Tag Archives: Donate

How to Reduce the Need for Welfare

It’s one thing to have a lot of money or know a lot of people, but it’s a much more important thing to know how to use the money you have or to give and receive support from friends. If you have plenty of money but can’t use it to achieve your goals then you have much less wealth than someone with no money but plenty of supporters who are willing to provide everything he needs. I bring this up to show problems I see with some welfare programs and to inspire readers to find better ways to support those around them.

Two Views on Welfare

I recently came across an article discussing two books that see welfare from two completely different viewpoints.

In the book, Nickel and Dimed, the plight of poor workers is discussed and analyzed. The author Barbara Ehrenreich argues that workers at minimum wage jobs are stuck in an endless cycle where they never have enough money or energy (after manual labor jobs all day) to improve their livelihood through better education and networking. She suggests welfare is needed to get people out of this endless cycle.

In Scratch Beginnings, Adam Shepard performs a personal experiment to prove wrong the concept in Nickel and Dimed. He moves to a foreign town and starts off with only $25. After starting with no job or connections and living in a homeless shelter, he is able to amass $2,500, a job and a car in a year. Apparently, anyone can get out of a financial pit if they just have the right mindset.

The Key Concept

Although the books look at welfare from different lenses, both have a good point – People can get stuck in poverty. Where they differ is where a solution can be found.

When Adam Shepard found a way out of poverty he admitted that the life and financial lessons he had learned from accomplished family and friends while growing up made a big difference (the only difference from my perspective). Most people stuck in poverty don’t grow up hearing what they need to know to get out of tough situations. This is evident in stories of poor people just completely wasting handouts designed to help them. Welfare does not help them because they don’t know how to use it. Concepts that wealthy people consider common sense are lost among people spiraling through poverty.

How to Fix Welfare

If the lack of knowledge is why people get stuck in poverty, then educating them is the best way to help them out. Whether you are a hard core capitalist, tired of paying taxes, or just someone who cares, investing in the education of simple life and financial lessons has benefits for everyone. Welfare can be removed (or shrunk) if we simply remove the need for it. Here’s how.

  • Capitalism assumes everyone knows what’s best for them. To help pursue this ideal, companies should invest in programs that teach basic financial principles and skills to people who did not learn them growing up.
  • Individuals, take the time to develop relationships with people lacking the basic understanding of finances and business skills and gradually teach them what you know as trust is developed. This can be done by putting some of your time towards mentoring to and volunteering for those in need.

Great examples of these investments paying off can be found everywhere. One I recommend is the book Same Kind of Different as Me. It’s a true story about a couple who invests in one homeless man with the goal of learning his story as he learns about their own.

What ideas do you have on improving the lives of those in poverty or ceasing the need for welfare? How have you invested in the lives of others so that they can learn from your experiences? It may be idealistic to say welfare will end soon, but educating those without simple financial knowledge can go a long way to helping us all.

(photo credit jimfischer)

Billionaires Give Wealth Away in the Giving Pledge

Warren Buffett is famous for being one of the richest men in the world, but he is also known as a great example for his pledge to donate 99% of his wealth.  Over the past few years, he has been working with Bill Gates to challenge other wealthy businessmen and celebrities to relinquish the hold they have on their money for the greater good.

The Power of Giving

I have long been an advocate of giving away money and recommend it before any other financial decision including saving for retirement and establishing emergency funds.  Similar to spending money, giving supports those around us and is an investment in our community when done wisely.  Even for yourself, giving is beneficial as it allows you to prioritize more important things in life ahead of money by making you realize money is just an optional tool that we can use towards our goals.  If you really think about it, money has no direct value to you unless you are out of wood to burn and need paper to start a fire.

Joining the Giving Pledge

I remember as a kid wondering why it was so hard for rich people to give money away.  When I had $10 in a shoebox, I didn’t mind giving $1 away to help others so why couldn’t someone with $10 billion give a way $1 billion.  As I grew older and my wealth increased from $10 to $100 to $1000s, I began to realize how a modest percentage like 10% became hard to give away.  As the numbers get bigger, it’s hard for you to stomach the idea of giving that much away.  This is what makes Buffett’s ambition to get the wealthiest people in the world to give away at least 50% of their wealth so amazing.

Lately, Warren Buffett’s example and hard work has paid off (literally) as forty of the richest people in the world have joined his pledge.  The Giving Pledge list includes well known names like Ted Turner, George Lucas, and T. Boone Pickens among lesser known billionaires like Alfred E. Mann.  On NPR this week, Mann acknowledged that giving his money away is better than leaving it to his family since an inheritance often ruins people.  He also said that he hopes to give it all away before he dies so that he can see the benefit of his donation.

What’s Your Pledge

As more and more of the world’s wealthiest commit to giving away their wealth, I’m curious how much of the rest of us will follow suit.  It’s easy to say that these rich people still have plenty to live off of and that’s true, but at the same time, they may be the people most attached to their money.  If everybody who wasn’t a billionaire even pledged to give away 10% of their income, that would have a much greater impact on our world community.

So what do you think?  Do the non-billionaires have the ability to join the Giving Pledge or are we too attached ourselves.  Let me know your goals on giving and how it impacts your life in the comments below or on Facebook.