This may be a UK thing. A lot more US folks seem to get involved in volunteering.
This is true. The USA donates twice as much money to charity as a percentage of GDP as the UK does. While charitable donations aren't (necessarily) the same as volunteering time, it does indicate a gaping cultural chasm vis a vis giving.
The difference wasn't always so marked; the UK used to have a much stronger philanthropic tradition.
But the reasons of the change are pretty obvious to me:
1) the UK has developed a psychological dependency on the concept of the welfare state over the past 50+ years, which naturally takes the philanthropic onus away from individual responsibility and transfers it to the state.
2) the tax system in this country has historically been nowhere near as generous regarding charitable giving as it is in the USA. It's now much more similar, but this is a very recent change. Gift Aid was only introduced in 1990, and the ability to count assets rather than cash as valid donations for attracting that tax relief was only added a few years ago.
The first issue narrows the base of donors, and the second has limited large donations from the richest decile. And while the tax system is now much less of an issue, because it's only changed recently, the average person - including the average wealthy person - doesn't realise just how tax-efficient giving can be these days and so how much more affordable it is to donate both cash and assets to charities. This should change over time, though.
The first issue remains a deeper problem. For instance, I don't volunteer or even donate (beyond a couple of charities that I have a personal connection to) because I feel that I already pay too much in tax to support a too-broad welfare state.
This, without getting overly political, is why Cameron's Big Society concept is an excellent idea doomed to short/medium-term political difficulty as a result of the transient gaps in service provision that will almost inevitably arise.
For it to really take off, the state has to do less, so people feel obligated to do more. But there will be a time lag between the state doing less and people actually doing more, during which state service provision will contract without non-profit/voluntary provision expanding enough to compensate. In the longer term, if the state squeeze remains, one hopes a broader cultural shift will be effected whereby donations will rise as people like myself note a genuine change and shift in balance of responsibility from state to individuals. But this is clearly a politically difficult strategy to follow in the short/medium-term. While it gets a lot of comic stick poked at it for being woolly, in reality it's a remarkably brave strategy for a political party to follow, primarily because it's so guaranteed to be unpopular in the near term. Whether it proves to be "brave" only in the Humphrey Appleby sense of the word, time will tell.
