When one person is rich, does this take away from others? Does one person's wealth create poverty for someone else? According to quantum physics, life is all a matter of vibration and energy. This means that all states of being are energy states. For example, if a person is sick, it's one state. If they are well, it's another state. If one person is healthy and another is ill, we never say the first person made someone else sick by "taking" energy from them. There's enough health to go around for everyone.
On the other hand, we regularly accuse the rich of "taking" energy or wealth from the poor. We think there is an unlimited amount of "health" energy available to us all but a finite amount of "wealth" energy. At the quantum level, money is just another form of energy. Why wouldn't there also be an unlimited amount of that energy available to all of us?
No one says, "I've been healthy for a long time. I think I'll be sick this year so someone else can benefit." Yet we accuse the rich of being selfish if they don't give away their wealth to benefit someone else. Maybe charity is "giving a fish" rather than "teaching someone to fish". Maybe charity is actually cheating the poor out of learning how they can acquire more "wealth" energy themselves.
I'm not advocating that charities are abolished. I like to think that someday I'll have a respectable level of wealth, so this is a personal as well as a social issue. If I don't master acquiring wealth, I will most certainly cheat the poor because I will still be counted among them and won't be able to contribute to any charitable causes at all. I will have cheated myself and others out of the "wealth" energy that the universe may want to bestow.
Although religious devotees have taken vows of poverty for centuries, perhaps more good would be done by socially minded individuals taking vows of abundance. By learning the principles of energy flow where money is concerned, more individuals could aspire to achieving personal well-being: happiness, health and wealth. That level of personal well-being will benefit their families, their communities and ultimately society as a whole.