Charity means generosity, typically in a helpful way to those in greater need. The United States is by far the most charitable nation in the world, as a percentage of its GDP and in absolute terms. Charity also has special religious connotations.
Charity is important to most religions, and is practiced by both religious and secular people and organizations.
In both the Christian and Islamic faiths, charity is not considered righteous if done to enhance the giver's reputation. Thus private and discreet charity is prompted by love not status.
For libertarians, charity is the choice of the individual, as any societal intervention must be voluntary, and based on the decision of the individual. It goes against libertarian belief to tax people involuntarily and redistribute wealth as "charity".[5]
The United States is “a land of charity,” says Arthur Brooks, an expert on philanthropy and a professor at Syracuse University's Maxwell School, who sees charitable giving and volunteerism as the signal characteristic of Americans. Americans increased their charitable donations significantly in 2006 to more than $295 billion—a record, according to a study released June 25 by the Giving USA Foundation, which reports on charitable contributions. The overwhelming majority of this money was donated by individuals, not corporations or foundations, according to the chairman of Giving USA, Richard Jolly. Donations from individuals, including bequests, accounted for 83.3 percent of total giving last year, or $245.8 billion, he told USINFO.[7]
Higher faith-based giving in the US explains 60% of the difference in proportion of GDP given to charity in the US and the UK. Religion giving accounts for a third of US charity donations, compared to 13% in the UK.[8]
The following is a table of national giving levels as a percentage of GDP.
Country | Level of Giving as % of GDP |
---|---|
USA | 1.67 |
UK | 0.73 |
Canada | 0.72 |
Australia | 0.69 |
South Africa | 0.64 |
Republic of Ireland | 0.47 |
Netherlands | 0.45 |
Singapore | 0.29 |
New Zealand | 0.29 |
Turkey | 0.23 |
Germany | 0.22 |
France | 0.14 |
The UK is especially proactive with donating to overseas charities, compromising 13% of total giving. In contrast, only 3% of US contributions goes to international
The lower levels of giving in some European countries reflects an expectation that social services should be provided through socialist state institutions. There is also an general inverse relationship between the rate of income tax and the level of giving.[8]
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Categories: [Economics] [Fruits of the Holy Spirit] [Conservative Traits]