And here’s a scene about the rationality of charitable donors, inspired in part by Landsburg’s “giving your all” theorem:

d.  Charitable Giving

Bennett
and DiLorenzo (1994) argue that due to donors’ rational ignorance, the market
for charitable giving works poorly.  But
given that a person finds it worthwhile to donate in the first place, it is
unclear why search effort would be especially low: in either case, gathering
more information lets you get more for your money.  Perhaps some people only donate to charity in
order to feel better about themselves; but they will only feel better because
they believe that their donation
makes the world a better place.  Suppose,
in other words, that self-image is one of the arguments in their utility
function, and they maximize utility given their psychological “technology” for
transforming the (subjectively) expected social value of their charity into
self-image.  With rational expectations,
even donors who care solely about their self-image would acquire information
and otherwise act as if they were trying to maximize the (objectively) expected
social payoff of each of their charitable dollars. 

Yet
people often seem to allocate their charity in a suboptimal way given their
moral preferences.  Landsburg (1997)
shows that under weak assumptions a rational altruist will only donate to one
charity.  Intuitively, unless you are both extremely
wealthy and extremely generous, your individual donations won’t change the most
important cause in the world into the second most important.  In practice it is much more common for people
to give small amounts to a variety of causes. 
Similarly, if charities compete for contributions from rational altruists,
fraud and deception by charities should be no more prevalent than in the
for-profit sector; like consumers in other markets, rational altruists will
somehow verify that they are getting what they pay for.  Yet in practice the level of malfeasance in
the charitable sector seems unusually high. (Bennett and DiLorenzo 1994)

The
model of rational irrationality offers a partial explanation.  If self-image arises from how much good you believe your donations do, then
irrationally over-estimating your impact can be utility-enhancing.  Monitoring charities and supporting the most efficient
one increases the impact of your charitable dollars on the world, but reduces
the impact of your charitable dollars on your self-image.  As long as the donor can sustain the belief
that the charitable market is working efficiently, he gets the greatest
possible psychic payoff from his donation. 


Consider
the argument that the rational altruist should only donate to one charity.  Adopting this principle would enable any
donor, whatever his viewpoint, to increase the beneficent impact of his donations.  But avoiding this insight has offsetting
benefits: You need not acknowledge that your past donations were suboptimally
allocated; neither do you indirectly oblige yourself to ascertain the identity
of the most deserving cause in the world.

If I remember correctly, one of the reasons I cut this section was because Alex Tabarrok told me it was unconvincing.  I haven’t looked at it for about eight years, but I still think it’s on-target.  Your thoughts?

P.S. This will be my last post for a while.  If I have convenient Internet access and enough spare time, I may blog from Singapore and/or Malaysia.  Otherwise, the next time you’ll be hearing from me is around Thanksgiving.