypocritical? Some argue that charity is an "easy good" that gives us peace of mind but does not help changing the systemic problems that cause inequality and poverty. From this point of view in the long run charity could even be detrimental to global good.
  • Charity may produce harm: There are also problems of poor coordination among donors, accusations of resources diverted to corrupt officers, doubts about the positive economic effects of foreign aid in local markets.

Do you agree with Peter Singer? Is helping the poor a moral obligation? Is charity necessary and good? Why? Vote and share your views on this important political, ethical and philosophical issue on the discussion forum below.

Recommended readings:

  • Salomon, M. (2011) "Why should it matter that others have more? Poverty, Inequality, and the potential of international human rights law", Review of International Studies 37(5), pp. 2137-2155 (article)
  • Singer, P (1972) 'Famine, Affluence, and Morality", Philosophy and Public Affairs 1(2), pp. 229-243  (article)
  • Wenar, L. (2010) "Poverty is No Pond": Challenges for the Affluent", in Giving Well: The Ethics of Philanthropy, Illingworth, P., T. Pogge and L. Wenar (eds) Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Further resources:

  • Test yourself and find out how rich you are compared to the rest of the world population (click here)

Watch these very interesting videos with the contrasting views of two great contemporary philosophers: Peter Singer and Slavoj Žižek.

 
 
If you want to promote your own scholarly debate, lecture, research project or academic article, contact us: university[a]netivist.org
 
Helping the poor: do we have a moral obligation to give money to charity? Vote and explain why. Feel free to ask questions to the LSE100 teaching team on the discussion forum below.


Vote to see result and collect 1 XP. Your vote is anonymous.
If you change your mind, you can change your vote simply by clicking on another option.





Join the debate

In order to join the debate you must be logged in.



Already have an account on netivist? Just login. New to netivist? Create your account for free.





View all comments

You are viewing a filtered list of comments. Click the button above to view all comments.

...
Lvl 3
124 xp

115 posts
#77  |  Amelia Jonathan  07 February 2025 @ 22:10

My name is Amelia Jonathan from the United States, Using this opportunity to thank Dr. Ughulu is a grateful thing to me, for over years I have been sick with Hepatitis B disease, I have done a lot of things to get cured of my diseases and nothing has worked out. I have taken different types of medication for it , but it still doesn’t work for me. I still keep going for a check up so that the doctor will tell me my disease has be gone, because i’m taking my medicine with no result nothing has been cured, I have spent a lot of money just to get cure of Hepatitis B. until my old time friend came to my place and saw what am going through, and then direct me to contact Dr. Ughulu who is a very powerful man, which I did explain my problem to Dr. Ughulu and send me a herbal remedy bottle and explain to me how I should drink it. So I started to drink the herbal tea in one week that I drink the herbal tea. I went for a check up to check if I’m cured from Hepatitis B disease, then the nurse told me nothing is wrong with me anymore and said I’m fine. I am the happiest person right now. I promise Dr Ughulu I will testify about his good work on the internet. Reach out to Dr. Ughulu Via: drughulupowerfulspelltemple@gmail.com Thank you so much sir for what you did for me you’re the best of all. TEXT OR CALL: +1(252) 409-1841 or website: https://drughulupowerfulsp.wixsite.com/my-site-ughulu WHATSAPP NUMBER: +1(720) 794-2516


Join the debate

In order to join the debate you must be logged in.



Already have an account on netivist? Just login. New to netivist? Create your account for free.


Next Article