The Animal Welfare vs Global Health debate week is turning out to be pretty one sided so far.
The wording of the question this time was chosen to be a bit more resistant to nitpicks (vs "...should be an EA priority" last time), potentially this has also resulted in it appearing more polarised one way. For me, voting strongly on the animal welfare side was not a endorsement of animal welfare being definitely more effective forever, but just that moving a chunk of money on the margin would be good seeing as it currently appears more cost effective by most counts.
So, I'm interested in hearing arguments for the other side (whichever way you voted) that you find persuasive, but not enough to fully persuade you.
(Edited)
I favour animal welfare, but some (near-term future) considerations that I'm most sympathetic to that could favour global health are:
People probably just have different beliefs/preferences about how much their own suffering matters, and those preferences are plausibly not interpersonally comparable at all.
Some people may find it easier to reflectively dismiss or discount their own suffering than others for various reasons, like particular beliefs or greater self-control. If interpersonal comparisons are warranted, it could just mean these people care less about their own suffering in absolute terms on average, not that they care more about other things than average. Other animals probably can't easily dismiss or discount their own suffering much, and their actions follow pretty directly from their suffering and other felt desires, so they might even care more about their own suffering in absolute terms on average.
We can also imagine moral patients with conscious preferences who can't suffer at all, so we'd have to find something else to normalize by to make interpersonal comparisons with them.
I discuss interpersonal comparisons more here.