| Literature DB >> 29659341 |
Jonathan Z Berman1, Alixandra Barasch2, Emma E Levine3, Deborah A Small4.
Abstract
Charity could do the most good if every dollar donated went to causes that produced the greatest welfare gains. In line with this proposition, the effective-altruism movement seeks to provide individuals with information regarding the effectiveness of charities in hopes that they will contribute to organizations that maximize the social return of their donation. In this research, we investigated the extent to which presenting effectiveness information leads people to choose more effective charities. We found that even when effectiveness information is made easily comparable across options, it has a limited impact on choice. Specifically, people frequently choose less effective charity options when those options represent more subjectively preferred causes. In contrast to making a personal donation decision, outcome metrics are used to a much greater extent when choosing financial investments and when allocating aid resources as an agent of an organization. Implications for effective altruism are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: charitable decision making; decision subjectivity; effective altruism; open data; preregistered; prosocial behavior
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29659341 DOI: 10.1177/0956797617747648
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychol Sci ISSN: 0956-7976