#153 – Elie Hassenfeld on 2 big picture critiques of GiveWell's approach, and 6 lessons from their recent work

#153 – Elie Hassenfeld on 2 big picture critiques of GiveWell's approach, and 6 lessons from their recent work

GiveWell is one of the world's best-known charity evaluators, with the goal of "searching for the charities that save or improve lives the most per dollar." It mostly recommends projects that help the world's poorest people avoid easily prevented diseases, like intestinal worms or vitamin A deficiency.

But should GiveWell, as some critics argue, take a totally different approach to its search, focusing instead on directly increasing subjective wellbeing, or alternatively, raising economic growth?

Today's guest — cofounder and CEO of GiveWell, Elie Hassenfeld — is proud of how much GiveWell has grown in the last five years. Its 'money moved' has quadrupled to around $600 million a year.

Its research team has also more than doubled, enabling them to investigate a far broader range of interventions that could plausibly help people an enormous amount for each dollar spent. That work has led GiveWell to support dozens of new organisations, such as Kangaroo Mother Care, MiracleFeet, and Dispensers for Safe Water.

But some other researchers focused on figuring out the best ways to help the world's poorest people say GiveWell shouldn't just do more of the same thing, but rather ought to look at the problem differently.

Links to learn more, summary and full transcript.

Currently, GiveWell uses a range of metrics to track the impact of the organisations it considers recommending — such as 'lives saved,' 'household incomes doubled,' and for health improvements, the 'quality-adjusted life year.'

The Happier Lives Institute (HLI) has argued that instead, GiveWell should try to cash out the impact of all interventions in terms of improvements in subjective wellbeing. This philosophy has led HLI to be more sceptical of interventions that have been demonstrated to improve health, but whose impact on wellbeing has not been measured, and to give a high priority to improving lives relative to extending them.

An alternative high-level critique is that really all that matters in the long run is getting the economies of poor countries to grow. On this view, GiveWell should focus on figuring out what causes some countries to experience explosive economic growth while others fail to, or even go backwards. Even modest improvements in the chances of such a 'growth miracle' will likely offer a bigger bang-for-buck than funding the incremental delivery of deworming tablets or vitamin A supplements, or anything else.

Elie sees where both of these critiques are coming from, and notes that they've influenced GiveWell's work in some ways. But as he explains, he thinks they underestimate the practical difficulty of successfully pulling off either approach and finding better opportunities than what GiveWell funds today.

In today's in-depth conversation, Elie and host Rob Wiblin cover the above, as well as:

  • Why GiveWell flipped from not recommending chlorine dispensers as an intervention for safe drinking water to spending tens of millions of dollars on them
  • What transferable lessons GiveWell learned from investigating different kinds of interventions
  • Why the best treatment for premature babies in low-resource settings may involve less rather than more medicine.
  • Severe malnourishment among children and what can be done about it.
  • How to deal with hidden and non-obvious costs of a programme
  • Some cheap early treatments that can prevent kids from developing lifelong disabilities
  • The various roles GiveWell is currently hiring for, and what's distinctive about their organisational culture
  • And much more.

Chapters:

  • Rob’s intro (00:00:00)
  • The interview begins (00:03:14)
  • GiveWell over the last couple of years (00:04:33)
  • Dispensers for Safe Water (00:11:52)
  • Syphilis diagnosis for pregnant women via technical assistance (00:30:39)
  • Kangaroo Mother Care (00:48:47)
  • Multiples of cash (01:01:20)
  • Hidden costs (01:05:41)
  • MiracleFeet (01:09:45)
  • Serious malnourishment among young children (01:22:46)
  • Vitamin A deficiency and supplementation (01:40:42)
  • The subjective wellbeing approach in contrast with GiveWell's approach (01:46:31)
  • The value of saving a life when that life is going to be very difficult (02:09:09)
  • Whether economic policy is what really matters overwhelmingly (02:20:00)
  • Careers at GiveWell (02:39:10)
  • Donations (02:48:58)
  • Parenthood (02:50:29)
  • Rob’s outro (02:55:05)

Producer: Keiran Harris

Audio mastering: Simon Monsour and Ben Cordell

Transcriptions: Katy Moore

Jaksot(320)

15 expert takes on infosec in the age of AI

15 expert takes on infosec in the age of AI

"There’s almost no story of the future going well that doesn’t have a part that’s like '…and no evil person steals the AI weights and goes and does evil stuff.' So it has highlighted the importance of...

28 Maalis 20252h 35min

#213 – Will MacAskill on AI causing a “century in a decade” – and how we're completely unprepared

#213 – Will MacAskill on AI causing a “century in a decade” – and how we're completely unprepared

The 20th century saw unprecedented change: nuclear weapons, satellites, the rise and fall of communism, third-wave feminism, the internet, postmodernism, game theory, genetic engineering, the Big Bang...

11 Maalis 20253h 57min

Emergency pod: Judge plants a legal time bomb under OpenAI (with Rose Chan Loui)

Emergency pod: Judge plants a legal time bomb under OpenAI (with Rose Chan Loui)

When OpenAI announced plans to convert from nonprofit to for-profit control last October, it likely didn’t anticipate the legal labyrinth it now faces. A recent court order in Elon Musk’s lawsuit agai...

7 Maalis 202536min

#139 Classic episode – Alan Hájek on puzzles and paradoxes in probability and expected value

#139 Classic episode – Alan Hájek on puzzles and paradoxes in probability and expected value

A casino offers you a game. A coin will be tossed. If it comes up heads on the first flip you win $2. If it comes up on the second flip you win $4. If it comes up on the third you win $8, the fourth y...

25 Helmi 20253h 41min

#143 Classic episode – Jeffrey Lewis on the most common misconceptions about nuclear weapons

#143 Classic episode – Jeffrey Lewis on the most common misconceptions about nuclear weapons

America aims to avoid nuclear war by relying on the principle of 'mutually assured destruction,' right? Wrong. Or at least... not officially.As today's guest — Jeffrey Lewis, founder of Arms Control W...

19 Helmi 20252h 40min

#212 – Allan Dafoe on why technology is unstoppable & how to shape AI development anyway

#212 – Allan Dafoe on why technology is unstoppable & how to shape AI development anyway

Technology doesn’t force us to do anything — it merely opens doors. But military and economic competition pushes us through.That’s how today’s guest Allan Dafoe — director of frontier safety and gover...

14 Helmi 20252h 44min

Emergency pod: Elon tries to crash OpenAI's party (with Rose Chan Loui)

Emergency pod: Elon tries to crash OpenAI's party (with Rose Chan Loui)

On Monday Musk made the OpenAI nonprofit foundation an offer they want to refuse, but might have trouble doing so: $97.4 billion for its stake in the for-profit company, plus the freedom to stick with...

12 Helmi 202557min

AGI disagreements and misconceptions: Rob, Luisa, & past guests hash it out

AGI disagreements and misconceptions: Rob, Luisa, & past guests hash it out

Will LLMs soon be made into autonomous agents? Will they lead to job losses? Is AI misinformation overblown? Will it prove easy or hard to create AGI? And how likely is it that it will feel like somet...

10 Helmi 20253h 12min

Suosittua kategoriassa Koulutus

rss-murhan-anatomia
psykopodiaa-podcast
rss-narsisti
voi-hyvin-meditaatiot-2
aamukahvilla
rss-niinku-asia-on
rss-liian-kuuma-peruna
adhd-podi
psykologia
kesken
rss-vapaudu-voimaasi
rss-valo-minussa-2
dear-ladies
rss-koira-haudattuna
jari-sarasvuo-podcast
esa-saarinen-filosofia-ja-systeemiajattelu
leveli
rss-duodecim-lehti
rss-luonnollinen-synnytys-podcast
rss-ihana-elamani