Obfuscation is really important if you want to provide a certain level of privacy to your own code.
Imagine that you come up with a very nice library which is coveted by a lot of potential developers eager to earn money. They could easily access your source code (through github or apk decompiling), rip it off and use it on their own applications and you would not receive any credit for it whatsoever.
Enter : Software Licenses
By specifying a Software License, you are informing any potential developer what are the do's and do-not's to your own intellectual property.
If you keep your code in a private matter, it will make things hard for someone to make legal profit from it, but keep in mind that there are people who will not respect this and will try to copy that code. That is where Obfuscation comes in.
By obfuscating your code, you are making it hard to perceive/read by someone else, thus granting some level of protection.
Standard obfuscation in Android is achieved by using Proguard (and their professional and better products such as DexGuard).
Keep in mind that Proguard is not only a tool for obfuscation but also for:
Code Shrinking (Reducing the size of code and dumping classes that your application does not require)
In the shrinking step, ProGuard starts from these seeds and
recursively determines which classes and class members are used. All
other classes and class members are discarded.
Code Optimization
In the optimization step, ProGuard further optimizes the code. Among other optimizations,
classes and methods that are not entry points can be made private,
static, or final, unused parameters can be removed, and some methods
may be inlined.
Obfuscation
In the obfuscation step, ProGuard renames classes and
class members that are not entry points. In this entire process,
keeping the entry points ensures that they can still be accessed by
their original names.
The preverification step is the only step that
doesn't have to know the entry points.
@Very important note : Obfuscating your code does not grant full protection from theft or copy.
With the proper tools and a bit of patience, a very experienced developer may eventually break the obfuscation (it just depends on how much they want the code)
@Conclusion
One should always use ProGuard regardless of being a small or a complex project. The fact that unused code is removed during build grants the apk less required space and better performance (I've had ProGuarded Applications that had their size reduced by up to 25% thanks to the shrinking process).
Even though your application code might be available through Github or other repositories, you should keep your ProGuard scripts tidy and clean (even if only a handful of classes are removed during shrinking process).
But responding to your main question : If the code is at least simply optimized and opened to everyone, you can skip obfuscation