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Are charitable donations a luxury good of the rich? : Evidence from a survey and actual behavior in a superdiverse metropolis
Elis, Jonas; Mayer, Sabrina Jasmin; Goerres, Achim (2024): Are charitable donations a luxury good of the rich? : Evidence from a survey and actual behavior in a superdiverse metropolis, in: Social Science Quarterly, Oxford [u.a.]: Wiley-Blackwell, Jg. 105, Nr. 5, S. 1505–1514, doi: 10.1111/ssqu.13418.
Faculty/Chair:
Author:
Title of the Journal:
Social Science Quarterly
ISSN:
1540-6237
0038-4941
Publisher Information:
Year of publication:
2024
Volume:
105
Issue:
5
Pages:
Language:
English
DOI:
Abstract:
Objective:
Previous studies on charitable giving have emphasized the importance of socioeconomic status in explaining why individuals choose to donate or not to donate money. Other explanations, such as social capital or local contexts, have also been investigated, but these perspectives are rarely combined and tested against an actual behavioral outcome measure. We seek to compare the statistical importance of these explanations for individual-level donation decisions.
Methods:
Our study investigates survey respondents’ choices to repeatedly donate their earned incentive after a completed interview in the three waves of the Immigrant German Election Study II from 2021. In each wave, respondents were offered an incentive worth 10 euros, which they could either keep as a gift card or donate to the local food bank. This decision is a measurement of real rather than self-reported donation behavior. We combine individual-level variables and neighborhood-level variables that capture the heterogeneity of our sample to systematically compare explanations for this donation decision.
Results:
We find that the respondents’ self-assessed economic situation and sociopolitical preferences in favor of more social spending by the state, rather than the respondents’ objective socioeconomic status, have strong positive effects on the total amount donated throughout the survey.
Conclusion:
Not the rich per se, but those who think they are doing well economically, and who are on the redistributive left, give more to others. These findings remain robust after controlling for the strong heterogeneity of our sample.
Previous studies on charitable giving have emphasized the importance of socioeconomic status in explaining why individuals choose to donate or not to donate money. Other explanations, such as social capital or local contexts, have also been investigated, but these perspectives are rarely combined and tested against an actual behavioral outcome measure. We seek to compare the statistical importance of these explanations for individual-level donation decisions.
Methods:
Our study investigates survey respondents’ choices to repeatedly donate their earned incentive after a completed interview in the three waves of the Immigrant German Election Study II from 2021. In each wave, respondents were offered an incentive worth 10 euros, which they could either keep as a gift card or donate to the local food bank. This decision is a measurement of real rather than self-reported donation behavior. We combine individual-level variables and neighborhood-level variables that capture the heterogeneity of our sample to systematically compare explanations for this donation decision.
Results:
We find that the respondents’ self-assessed economic situation and sociopolitical preferences in favor of more social spending by the state, rather than the respondents’ objective socioeconomic status, have strong positive effects on the total amount donated throughout the survey.
Conclusion:
Not the rich per se, but those who think they are doing well economically, and who are on the redistributive left, give more to others. These findings remain robust after controlling for the strong heterogeneity of our sample.
GND Keywords: ;  ;  ;  ; 
Deutschland
Wirtschaftliches Verhalten
Spende
Wirtschaftliche Lage
Politische Einstellung
Keywords: ;  ;  ;  ; 
behavior
donation
incentive
redistribution
survey
DDC Classification:
RVK Classification:
Type:
Article
Activation date:
April 25, 2025
Versioning
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https://fis.uni-bamberg.de/handle/uniba/107775