When it comes to voluntarily spreading their own wealth around, a distinct "charity gap" opens up between Americans who are for and against government income leveling. Your intuition might tell you that people who favor government redistribution care most about the less fortunate and would give more to charity. Initially, this was my own assumption. But the data tell a different story.
....the General Social Survey (GSS) found that those who were against higher levels of government redistribution privately gave four times as much money, on average, as people who were in favor of redistribution. This is not all church-related giving; they also gave about 3.5 times as much to nonreligious causes. Anti-redistributionists gave more even after correcting for differences in income, age, religion and education.
Of course, there are other ways to give than with money....those who said the government was "spending too much money on welfare" were more likely to donate blood than those who said the government was "spending too little money on welfare." The anti-redistributionists were also more likely to give someone directions on the street, return change mistakenly handed them by a cashier, and give food (or money) to a homeless person.
Correcting misconceptions about markets, economics, asset prices, derivatives, equities, debt and finance
Thursday, December 23, 2010
Anti Big Government, Anti Income Redistribution Americans Give 4 Times As Much To Charities As Liberals
Posted By Milton Recht
From The Wall Street Journal article, "Tea Partiers and the Spirit of Giving" by Arthur C Brooks:
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