Hey readers,
Sara here. It's giving…Wednesday?
Millions of people took a break from holiday shopping — or, erm, no-buy boycotting — to give their favorite charity a much-needed dose of love yesterday. If Black Friday had a sweetie pie of a little brother, his name would be Giving Tuesday, one of the most important days of the year for the country's over 1.5 million charities.
And in stark contrast to dire warnings about an America that's less generous than ever before, its social contract eroded beyond repair, Americans give more and more on Giving Tuesday each year. Yesterday was no exception. Donations likely exceeded $4 billion, according to preliminary estimates, a record-breaking haul amounting to 10 percent more than what people gave in 2024.
That's not the only good news on giving lately. Three-quarters of Americans said they gave an average of nearly $1,400 to charity over the past 12 months, according to a new poll by Vanguard Charitable, almost 30 percent more than they gave this time last year. When SNAP funding lapsed during the federal shutdown, donations for hunger charities spiked by a whopping 587 percent on the popular vetting site Charity Navigator.
And in a hopeful sign of things to come, Giving USA found that for the first time in three years, total giving rose at a faster clip than inflation in 2024, rising to a record $592.50 billion.
To be clear, none of this means that it's been an easy year for charities. A full one-third of nonprofits have experienced serious disruptions to their government funding this year under the Trump administration's slash-and-burn approach to cuts, leading to widespread layoffs and program reductions. With the decimation of the US Agency for International Development, many global charities on the frontlines of combating child malnutrition, HIV/AIDS, and climate-related catastrophes are quite literally running on fumes.
So whatever you can afford to give this year — the change you round up at the check-out counter or the time you spend volunteering at your local food bank — will likely go even further than it used to when it comes to upholding vital progress and lifesaving programs.
And if you opted out of Giving Tuesday yesterday, if you found the onslaught of emails beseeching you for donations to be icky or overwhelming, that's okay, too. Most charities could actually use your help all year round, any day of the week. Yes, even on a Wednesday.
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