We are excited to announce that Basefund has entered its trial phase. Starting today, individuals who have previously donated to effective charities and are currently facing financial trouble can apply for hardship assistance at basefund.org.
During this trial phase, if your application is accepted, you will receive the lowest amount among the following three options:
- The payout suggested by our hardship examiners
- 50% of your donations to cost-effective charities made in 2022 and 2023
- 1,000 USD or the equivalent amount in another currency
Beware that during the trial phase, Basefund may halt operations or change its rules without warning.
If you're aware of anyone who has previously donated to effective charities and is currently facing financial hardship, please let them know about our fund. If you're not quite sure whether you qualify as experiencing hardship, we recommend you to submit an application.
A few random questions:
(Totally agree with leaving it undefined during the trial phase, and can see arguments for leaving it undefined in an operational phase too. On the other hand, I think transparency is particularly important for charities whose most direct benefit is to EA or EA-adjacent people, and given Basefund's purpose that transparency probably needs to be at a policy level rather than an individual-application level).
Could you explain the rationale for possibly extending the eligibility period backward to 2012? If the theory of change is to encourage people to donate boldly because they can get a partial refund if they experience future financial trouble, it seems that theory would only work prospectively.
One policy quirk to consider in the future: Should an intervening bankruptcy filing disqualify a significant payout?
There are some potential scenarios in which the effect would -- in my view -- be inequitable toward the donor's creditors. It doesn't seem appropriate to me to give a payout to someone based on pre-petition donations if they saddled their creditors with pre-petition losses.
Because the potential payout would fully be within Basefund's control, that asset could potentially evade the equitable principles of the Bankruptcy Code. This would be particularly problematic if the donor were insolvent when the donation was made, but the creditors couldn't recover the donation under fraudulent conveyance law because of 11 USC § 548(a)(2)'s protection for certain charitable contributions by individuals.