A Thinking Reed

"Man is but a reed, the most feeble thing in nature, but he is a thinking reed" – Blaise Pascal

Singer on the lives we can save

Beside his writings on animal liberation and bioethics, Peter Singer is probably best known for his views on the obligations people in the affluent parts of the world have to those living in absolute poverty. His article “Famine, Affluence, and Morality” is a classic in applied ethics; in it, Singer argues that those of us in the affluent world–to the extent that we expend resources on luxury goods that could be spent on alleviating extreme poverty–are acting in a grossly immoral fashion.

Picking up on these themes, Singer has just released a book called The Life You Can Save: Acting Now to End World Poverty. Again, the emphasis is on extreme poverty. Singer contends that ending extreme poverty is within our reach, but only if we in the richer world give much more of our incomes than we currently do to relieving that poverty. He proposes that we should give away our income to poverty relief organizations according to a sliding scale based on income (1% for those making under $105,000, 5% for those making between $105,000 and $148,000, and so on). Singer points out that Americans in particular routinely overestimate the amount of foreign aid the U.S. gives (and much of that is not even aimed at development or poverty relief); increasing the amount we each give is not only good for the immediate end of helping very poor people, but it can also serve to ratchet up public perception of how much we in the rich parts of the world owe to people who are extremely poor.

Here’s an article summarizing Singer’s argument; here’s the book’s website, which offers suggestions for how much to give and a list of organizations doing good work. It’s interesting that such a resolutely secular thinker as Singer would suggest such a notion at a time when many, if not most, Christians have given up the idea of the tithe. Not a bad thing to think about this Lent when considering where you alms can make a difference.

4 responses to “Singer on the lives we can save”

  1. Hi Lee:

    If you have the chance, I’d love to see you say something about this criticism of Singer’s argument, which Will Wilkinson blogged about here. The basic idea is that a central problem with foreign aid is that so much of it is wasted or otherwise ineffectual; that’s not to say that we shouldn’t care about it at all, but only that this fact gives us at least some reason to devote more of our efforts to helping others in ways that don’t rely on such intermediaries. Anyway, just a pointer.

  2. Hi John,

    Thanks for the links. I don’t think the disagreement between Singer and Easterly is really that profound, though (and Wilkinson seems to recognize that). Singer is emphasizing our obligation to give, and Easterly is emphasizing the necessity of finding effective institutional means for doing so. But Singer also addresses that (in the Chronicle article, and I presume at greater length in the book; though Easterly seems unconvinced). GiveWell–an outfit that evaluates charities for their effectiveness–discusses the issue here: http://blog.givewell.net/?p=351

    I think Easterly is right that Singer’s analogy with pulling a drowning child out of the water is oversimplified, but I’m not convinced it changes the moral calculus that much. Presumably the answer is to give more and be more diligent about how the money is spent, no?

  3. […] Cowen, focusing mostly on Singer’s new book The Life You Can Save. (I mentioned the book here; I still haven’t read it, though I do have a request in at the […]

  4. […] waiting for my copy of Singer’s book from the library. (See here and here for relevant […]

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