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Notes on Giving Away my First $100,000

For my 42nd birthday, Mrs. MM let me give away all this money

For my 42nd birthday, Mrs. MM let me give away all this money.

Here’s a little quiz:

Suppose you are living an extremely happy life  – all your material needs and wants are met, and there is still money to spare. Then suddenly, you get even more money. Do you:

a) Try to think of even more stuff you could buy for yourself with that extra money?

b) Try to find more efficient things to do with the surplus?

 

For many people, this might seem like a trick question. After all, needs are cheap but how could you ever have all your wants met?

I mean sure, you might already have a Honda, but you obviously still want a Tesla, right? And if you could afford it, why would you not forego ground transportation altogether and have a private helicopter on call, with a Gulfstream G6 waiting on the airstrip? Perhaps at that point you could be satisfied – you’re sensible and not one of those greedy people who needs a yacht. But that still leaves a long, long climb to full life satisfaction.

For me, the point of full satisfaction is also pretty high – not just basic food but fancy stuff from around the world. A glorious modernist house on a park in one of the country’s most expensive counties, and unlimited, bikes, music, computers, and whatever else happens to appeal. Hell, I even have a brand new electric car just to see what the buzz is about. The tab for this lifestyle – a little over $25,000 per year – is not quite at Gulfstream elevation but it still puts my family in the top 2% of the Global Rich List.

Since I hit my consumption ceiling a little earlier than a proper rich person, I have been thinking about option (b) above for a number of years now. And if you care about trying to be logical when dealing with surplus money, your research will very quickly lead you to the Effective Altruism movement, and indeed I wrote about it as far back as 2012 with a review of Peter Singer’s The Life You Can Save.  As with most useful things I’ve learned in the last five years, it was readers of this blog who clued me in to the idea.

Effective Altruism is an attempt to answer one simple question: where can our surplus money do the largest amount of good? When buying something for yourself has only a neutral or small positive effect, funding charitable causes in a relatively rich country can be a way of getting more happiness for your dollar. But meeting even bigger needs in a much poorer country can measurably outperform either of those options by a huge margin.

Taking an example from the video below, $40,000 can raise and train one beautiful golden retriever to help a blind person in the US – undeniably a good thing. Or it can pay for simple trachoma operations to permanently cure about 2000 people from preventable blindness in Africa – quite a strong argument to allocate at least some of your generosity there.

Watch: Peter Singer’s moving TED Talk explaining the ideas behind Effective Altruism in about 17 minutes. Or you can read the same ideas on his The Life You Can Save website. 

Even way back in 2012 I knew the idea was solid, and yet somehow the MMM family has managed to give away only relatively small amounts of money each year relative to our income, and thus other money has continued to accumulate.

I have been stuck in an analysis paralysis, wondering if I should give individually to conventional charities, or use wider reach of this blog to do something cooler that would make news headlines and thus create a multiplier effect. For example, what if I could:

  • Personally fund some critical bike path in my town, drawing attention to the highest-returning investment any city can make?
  • How about hiring some creative geniuses with an appropriately bizarre sense of humour to help me run a brilliant and educational YouTube channel?
  • Could we collectively buy up a few blocks of a neighborhood and permanently shut down the roads to cars, keeping a few shared vehicles in a lot at the periphery and tearing up the pavement to become a little woodland/garden for our kids, and our utopian living space? Imagine how much the US would change if this became the new model for town planning?

These are great ideas, but they all take work, and my power to get stuff done is quite finite. So by holding out for them, I am falling in to the classic trap of Perfection is the Enemy of the Good. Why not try something I know is good, right now?

So I resolved to start with a donation amount that feels big enough to be meaningful to me, but not so big I am afraid to do it, and just do it. For me, that number was $100,000.

It sounds big if you think of it as “Four years of the family’s spending!”, or “An entire University education for a kid!” but only medium if you consider it’s only a mid-range Tesla. And downright small at less than a quarter of what this blog earned last year (before tax at least), which I managed via only the occasional typing of shit into the computer.

By keeping our lifestyle* at the previous already-glorious level we set at retirement, we have found that 100% of the extra income and windfalls we’ve encountered in these subsequent 11 years has been a pure surplus.

Effective Altruism is based on the principle that All Human Lives have Equal Value. Thus, they suggest that you simply give to the charity has the largest effect on improving and saving human lives, per dollar. The intellectual headquarters for the movement is a website called Givewell.org

According to them, the most effective charity per dollar is currently the Against Malaria Foundation – a very minimalist organization that distributes protective Mosquito nets in Africa – efficiently and with a focus on measurement.

But being a flawed human, I wasn’t quite satisfied with such pure logic and decided to spread out my first donation just a bit, according to some of my values. What I came up with is this:

Health and Poverty: 

Environment:

American and Local Causes:

  • Planned Parenthood: (helps people control when they have kids, but often under political attack) $5,000
  • The American Civil Liberties Union: (uses the law as a watchdog to prevent powerful established groups (whether corporations or religions) from overriding individual rights): $5000
  • Khan Academy: (amazing, always-growing great education, free for millions of kids and adults) $9000
  • Wikipedia: (via WikiMedia foundation – an independent, hard-to-suppress open source of information for the world) $1000
  • Bicycle Colorado: $5000 (works to push bold new bike laws and infrastructure into the fertile ground of Colorado, which are then copied by other states).
  • My local Elementary School (just a bunch of good people doing good work for kids): $5000

These are pretty arbitrary numbers, adjusted just to prioritize the Effective Altruism stuff most and still have it all add up to the right amount. My list is not meant to be expertly allocated, just to start putting some money to work, highlight a few causes, and give me a wide range of different things to start feeling good about.

What Does This Feel Like, and Should You Do it Yourself?

In summary, deeply satisfying and happy. I have known for years that I wanted to start doing this, but on the day that I actually dropped all those checks into the mailbox, I felt a great lightness. That night, I fell asleep with the happy peace that comes from letting go of just a bit of selfishness and fear. After noticing not even the slightest regret, I can see that it will become even easier as time goes on.

I get quite a few emails from readers asking if I think charitable giving should be prioritized early in life, or if it’s more efficient to wait until you reach financial independence. After all, certain religions come with the concept of tithing and suggest that people do it even if they are in personal debt.

For anyone with my personality type, this would not work – obligations imposed by others are counterproductive and you must decide for yourself what feels right. Getting out from a stressful situation – whether it is debt or an unsatisfying career, is a good use of your time and may even allow you to be more generous over your remaining lifetime.

On the other hand, if you’re a beginner and are curious, there’s no harm in just trying out the idea on yourself. You might try giving just $100 or so to a few favorite causes and noting the effect on your feeling. If you are financially stable and that amount is too small to cause a thrill, try $500 or $1000. If the practice proves satisfying, you’ll automatically decide to do more.

The thing about money is that even in a country like the US where almost everybody is rich by world standards, the top 10% of us own over 75% of the wealth. As a member of that lucky little slice, I won’t waste time complaining about the system. But I will suggest this: Since we obviously have all the money, and yet building a happy lifestyle for ourselves should not be particularly expensive, we might as well put the bulk of our money to efficient use improving the world – if we happen to enjoy that sort of thing. Meanwhile, since the bottom 90% is sharing the remaining quarter of the earnings, I’d expect a lower rate of philanthropy.  How’s that for hardcore capitalist libertarian socialism?

What Other Causes are Worth Supporting?

Since this is just my one round of donations, all the doors are wide open.

If you were assigned to do the most good for the human race with each dollar you had available, what would you spend it on? Please share your ideas in the comments and we’ll keep getting better at this stuff together.

* Actually this part about completely resisting lifestyle inflation is a lie. Since becoming richer than expected I have dropped all restraint in the area of buying myself fancy burritos. Especially on trips. I even pay for my friends’ burritos frequently. Man, have we had some good ones.

—-

Other Helpful Stuff:

Unsure about the value of giving away your hard-earned money? Apathy towards giving ususally comes from believing in various Myths about charity.

Tax Strategy: A further bit of great news is that this $100k round of donations will actually save me about $30,000 in income tax. Contributions like these come off of your taxable income as “itemized deductions”. The limit is 50% of your Adjusted Gross Income, and the deductibility also starts to phase out slowly in certain cases if you make more than $311,000. A few details on my Accountant’s blog (The Wealthy Accountant), and on this Fidelity page.

During research, I wondered about  Charity Navigator, which ranks a larger number of charities based on administrative overhead and other stuff. How do they relate to GiveWell?

Freakonomics says the Givewell method is better, because there is much more to effectiveness than this ratio, and the ratio itself can be manipulated. When I saw this Angry Rebuttal by Charity Navigator founder Ken Berger, which resorted to name-calling and based his argument on, “Yeah, but who are YOU to say it’s better to donate overseas than in rich countries? If everybody did that, we’d never help anyone locally!” I felt even more confident about Givewell and Effective Altruism.

  • Tim November 14, 2016, 8:19 am

    While mailing checks (or electronic transfers) are a fantastic and immediate way to make a difference, any of the organizations you cited would have preferred you set up recurring payments. Please consider affiliating long-term with any of these organizations and establishing a trajectory of giving that allows them to forecast revenues and therefore aim towards higher goals in the future.

    Thank you for being a decent and caring human.

    Tim

    Reply
  • Team CF November 15, 2016, 5:29 am

    He talks the talk and walks the walk. Respect!
    Well done MMM, good for you. May there be many to follow in your footsteps, will make the world a bit better place.

    Reply
  • Michelle November 17, 2016, 6:59 am

    Duuuude – you are awesome and I like your values (no pun intended) based on where you put that donation. Rock on!

    Reply
  • Jerry November 17, 2016, 2:05 pm

    MMM,

    I’d be interested to hear whether you’ve developed a “system” for giving like you have in your other endeavors, such as a percentage of income to go to charity or some other metric?

    Reply
  • Maggie November 17, 2016, 11:11 pm

    I just want to say that I think it’s amazing to donate money. I do bits here and think — and almost always give a $1 to a homeless person who looks distraught (mostly because many have mental issues or are veterans and forgotten) but I dream of the day when I can go bigger. The first thing I want to do is create a scholarship in the name of my basketball coach, who had such a positive attitude and believed in me and my entire team. He changed my life. Next, I want to give away $1,000 chunks to people who need it. This definitely would take some energy doling out money, but I remember right after having kids (and having both of them in daycare) and being a journalist (think low-paying; less than teachers), how much an extra $1,000 would help us out. I see it all the time — a family just trying to make it — and know that while a gift of $1,000-$3,000 wouldn’t change their lives over the long-term, it could allow them to make a car repair, buy a new appliance for their home, go out to eat once in a while, or even to stock some money away for upcoming expenses. So many people are living on the edge, and when parents are stressed out, that stress almost always pervades the family. Couples are more likely to be at each others throats. I just upgraded my own car from a 1997 to 2004 two years ago. That upgrade came with a huge peace of mind because I no longer had to worry about my car starting during cold winter months (my husband was working 2.5 hours away at the time ….). So I think it’s the little donations that can have huge impacts on the so many families that live at the edge. It really puts a face to the giving, and those people may want to emulate that giving in the future. I have so been thankful for the things that I have received in my life (including that positive attitude that my basketball coach instilled so many years ago), that I do my best to return that on a daily basis. Being in a place of receiving in some cases (not all) sets up some people for being excellent givers in the future.

    Reply
  • G McD November 20, 2016, 12:55 pm

    If you have shares of VTSAX in your taxable account, and you’re giving that kind of money, why not use a donor-advised fund to gift your lowest cost basis shares to fund your giving? You only get to deduct up to 30% of your income that way, but for highly appreciated shares , it’s like getting two deductions for the price of one. First, you avoid incurring the capital gain on those shares. Second, you deduct the fair market value of those shares. That allows you to give more. Both Fidelity and Vanguard have affiliated, easy to use Donor Advised Fund nonprofits that make the process straightforward. Community foundations also have them ,available. I searched your blog but found no mention of Donor Advised Funds. They sound like they’re potentially very mustachian.

    Reply
  • MMMFan November 21, 2016, 11:46 am

    Great post, thank you. I consider giving some from our wealth to those who need it, as not only highly fulfilling but an obligation to fellow human beings. Thanks to your blog, I am on my way to ER, but I have already factored a modest giving in my ‘essential spending’, so my ‘4% safe withdrawal’ will automatically cover it. That way, I don’t have to wait for a windfall to give away, and it will be an ongoing, disciplined approach. I hope many of the fellow Mustachians will see it that way.
    A dumb question for MMM, your blog doesn’t have any ads, then how is it making the money you mentioned in the blog? (You don’t have to answer it, but I am just curious!!)
    Best,

    Reply
    • Amanda November 23, 2016, 6:45 am

      There is an “MMM Recommends” section that is mostly (if not all) paid links to different products and services. I believe the small sponsor links throughout the website with this recommends page bring in some major bacon.

      Reply
  • Karoline November 22, 2016, 6:44 am

    I did it, MMM. I have read through every post on your blog since its creation. Minimalism, frugality and that kind of thing has always naturally appealed to me, but your financial insight and badassity has given me perspectives that I sorely needed. I have restructured the way I save and invest, and I now invest a lot more. In my country the access to Vanguard funds are extremely limited, however, and even when they are available, the fees are exorbitant. I have resorted to 0.3% annual fee global index funds that seem to be doing the trick for people. So far so good. Thank you sincerely for all the insight and please keep posting!

    Reply
  • Papaya November 25, 2016, 7:13 pm

    Thank you for the donation to NRDC, MMM! I’m an attorney there, and it’s a great organization. You’ve actually already helped us out by helping me figure out how to navigate six-figure law school debt and a very high-cost city on a non-profit salary. Rather than saving money to retire, my goal is to be frugal enough to keep this job because I truly love it. And you’ll be happy to know that I have been trying to bring MMM principles to the organization more broadly. (Some of my colleagues read your blog, too.) The more money we save and use efficiently, the better we can acheive our environmental goals. I think we are fairly efficient already, but there’s always room for improvement. Thanks again!

    Reply
  • Concojones November 26, 2016, 9:06 pm

    MMM, you continue to be an inspiration. This website should be required reading (and re-reading) for humanity.

    Even though I was already sold on the idea of early retirement before finding your blog, I’ve learnt so much from you since. Thank you for doing this. I’m a huge fan.

    Back on topic (charity suggestions): I personally like Greenpeace, they are controversial but necessary. Protecting our anet is important to me, to the extent where I have mixed feelings about causes saving human lives (because of the impact on world population and, due to our destructive lifestyles, on the plsnet).

    Reply
  • Concojones November 26, 2016, 9:08 pm

    Typo: planet

    Reply
  • Lady Fordragon November 28, 2016, 1:44 pm

    My husband and I recently started a charitable fund via Vanguard Charitable. It had been a dream of ours for several years and once we reached our goal of $125k in our taxable Vanguard account, we took $25k of it and started The Fordragon Fund. Our initial plan is to donate a total of $1000 every year to a couple of charities of our choosing while allowing the remaining money to continue to grow in the fund. We’re hoping to be able to add $25k to this fund every 2 years and in the process increase our yearly donations.

    Definitely a worthwhile approach for anyone interested in charitable giving.

    Reply
  • Audie December 13, 2016, 4:08 pm

    I would like to offer an argument on why you should generously donate well before reaching financial independence.
    In your blog, you mention that your ultimate goal is to reduce sucker consumption, and therefore save the world by people being less ridiculous with the amount of resources that we individually consume. And by focusing on what really makes us happy and that happiness, once our basic needs are met, doesn’t cost money or excessive consumption.
    Study after study has shown that donating money does in fact bring happiness (one example of many – https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/out-the-darkness/201501/happiness-comes-giving-not-buying-and-having) and your own experience you shared above corresponds with that.

    Plus, returns on your donation are much higher than money invested into the stock market. For example, if I donated $7 every week to my local Feeding America branch, that would in turn “sponsor” the meals for a kid for an entire year. That investment in a kid who is now attending school and not hungry, will be worth WAY more over 10 years than the $5,264 I could have earned had I invested it. The same goes with our (and your) donation to local schools.
    The $100 dollars we invested into the National Park Foundation to purchase a prime parcel for Grand Teton National Park will pay dividends for generations – worth way more than the 7% we would have earned on it over our lifetimes.
    My husband and I admittedly donate a lot of our income, but to us it is well worth it even if it means delaying financial freedom a bit longer. Donating also reminds us just how strong those $10 bills in the hands of amazing charities throughout the world!

    So to make a long story short (too late!) – if you want to use your money to buy happiness, donate!

    PS. Studies also show that volunteering has great benefits to physical health, so also be sure to donate your time to great causes too!

    Reply
  • C. Fland January 2, 2017, 4:12 am

    If I had to choose a charity that I think makes the most difference, I’d choose the food pantry. We do a small weekly donation and larger quarterly ones. I involve my children to help them learn altruism. It makes such a difference. I can also choose to donate fair trade or organic, benefiting two causes at once. I recognize they can do more with cash but for right now we donate goods as it is more readily understood by my young children.

    Reply
  • Supporter of Cause! January 5, 2017, 7:24 pm

    hello! been a long-time reader and this year had an opportunity to do a similar exercise, albeit for less money ;) had a couple suggestions for you, not organizationally, but broader, and thought it might be of interest especially given your recent foray’s towards Buddhism-

    1- Supporting groups/orgs that are looking to shift paradigms/systems (a la Dana Meadows work), given that the current ones don’t really work and what is built on them is asking for collapse. eg, you fund hospitals, more and more people show up sick every year, you fund upstream folks like prevention, there’s less downstream issues.
    2- Supporting groups/orgs in the field of personal transformation/human development/consciousness shift. whether in the workplace, in schools, through media, etc.

    In our family’s case, those 2 categories play major roles in our theory of change. if you’re ever interested in learning more about our journey, i’d welcome connecting (and learning more about your emerging journey as well!)

    Reply
  • Cherry January 8, 2017, 6:19 am

    I have just returned to this post because I’ve found it! I’ve found where I’d want put that kind of money to benefit humanity: Open Medical Foundation. (Who’s board includes three Nobel Laureates and a leader of the Human Genome Project!) They’re a non-profit conducting open*, collaborative research into neuro-immune diseases starting with ME/CFS. It affects 1 million people in the U.S. 25% of patients are bedridden or housebound, some require full-time care for decades ..but in 2014 male-pattern baldness received six times more funding ($18mil vs $3mil) from the NIH than ME/CFS. SIX times! For balding! BUY A BLOODY RAZOR AND OWN IT GUYS!!

    Here’s why I like OMF – they’re totally badass medical research scientists, they’re doing something really important, they’re doing it really well and in a way which could have significant impact on scientific/medical testing in general (producing new equipment), and also because it may have a major impact on mine and approximately 17 million other people’s lives (globally). I admit, it’s a slow-burn kind of impact but still so important – one dishonest study can stop people from vaccinating their kids for 30 years so good science is worthy of the time – and the funding. It’s not as clear cut as mosquito nets, granted, but someone had to figure out what was causing malaria before mozzie nets would be useful, and someone had to build a microscope before someone else could figure out what malaria even was, let alone how it was transmitted etc. Currently ME/CFS has no cure, no treatments, no known mechanism, no known cause.

    I could write a whole essay, I won’t, but I just had to throw that hat in the ring!

    You can even donate shares to them and avoid capital gains tax ;)

    *really open – publishing trial data even before they publish the results and analysis etc.
    (p.s. this blog has been a huge encouragement to me! Thanks MMM and commenters!)

    Reply
  • Blessedbeyondmeasure January 8, 2017, 11:20 am

    MMM,

    I run a non-profit in America called Young Entrepreneurs Club–we help at risk, homeless, and foster youth ages 8-18 find empowerment through service and entrepreneurship (we emphasize service because, go figure, if you go from 4 days without food to being able to feed someone who wouldn’t eat without your help, there’s a certain sense of empowerment). We teach a lean launch business model building program, assist the kids in raising funds, and assign them mentors in the form of current business owners. We’ve been growing fast, but we’re also brand new.

    Now, I’m a former for-profit businessman, and more importantly former foster, at risk, and homeless youth who’s recently made the change to non-profit (because I’m by far the exception to the rule when it comes to my peers, not the average success rate)–and my question for you is simple: How would you, aside from proving the model and giving clear line items that need be paid for–which we’re in the process of doing–ask for funding? (This is a market research question).

    -Daniel
    Young Entrepreneurs Club
    http://www.facebook.com/jointheyec

    Reply
  • Tina C January 10, 2017, 10:11 pm

    I stumbled across your site and read this post – I’m in awe and deeply humbled that there still are nice people out there that do this. Thank you for your donations to those entities. I bet you felt great doing it!!

    Reply
  • Aaron February 27, 2017, 12:26 pm

    I for one don’t get the impression that MMM is living beyond the $25k budget (or at least not very far beyond it), even if his income via the blog is far higher than that.

    I think it’s also a reasonable choice to donate $100K in a huge shot but not blow all $400k at once. Giving to a variety of charities allows MMM to see how the impact of various options plays out, and he can always give the rest of the money at a later time. Maybe he can invest that money in expanding his message and end up building a larger movement that results in more giving capacity for himself and others in the future, for instance.

    Anyhow, I’m not sure exactly what the arguments are for saving the rest of the income, but there are many good potential reasons. Overall, good for him for making such a massive contribution.

    Reply
  • Tab March 2, 2017, 12:42 pm

    http://standupkids.org/

    MMM For a charity to donate to you can’t go wrong with this one. Kelley and his wife are trying to change how active kids are by starting in the classroom.

    Reply
  • TigerLily May 22, 2017, 12:02 pm

    Absolutely love your generosity. Doctors Without Borders is one of my favorite charities.
    THANK YOU for your generous spirit! <3

    Reply
  • rani May 31, 2017, 7:33 pm

    I’m a reader for the last couple of years, but this is the first time I’m bothering to comment–all because I read one of the links on EA and the comments from the CEO of Charity Navigator… Wow. They didn’t express themselves in a manner befitting a charity, but they argue that neither did the people they are rebutting. I dislike emotional manipulation from any external source, and I think both sides are playing that game.
    I am glad to see I’m not the only commenter who doesn’t automatically love the EA concept. I understand the idea, but I still believe in the value of local charities in one’s own community and helping kids in our country as much as anywhere else. It’s great for the Bill Gateses to focus on problems in the developing world, and I love the idea of Kiva, but I give money every year to a few select charities (a matter of $100 to several vs a more meaningful chunk to the ones that mean the most to me), and none of them is international currently. Planned Parenthood is a must in my eyes. I am so glad, MMM, that you chose them–low cost and free healthcare to needy women is always under attack, for reasons that have more to do with propaganda than practicality. Women’s health is so important to our success as a nation and an economy… the stats back me up on that one, as someone referred to above.
    I was giving to Wounded Warrior Project, until I felt that the funds were widely misused with their lavish parties and significant expenses not going to the soldiers. I give to my old public high school, because it got me my start in life and helps so many other kids who aren’t wealthy compete effectively with those who come from more privileged backgrounds. I give to public television, because I enjoy watching it, and because I really believe it provides educational opportunity and a vision of what the world has to offer to poor children in the US, who don’t get the advantages that people higher on the SES ladder get. I was one of those kids who didn’t get to go to preschool. PBS and good (though poor) parents made up for a lot. I give to the ASPCA, because people are often thoughtless and cruel to animals, and there has to be some way to fight that. I give to local food banks, because hunger is something no one in a country of abundant resources and wealth should have to face.
    Yes, when you think about what people in the developing world are going through, you might call these donations less ‘effective’–not saving any human lives, though hopefully animal ones are being saved… But I don’t care about that kind of mathematical analysis. I give to these because they mean something to me. So I am sorry, but I’m not an EA fanatic. There are many people who will look at it as numbers helped–but I think helping anyone who needs it is worthwhile, whether with my time (which I donate also), or my money. Effectiveness is a good goal–but that doesn’t necessarily mean saving more lives; to me, what it really means is: is the organization you wish to support effectively accomplishing its altruistic goals, which align with your values? How much is spent on the goal, vs on admin costs? If the goal is to save lives from condition x, then which of the charities out there accomplishes this best? But I don’t approve of the idea that condition x is not as important as disease y. Or that only people in the absolute worst circumstances deserve our help, while local families in need or kids from poor families here, though not as badly off as the ones abroad may be, should be somehow less valued. If government help was a given, we wouldn’t have to worry about supporting our domestic disadvantaged brethren with charity. But since it’s always at risk… sorry, African diseases, you’ll have to wait in my book.
    Oh, and I’m voting for the ‘not yet FI but still feel like giving’ option. I don’t give as much now as I hope to when I achieve FI, but I can find room in the budget for these valued causes and find something else to spend less on… I try to give at least $10k/yr, and though I know that if invested instead, I’d be another few years closer to retirement, I still find myself doing it. It may not be the wisest way, just as it may not save as many lives to donate to the causes I choose. But I think donation isn’t about math–it’s about what touches us, what makes us feel whole in our lives, and what provokes in us a deep-seated desire to help others. I can’t put a value judgment on it based on some mathematical calculation, whether it’s how much longer I’ll have to work since I want to give, or how many lives are being affected by my giving. I’d rather think of it as trying to help preserve things I think are really important, while knowing I can’t fix everything I want to.
    Finally, woo-hoo to MMM for giving such a nice chunk. It shouldn’t be about the amount, it’s about the intent and what we can spare. And I’m glad you chose to distribute it among different choices that you think are important–abroad and at home. Glad you have such a great use for your unintentional excess of prosperity!

    Reply
  • TJ June 14, 2017, 9:52 am

    Tl;dr – International Justice Mission is another organization well worth mentioning in that although it does not directly combat public health issues, it combats injustice against the world’s most poor. When asked in the World Bank’s Voices of the Poor study (http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/131441468779067441/Voices-of-the-poor-can-anyone-hear-us), the most commonly mentioned theme was a functioning justice system that those in poverty could trust in to protect themselves, their family, and their property. The book, The Locust Effect by Gary Haugen and Victor Boutros, was a great read.

    I am extremely pleased to see that you tackle this issue. I am relatively new to having a full-time job that actually pays (I was a peace corps volunteer in Peru for the past two years) and have stumbled upon your ideas of basically living better in every way possible. I was worried that the financially independent community might not agree that donating is a good idea, so it is great to hear that you have found Effective Altruism as a great way to do that.

    I have been considering in some ways, the privilege that leads to the possibility of financial independence. Working in Peru, I was able to see many hardworking engineers, teachers, and normal ass office workers who, in the US, could easily attain the dream of early financial independence due to higher pay but most importantly, access to technology (incredible farming practices that reduce a healthy diet to mere dollars – lots of brown rice, barley, fruits, vegetables) and especially, access to banks that provide very efficient investment opportunities: Vanguard index funds, Schwab intelligent portfolio/other intelligent portfolios to put in money and forget. There are probably many better investment options out there, but Americans/people of the developed world have access to all of them relatively easily. This is a privilege that many who really benefit from effective altruism donations do not have, and I agree with Peter Singer that we may indeed be morally obligated to give what we are able to, as much as we feel comfortable giving, in order to help those who have had almost none of the privileges we enjoy.

    One thing I did not see in the discussion is the justice system. This is a very controversial issue I would say.
    However, I recently read a book called “The Locust Effect” by Gary Haugen and Victor Boutros which I found incredibly disheartening in some senses while at the same time very hopeful. They argue that all of these great public health, agriculture, and personal empowerment advances need the proper effect of justice in order to do the most good. I was convinced by their argument, and noted that the International Justice Mission was not included in the list of GiveWell or thelifeyoucansave.org because lives are not directly saved through these efforts. However, if we were to count the number of slaves freed, the number of women protected from further sexual assaults, and other cases where it is much much harder to appropriately quantify the benefit, I think this is an area where great improvements can be made.

    What convinced me the most was a study by the World Bank, attempting to personally interview 10,000 individuals who would be considered in extreme poverty. According to them, the ones we are trying to help, a functioning justice system that they felt protected them, their property rights, and their family would be the MOST valuable thing to help them get themselves out of poverty. So when we asked them for the help they wanted, this was what they said. Link: http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/131441468779067441/Voices-of-the-poor-can-anyone-hear-us

    Reply
  • Alicia Kennelly October 23, 2017, 11:08 am

    Admittedly, I didn’t read all the comments, but did you consider donating appreciated taxable investments to any of the foundations? I am not saying I am fond of the tax law, but it is a way to reduce taxes further.

    From there, each person has to choose one’s own passions for philanthropy. I do not personally share the concept that all lives have equal value to me, so my giving takes different forms, including significantly to my alma mater.

    Reply
  • Waryenn May 9, 2018, 11:34 am

    MMM, did you consider setting up a trust, imvesting the £100k and ensuring the dividends were distributed to charitable causes. You could keep increasing the fund £100k each year and have instructions for the fund to be liquidated and distributed at a certain time in the future.
    The above is clearly within your skill set, and might do more good over the long term.
    So what prompted you to give cash?
    Regarding effective altruism I applaud your efforts and hope more people consider supporting human life with their charitable donations.

    Reply
  • Amy March 15, 2023, 6:27 pm

    A bit late to the party, but I can’t tell you how much I love this. Seeing a successful entrepreneur/money guru extolling the virtue and happiness making a difference (in this case through donating) makes my heart sing. Thank you MMM.
    (I don’t want to be a negative Nancy but must add the only way I could have loved this more is if you’d made it clear Effective Altruism is based on the premis “all lives have equal value” human or otherwise. It is about doing good for all sentient beings, not just humans. I make this point with nothing but love and respect for what you’ve done.)

    Reply

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