Ethics of Offering Incentives

Ethics of Offering Incentives

Many people support the offering of incentives to increase charitable acts. They believe that offering incentives increase the amount of charity in the modern world. It is ethical for incentives to be offered.

Incentives should be offered to encourage people to commit charitable acts. Without incentives, a large portion of the populace would refuse to support important causes across the world. By offering incentives, people support those in need and get benefits in return.

In the paradoxical modern world, oftentimes the people who claim they want a more ethically correct world are the same people who fail to make an effort to change it. This inconsistency is prevalent across the world. By offering incentives to the populace for committing charitable acts, the support for numerous charities is increased.

Logically, incentives are the most effective way to influence people to fund good causes. By offering incentives, both the funder and the cause are recompensed. Many important issues around the world would not have as much support should the incentives be taken away.

People should have a desire to commit charitable acts without the aid of incentives. While incentives are often required to garner support, individuals should generally be encouraged to commit charitable acts by their moral compass.  In certain situations, a person should not need an incentive to help support someone in need.

Ethically, it should be an innate human desire to help others in need. Incentives should only be an extra benefit. Sadly, people often exploit incentives and only view them as an opportunity for personal gain. Often, people support causes that they have no prior knowledge only to reap the benefits. People should aspire to help those in need even without any benefits.

 The use of incentives increases the support for those in need. Without incentives, many people would lose their desire to be virtuous citizens. Sadly, a large portion of humanity lacks a basic human desire to help those around them. Many people need an extra push. By offering a benefit, more people feel encouraged to help those around them.

Incentives are the only reason many people in need receive support. There should be a limit to the number of incentives one gets for committing a charitable act. Some people take advantage of incentives to buy their way to success. People should not want to help others just to help themselves. The desire to help others should be encouraged, even if there are no incentives.

In the modern world, incentives are often needed to encourage people to commit charitable acts. They are one of the most effective ways to increase the amount of charity in society. Many people do not care about the well-being of their fellow citizens. So many people are only concerned with their own success.

To counter egocentric citizens, incentives can be given to benefit the person who supports the cause. Through the offering of incentives, both the supporter and gain profit. By giving people a way to benefit themselves by committing charitable acts, the door is opened for a more humanitarian modern landscape.