Feeling Good about Giving: The Benefits (and Costs) of Self-Interested Charitable Behavior



Feeling Good about Giving 2

Abstract

While lay intuitions and pop psychology suggest that helping others leads to higher levels of
happiness, the existing evidence only weakly supports this causal claim: Research in psychology,
economics, and neuroscience exploring the benefits of charitable giving has been largely
correlational, leaving open the question of whether giving
causes greater happiness. In this
chapter, we have two primary aims. First, we review the evidence linking charitable behavior
and happiness. We present research from a variety of samples (adults, children and primates)
and methods (correlational and experimental) demonstrating that happier people give more, that
giving indeed causes increased happiness, and that these two relationships may operate in a
circular fashion. Second, we consider whether advertising these benefits of charitable giving -
asking people to give in order to be happy - may have the perverse consequence of decreasing
charitable giving, crowding out intrinsic motivations to give by corrupting a purely social act
with economic considerations.



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