#73 – Phil Trammell on patient philanthropy and waiting to do good
80,000 Hours Podcast17 Maalis 2020

#73 – Phil Trammell on patient philanthropy and waiting to do good

To do good, most of us look to use our time and money to affect the world around us today. But perhaps that's all wrong.

If you took $1,000 you were going to donate and instead put it in the stock market — where it grew on average 5% a year — in 100 years you'd have $125,000 to give away instead. And in 200 years you'd have $17 million.

This astonishing fact has driven today's guest, economics researcher Philip Trammell at Oxford's Global Priorities Institute, to investigate the case for and against so-called 'patient philanthropy' in depth. If the case for patient philanthropy is as strong as Phil believes, many of us should be trying to improve the world in a very different way than we are now.

He points out that on top of being able to dispense vastly more, whenever your trustees decide to use your gift to improve the world, they'll also be able to rely on the much broader knowledge available to future generations. A donor two hundred years ago couldn't have known distributing anti-malarial bed nets was a good idea. Not only did bed nets not exist — we didn't even know about germs, and almost nothing in medicine was justified by science.

ADDED: Does the COVID-19 emergency mean we should actually use resources right now? See Phil's first thoughts on this question here.

Links to learn more, summary and full transcript.

What similar leaps will our descendants have made in 200 years, allowing your now vast foundation to benefit more people in even greater ways?

And there's a third reason to wait as well. What are the odds that we today live at the most critical point in history, when resources happen to have the greatest ability to do good? It's possible. But the future may be very long, so there has to be a good chance that some moment in the future will be both more pivotal and more malleable than our own.

Of course, there are many objections to this proposal. If you start a foundation you hope will wait around for centuries, might it not be destroyed in a war, revolution, or financial collapse?

Or might it not drift from its original goals, eventually just serving the interest of its distant future trustees, rather than the noble pursuits you originally intended?

Or perhaps it could fail for the reverse reason, by staying true to your original vision — if that vision turns out to be as deeply morally mistaken as the Rhodes' Scholarships initial charter, which limited it to 'white Christian men'.

Alternatively, maybe the world will change in the meantime, making your gift useless. At one end, humanity might destroy itself before your trust tries to do anything with the money. Or perhaps everyone in the future will be so fabulously wealthy, or the problems of the world already so overcome, that your philanthropy will no longer be able to do much good.

Are these concerns, all of them legitimate, enough to overcome the case in favour of patient philanthropy? In today's conversation with researcher Phil Trammell and my 80,000 Hours colleague Howie Lempel, we try to answer that, and also discuss:

• Real attempts at patient philanthropy in history and how they worked out
• Should we have a mixed strategy, where some altruists are patient and others impatient?
• Which causes most need money now, and which later?
• What is the research frontier here?
• What does this all mean for what listeners should do differently?

Chapters:

  • Rob’s intro (00:00:00)
  • The interview begins (00:02:23)
  • Consequences for getting this question wrong (00:06:03)
  • What have people had to say about this question in the past? (00:07:22)
  • The case for saving (00:11:51)
  • Hundred year leases (00:29:28)
  • Should we be concerned about one group taking control of the world? (00:34:51)
  • Finding better interventions in the future (00:37:20)
  • The hinge of history (00:43:46)
  • Does uncertainty lead us to wanting to wait? (01:01:52)
  • Counterarguments (01:11:36)
  • What about groups who have a particular sense of urgency? (01:40:46)
  • How much should we actually save? (02:01:35)
  • Implications for career choices (02:19:49)


Producer: Keiran Harris.
Audio mastering: Ben Cordell.
Transcriptions: Zakee Ulhaq.

Jaksot(322)

#129 – James Tibenderana on the state of the art in malaria control and elimination

#129 – James Tibenderana on the state of the art in malaria control and elimination

The good news is deaths from malaria have been cut by a third since 2005. The bad news is it still causes 250 million cases and 600,000 deaths a year, mostly among young children in sub-Saharan Africa...

9 Touko 20223h 19min

#128 – Chris Blattman on the five reasons wars happen

#128 – Chris Blattman on the five reasons wars happen

In nature, animals roar and bare their teeth to intimidate adversaries — but one side usually backs down, and real fights are rare. The wisdom of evolution is that the risk of violence is just too gre...

28 Huhti 20222h 46min

#127 – Sam Bankman-Fried on taking a high-risk approach to crypto and doing good

#127 – Sam Bankman-Fried on taking a high-risk approach to crypto and doing good

On this episode of the show, host Rob Wiblin interviews Sam Bankman-Fried. This interview was recorded in February 2022, and released in April 2022. But on November 11 2022, Sam Bankman-Fried's co...

14 Huhti 20223h 20min

#126 – Bryan Caplan on whether lazy parenting is OK, what really helps workers, and betting on beliefs

#126 – Bryan Caplan on whether lazy parenting is OK, what really helps workers, and betting on beliefs

Everybody knows that good parenting has a big impact on how kids turn out. Except that maybe they don't, because it doesn't.Incredible though it might seem, according to today's guest — economist Brya...

5 Huhti 20222h 15min

#125 – Joan Rohlfing on how to avoid catastrophic nuclear blunders

#125 – Joan Rohlfing on how to avoid catastrophic nuclear blunders

Since the Soviet Union split into different countries in 1991, the pervasive fear of catastrophe that people lived with for decades has gradually faded from memory, and nuclear warhead stockpiles have...

29 Maalis 20222h 13min

#124 – Karen Levy on fads and misaligned incentives in global development, and scaling deworming to reach hundreds of millions

#124 – Karen Levy on fads and misaligned incentives in global development, and scaling deworming to reach hundreds of millions

If someone said a global health and development programme was sustainable, participatory, and holistic, you'd have to guess that they were saying something positive. But according to today's guest Kar...

21 Maalis 20223h 9min

#123 – Samuel Charap on why Putin invaded Ukraine, the risk of escalation, and how to prevent disaster

#123 – Samuel Charap on why Putin invaded Ukraine, the risk of escalation, and how to prevent disaster

Russia's invasion of Ukraine is devastating the lives of Ukrainians, and so long as it continues there's a risk that the conflict could escalate to include other countries or the use of nuclear weapon...

14 Maalis 202259min

#122 – Michelle Hutchinson & Habiba Islam on balancing competing priorities and other themes from our 1-on-1 careers advising

#122 – Michelle Hutchinson & Habiba Islam on balancing competing priorities and other themes from our 1-on-1 careers advising

One of 80,000 Hours' main services is our free one-on-one careers advising, which we provide to around 1,000 people a year. Today we speak to two of our advisors, who have each spoken to hundreds of p...

9 Maalis 20221h 36min

Suosittua kategoriassa Koulutus

rss-murhan-anatomia
voi-hyvin-meditaatiot-2
rss-narsisti
psykopodiaa-podcast
psykologia
rss-liian-kuuma-peruna
rss-vapaudu-voimaasi
kesken
rss-uskonto-on-tylsaa
rahapuhetta
rss-niinku-asia-on
rss-duodecim-lehti
rss-valo-minussa-2
rss-tietoinen-yhteys-podcast-2
rss-hereilla
adhd-podi
ihminen-tavattavissa-tommy-hellsten-instituutti
rss-taloustaito-podcast
rss-sielun-aani-podcast
rss-arkea-ja-aurinkoa-podcast-espanjasta