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Part plea, part manifesto, part handbook, this short and surprisingly compelling book sets out to answer two difficult questions: why people in affluent countries should donate money to fight global poverty and how much each should give. Singer (Animal Liberation) dismantles the justifications people make for not giving and highlights the successes of such efforts as microfinance in Bangladesh, GiveWell's charitable giving and the 50% League, where members donate more than half their wealth. Singer alternately cajoles and scolds: he pillories Microsoft cofounder Paul Allen, who has given less than his former partner, Bill Gates, and lives far more extravagantly: "His toys include a large collection of vintage military aircraft and a 413-foot oceangoing yacht called Octopus that cost him over $200 million and has a permanent crew of sixty." Singer contrasts Allen's immoderation with the work of Paul Farmer (a cofounder of the international social justice organization Partners in Health) and the cost of basic health services in Haiti ($3,500 per life saved), or malaria nets ($623-$2,367 per life saved). Singer doesn't ask readers to choose between asceticism and self-indulgence; his solution can be found in the middle, and it is reasonable and rewarding for all. (Mar.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.For those willing to do more than this bare minimum, Singer has worked out a detailed chart specifying how much everyone at every income level should give each year in order to make possible a minimally decent life for all our fellow humans. To simplify: His proposal comes to 5 percent of gross income for the nonpoor but nonaffluent (i.e., most of us), 10 percent for the affluent, 15 percent for the rich, and 20 to 25 percent for the super-rich. Is this unrealistic? Maybe. But if we don't do it, our 26th-century descendants will be heartily ashamed of us. --George Scialabba
George Scialabba is an essayist and critic working at Harvard University. He was the very first recipient of the National Book Critics Circle award for excellence in reviewing.
The Argument
1 Saving a Child 3
2 Is It Wrong Not to Help? 13
3 Common Objections to Giving 23
Human Nature
4 Why Don't We Give More? 45
5 Creating a Culture of Giving 63
The Facts About Aid
6 How Much Does It Cost to Save a Life, and How Can You Tell Which Charities Do It Best? 81
7 Improving Aid 105
A New Standard for Giving
8 Your Child and the Children of Others 129
9 Asking Too Much? 140
10 A Realistic Approach 151
Acknowledgments 174
Notes 177
Index 199
Anonymous
Posted December 17, 2009
This book was an assigned reading for a college Sociology class. The comments the author made were very rude and hurtful, especially when he does not know your own situation. This was definitely not a popular book in our class and during our discussions of it I learned only 2 people out of 33 students liked it. The book was very preachy and not persuasive at all. Oh and by the way, according to Singer, if you buy this book you are killing a child because you spent money on it instead of sending your money to an organization since you don't need this book just like you don't need any money for retirement.
1 out of 4 people found this review helpful.
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Posted March 27, 2010
Don't read this book unless you want to forever change the way you see the poorest of those in the world and are willing to be challenged to change the way you use and give your money. Do read it if you would like to take on Oliver Sach's challenge (quoted here) to "end extreme poverty in the world by 2050." Read it and you are in danger of having every flimsy excuse for not helping desperate people overseas shredded again and again. Read it, form a book study and get your friends to read it. Do what it suggests and just maybe, together, we might change the world.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted September 6, 2009
Peter Singer has always made controversial yet compelling statements with his books, but this one is hugely important. it brings the ethics of being a global citizen "up close & personal", and said to me "you're doing the right thing, do more."
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Posted March 7, 2009
I just heard Peter Singer talk about his book in Seattle, and while I haven't read it yet I am so inspired and I plan to read it soon. This is a fine example of how if each person in the "developed" countries took personal responsibility for helping uplift the poor we would eradicate hunger from our vocabulary. This is a must read.
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Overview
For the first time in history, eradicating world poverty is within our reach. Yet around the world, a billion people struggle to live each day on less than many of us pay for bottled water. In The Life You Can Save, Peter Singer uses ethical arguments, illuminating examples, and case studies of charitable giving to show that our current response to world poverty is not only insufficient but morally indefensible. The Life You Can Save teaches us to be a part of the solution, helping others as we help ourselves.