Donative Behavior at the End of Life
A
general finding in the empirical literature on charitable giving is that among
older individuals, both the probability of giving and the conditional amount of
donations decrease with age, ceteris
paribus. In this paper, we use data on giving by alumni at an anonymous
university to investigate end-of-life giving patterns. Our main finding is that
taking into account the approach of death substantially changes the age-giving
profile for the elderly—in one segment of the age distribution, the independent
effect of an increase in age on giving actually changes from negative to
positive.
We
examine how the decline in giving as death approaches varies with the length of
time that a given condition is likely to bring about death, and the
individual’s age when he died. We find that for individuals who died from
conditions that bring about death fairly quickly, there is little decline in
giving as death approaches compared to those who died from other causes. Further,
the decline in giving as death approaches is steeper for the elderly (for whom
death is less likely to be a surprise) than for the relatively young. These
findings suggest that our primary result, that failing to take into account the
approach of death leads to biased inferences with respect to the age-giving
profile, is not merely an artifact of some kind of nonlinearity in the
relationship between age and giving.
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