The Singer Solution
to World Poverty By Peter Singer From The New York Times Sunday Magazine, September 5, 1999, pp. 60-63;
http://www.utilitarian.net/singer/by/19990905.htm In
the Brazilian film "Central Station," Dora is a retired
schoolteacher who makes ends meet by sitting at the station writing letters
for illiterate people. Suddenly she has an opportunity to pocket $1,000. All
she has to do is persuade a homeless 9-year-old boy to follow her to an address
she has been given. (She is told he will be adopted by wealthy foreigners.)
She delivers the boy, gets the money, spends some of it on a television set
and settles down to enjoy her new acquisition. Her neighbor spoils the fun,
however, by telling her that the boy was too old to be adopted —he will be
killed and his organs sold for transplantation. Perhaps Dora knew this all
along, but after her neighbor's plain speaking, she spends a troubled night.
In the morning Dora resolves to take the boy back. Suppose Dora had told her neighbor
that it is a tough world, other people have nice new TV's too, and if selling
the kid is the only way she can get one, well, he was only a street kid. She
would then have become, in the eyes of the audience, a monster. She redeems
herself only by being prepared to bear considerable risks to save the boy. At
the end of the movie, in cinemas in the affluent nations of the world, people
who would have been quick to condemn Dora if she had not rescued the boy go
home to places far more comfortable than her apartment. In fact, the average
family in the All of which raises a question: In
the end, what is the ethical distinction between a Brazilian who sells a
homeless child to organ peddlers and an American who already has a TV and upgrades
to a better one —knowing that the money could be donated to an organization
that would use it to save the lives of kids in need? Of
course, there are several differences between the two situations that could
support different moral judgments about them. For one thing, to be able to
consign a child to death when he is standing right in front of you takes a
chilling kind of heartlessness; it is much easier to ignore an appeal for
money to help children you will never meet. Yet for a utilitarian philosopher
like myself —that is, one who judges whether acts are right or wrong by their
consequences— if the upshot of the American's failure to donate the money is
that one more kid dies on the streets of a Brazilian city, then it is, in
some sense, just as bad as selling the kid to the organ peddlers. But one
doesn't need to embrace my utilitarian ethic to see that, at the very least,
there is a troubling incongruity in being so quick to condemn Dora for taking
the child to the organ peddlers while, at the same time, not regarding the
American consumer's behavior as raising a serious moral issue. In
his 1996 book, Living High and Letting Die, the Bob
is close to retirement. He has invested most of his savings in a very rare
and valuable old car, a Bugatti, which he has not been able to insure. The
Bugatti is his pride and joy. In addition to the pleasure he gets from driving
and caring for his car, Bob knows that its rising market value means that he
will always be able to sell it and live comfortably after retirement. One day
when Bob is out for a drive, he parks the Bugatti near the end of a railway
siding and goes for a walk up the track. As he does so, he sees that a
runaway train, with no one aboard, is running down the railway track. Looking
farther down the track, he sees the small figure of a child very likely to be
killed by the runaway train. He can't stop the train and the child is too far
away to warn of the danger, but he can throw a switch
that will divert the train down the siding where his Bugatti is parked. Then
nobody will be killed —but the train will destroy his Bugatti. Thinking of
his joy in owning the car and the financial security it represents, Bob
decides not to throw the switch. The child is killed. For many years to come,
Bob enjoys owning his Bugatti and the financial security it represents. Bob's
conduct, most of us will immediately respond, was gravely wrong. Unger
agrees. But then he reminds us that we, too, have opportunities to save the
lives of children. We can give to organizations like UNICEF or Oxfam Now
you, too, have the information you need to save a child's life. How should
you judge yourself if you don't do it? Think again about Bob and his Bugatti.
Unlike Dora, Bob did not have to look into the eyes of the child he was
sacrificing for his own material comfort. The child was a complete stranger
to him and too far away to relate to in an intimate, personal way. Unlike
Dora, too, he did not mislead the child or initiate the chain of events
imperiling him. In all these respects, Bob's situation resembles that of
people able but unwilling to donate to overseas aid and differs from Dora's
situation. If
you still think that it was very wrong of Bob not to throw the switch that
would have diverted the train and saved the child's life, then it is hard to
see how you could deny that it is also very wrong not to send money to one of
the organizations listed above. Unless, that is, there is some morally
important difference between the two situations that I have overlooked. Is
it the practical uncertainties about whether aid will really reach the people
who need it? Nobody who knows the world of overseas aid can doubt that such
uncertainties exist. But Unger's figure of $200 to save a child's life was
reached after he had made conservative assumptions about the proportion of
the money donated that will actually reach its target. One
genuine difference between Bob and those who can afford to donate to overseas
aid organizations but don't is that only Bob can save the child on the
tracks, whereas there are hundreds of millions of people who
can give $200 to overseas aid organizations. The problem is that most of them
aren't doing it. Does this mean that it is all right for you not to do it? Suppose
that there were more owners of priceless vintage cars —Carol, Dave, Emma,
Fred and so on, down to Ziggy— all in exactly the same situation as Bob, with
their own siding and their own switch, all sacrificing the child in order to
preserve their own cherished car. Would that make it all right for Bob to do
the same? To answer this question affirmatively is to endorse
follow-the-crowd ethics —the kind of ethics that led many Germans to look
away when the Nazi atrocities were being committed. We do not excuse them
because others were behaving no better. We
seem to lack a sound basis for drawing a clear moral line between Bob's
situation and that of any reader of this article with $200 to spare who does
not donate it to an overseas aid agency. These readers seem to be acting at
least as badly as Bob was acting when he chose to let the runaway train
hurtle toward the unsuspecting child. In the light of this conclusion, I
trust that many readers will reach for the phone and donate that $200.
Perhaps you should do it before reading further. Hypothetical
examples can easily become farcical. Consider Bob. How far past losing the
Bugatti should he go? Imagine that Bob had got his foot stuck in the track of
the siding, and if he diverted the train, then before it rammed the car it
would also amputate his big toe. Should he still throw the switch? What if it
would amputate his foot? His entire leg? As
absurd as the Bugatti scenario gets when pushed to extremes, the point it
raises is a serious one: only when the sacrifices become very significant
indeed would most people be prepared to say that Bob does nothing wrong when
he decides not to throw the switch. Of course, most people could be wrong; we
can't decide moral issues by taking opinion polls. But consider for yourself
the level of sacrifice that you would demand of Bob, and then think about how
much money you would have to give away in order to make a sacrifice that is
roughly equal to that. It's almost certainly much, much more than $200. For
most middle-class Americans, it could easily be more like $200,000. Isn't
it counterproductive to ask people to do so much? Don't we run the risk that
many will shrug their shoulders and say that morality, so conceived, is fine
for saints but not for them? I accept that we are unlikely to see, in the
near or even medium-term future, a world in which it is normal for wealthy
Americans to give the bulk of their wealth to strangers. When it comes to
praising or blaming people for what they do, we tend to use a standard that
is relative to some conception of normal behavior. Comfortably off Americans
who give, say, 10 percent of their income to overseas aid organizations are
so far ahead of most of their equally comfortable fellow citizens that I
wouldn't go out of my way to chastise them for not doing more. Nevertheless,
they should be doing much more, and they are in no position to criticize Bob
for failing to make the much greater sacrifice of his Bugatti. At
this point various objections may crop up. Someone may say: "If every
citizen living in the affluent nations contributed his or her share I
wouldn't have to make such a drastic sacrifice, because long before such
levels were reached, the resources would have been there to save the lives of
all those children dying from lack of food or medical care. So why should I
give more than my fair share?" Another, related, objection is that the
Government ought to increase its overseas aid allocations, since that would
spread the burden more equitably across all taxpayers. Yet
the question of how much we ought to give is a matter to be decided in the
real world —and that, sadly, is a world in which we know that most people do
not, and in the immediate future will not, give substantial amounts to
overseas aid agencies. We know, too, that at least in the next year, the
United States Government is not going to meet even the very modest United
Nations-recommended target of 0.7 percent of gross national product; at the
moment it lags far below that, at 0.09 percent, not even half of Thus,
this ground for limiting how much we ought to give also fails. In the world
as it is now, I can see no escape from the conclusion that each one of us
with wealth surplus to his or her essential needs should be giving most of it
to help people suffering from poverty so dire as to be life-threatening.
That's right: I'm saying that you shouldn't buy that new car, take that
cruise, redecorate the house or get that pricey new suit. After all, a $1,000
suit could save five children's lives. So
how does my philosophy break down in dollars and cents? An American household
with an income of $50,000 spends around $30,000 annually on necessities,
according to the Conference Board, a nonprofit economic research
organization. Therefore, for a household bringing in $50,000 a year, donations
to help the world's poor should be as close as possible to $20,000. The
$30,000 required for necessities holds for higher incomes as well. So a
household making $100,000 could cut a yearly check for $70,000. Again, the
formula is simple: whatever money you're spending on luxuries, not
necessities, should be given away. Now,
evolutionary psychologists tell us that human nature just isn't sufficiently
altruistic to make it plausible that many people will sacrifice so much for
strangers. On the facts of human nature, they might be right, but they would
be wrong to draw a moral conclusion from those facts. If it is the case that
we ought to do things that, predictably, most of us won't do, then let's face
that fact head-on. Then, if we value the life of a child more than going to
fancy restaurants, the next time we dine out we will know that we could have
done something better with our money. If that makes living a morally decent
life extremely arduous, well, then that is the way things are. If we don't do
it, then we should at least know that we are failing to live a morally decent
life —not because it is good to wallow in guilt but because knowing where we
should be going is the first step toward heading in that direction. When
Bob first grasped the dilemma that faced him as he stood by that railway
switch, he must have thought how extraordinarily unlucky he was to be placed
in a situation in which he must choose between the life of an innocent child
and the sacrifice of most of his savings. But he was not unlucky at all. We
are all in that situation. |