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

#124 Classic episode – 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 Karen Levy — deworming pioneer and veteran of Innovations for Poverty Action, Evidence Action, and Y Combinator — each of those three concepts has become so fashionable that they're at risk of being seriously overrated and applied where they don't belong.

Rebroadcast: this episode was originally released in March 2022.

Links to learn more, highlights, and full transcript.

Such concepts might even cause harm — trying to make a project embody all three is as likely to ruin it as help it flourish.

First, what do people mean by 'sustainability'? Usually they mean something like the programme will eventually be able to continue without needing further financial support from the donor. But how is that possible? Governments, nonprofits, and aid agencies aim to provide health services, education, infrastructure, financial services, and so on — and all of these require ongoing funding to pay for materials and staff to keep them running.

Given that someone needs to keep paying, Karen tells us that in practice, 'sustainability' is usually a euphemism for the programme at some point being passed on to someone else to fund — usually the national government. And while that can be fine, the national government of Kenya only spends $400 per person to provide each and every government service — just 2% of what the US spends on each resident. Incredibly tight budgets like that are typical of low-income countries.

'Participatory' also sounds nice, and inasmuch as it means leaders are accountable to the people they're trying to help, it probably is. But Karen tells us that in the field, ‘participatory’ usually means that recipients are expected to be involved in planning and delivering services themselves.

While that might be suitable in some situations, it's hardly something people in rich countries always want for themselves. Ideally we want government healthcare and education to be high quality without us having to attend meetings to keep it on track — and people in poor countries have as many or more pressures on their time. While accountability is desirable, an expectation of participation can be as much a burden as a blessing.

Finally, making a programme 'holistic' could be smart, but as Karen lays out, it also has some major downsides. For one, it means you're doing lots of things at once, which makes it hard to tell which parts of the project are making the biggest difference relative to their cost. For another, when you have a lot of goals at once, it's hard to tell whether you're making progress, or really put your mind to focusing on making one thing go extremely well. And finally, holistic programmes can be impractically expensive — Karen tells the story of a wonderful 'holistic school health' programme that, if continued, was going to cost 3.5 times the entire school's budget.

In this in-depth conversation, originally released in March 2022, Karen Levy and host Rob Wiblin chat about the above, as well as:

  • Why it pays to figure out how you'll interpret the results of an experiment ahead of time
  • The trouble with misaligned incentives within the development industry
  • Projects that don't deliver value for money and should be scaled down
  • How Karen accidentally became a leading figure in the push to deworm tens of millions of schoolchildren
  • Logistical challenges in reaching huge numbers of people with essential services
  • Lessons from Karen's many-decades career
  • And much more

Chapters:

  • Cold open (00:00:00)
  • Rob's intro (00:01:33)
  • The interview begins (00:02:21)
  • Funding for effective altruist–mentality development projects (00:04:59)
  • Pre-policy plans (00:08:36)
  • ‘Sustainability’, and other myths in typical international development practice (00:21:37)
  • ‘Participatoriness’ (00:36:20)
  • ‘Holistic approaches’ (00:40:20)
  • How the development industry sees evidence-based development (00:51:31)
  • Initiatives in Africa that should be significantly curtailed (00:56:30)
  • Misaligned incentives within the development industry (01:05:46)
  • Deworming: the early days (01:21:09)
  • The problem of deworming (01:34:27)
  • Deworm the World (01:45:43)
  • Where the majority of the work was happening (01:55:38)
  • Logistical issues (02:20:41)
  • The importance of a theory of change (02:31:46)
  • Ways that things have changed since 2006 (02:36:07)
  • Academic work vs policy work (02:38:33)
  • Fit for Purpose (02:43:40)
  • Living in Kenya (03:00:32)
  • Underrated life advice (03:05:29)
  • Rob’s outro (03:09:18)

Producer: Keiran Harris
Audio mastering: Ben Cordell and Ryan Kessler
Transcriptions: Katy Moore

Episoder(320)

Advice on how to read our advice (Article)

Advice on how to read our advice (Article)

This is the fourth release in our new series of audio articles. If you want to read the original article or check out the links within it, you can find them here. "We’ve found that readers sometimes...

29 Jun 202015min

#80 – Stuart Russell on why our approach to AI is broken and how to fix it

#80 – Stuart Russell on why our approach to AI is broken and how to fix it

Stuart Russell, Professor at UC Berkeley and co-author of the most popular AI textbook, thinks the way we approach machine learning today is fundamentally flawed. In his new book, Human Compatible, he...

22 Jun 20202h 13min

What anonymous contributors think about important life and career questions (Article)

What anonymous contributors think about important life and career questions (Article)

Today we’re launching the final entry of our ‘anonymous answers' series on the website. It features answers to 23 different questions including “How have you seen talented people fail in their work?...

5 Jun 202037min

#79 – A.J. Jacobs on radical honesty, following the whole Bible, and reframing global problems as puzzles

#79 – A.J. Jacobs on radical honesty, following the whole Bible, and reframing global problems as puzzles

Today’s guest, New York Times bestselling author A.J. Jacobs, always hated Judge Judy. But after he found out that she was his seventh cousin, he thought, "You know what? She's not so bad." Hijacking ...

1 Jun 20202h 38min

#78 – Danny Hernandez on forecasting and the drivers of AI progress

#78 – Danny Hernandez on forecasting and the drivers of AI progress

Companies use about 300,000 times more computation training the best AI systems today than they did in 2012 and algorithmic innovations have also made them 25 times more efficient at the same tasks.Th...

22 Mai 20202h 11min

#77 – Marc Lipsitch on whether we're winning or losing against COVID-19

#77 – Marc Lipsitch on whether we're winning or losing against COVID-19

In March Professor Marc Lipsitch — Director of Harvard's Center for Communicable Disease Dynamics — abruptly found himself a global celebrity, his social media following growing 40-fold and journalist...

18 Mai 20201h 37min

Article: Ways people trying to do good accidentally make things worse, and how to avoid them

Article: Ways people trying to do good accidentally make things worse, and how to avoid them

Today’s release is the second experiment in making audio versions of our articles. The first was a narration of Greg Lewis’ terrific problem profile on ‘Reducing global catastrophic biological risks...

12 Mai 202026min

#76 – Tara Kirk Sell on misinformation, who's done well and badly, & what to reopen first

#76 – Tara Kirk Sell on misinformation, who's done well and badly, & what to reopen first

Amid a rising COVID-19 death toll, and looming economic disaster, we’ve been looking for good news — and one thing we're especially thankful for is the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security (CHS). ...

8 Mai 20201h 53min

Populært innen Fakta

fastlegen
dine-penger-pengeradet
relasjonspodden-med-dora-thorhallsdottir-kjersti-idem
treningspodden
rss-strid-de-norske-borgerkrigene
foreldreradet
jakt-og-fiskepodden
rss-sunn-okonomi
merry-quizmas
gravid-uke-for-uke
fryktlos
sinnsyn
hverdagspsyken
rss-mann-i-krise-med-sagen
smart-forklart
generasjonspodden
rss-kunsten-a-leve
dopet
sovnlos
hr-podden-2