This post[1] is intended as an open thread for anyone to share where you donated or plan to donate in 2022, and why.
I encourage you to share regardless of how small or large a donation you’re making! And you shouldn’t feel obliged to share the amount that you’re donating.
You can share as much or as little detail as you want (anything from 1 sentence simply describing where you’re giving, to multiple pages explaining your decision process and key considerations).
And if you have thoughts or feedback on someone else’s donation plans, I’d encourage you to share that in a reply to their “answer”, unless the person indicated they don’t want that. (But remember to be respectful and kind while doing this! See also supportive scepticism.)
Why commenting on this post might be useful:
- You might get useful feedback on your donation plan
- Readers might form better donation plans by learning about donation options you're considering, seeing your reasoning, etc.
- Commenting or reading might help you/other people become or stay inspired to give (and to give effectively)
Related:
- Effective Giving Day is coming up — November 28 — next week!
- Talk about donations earlier and more
- Previous posts of this kind:
As a final note: we’re enabling emoji reactions for this thread.
- ^
Adapted almost entirely from Where are you donating in 2020 and why?, with permission.
Hi Devon,
Thanks for engaging!
A priori, I think it makes sense to assume grantmakers from the EA Funds are better than me. I am open to the possibility of finding better opportunities than EA Funds, but guess it would take me too much time to be more effective than deferring to EA Funds. I also believe exceptions exist, as Joel pointed to above.
However, I do agree there should be more efforts to assess past grants from EA Funds, as Nuño Sempere did here.
I agree that, for the same amount of non-risk-adjusted funding, more funders will tend to increase risk-adjusted funding, which is good. However, it is arguably easier to increase non-risk-adjusted funding via large funders, since wealth is heavy-tailed. I do not know which consideration (and there are more) is stronger.
"Lots of people making many different decisions on where to give" does not seem to have worked out perfectly in the outer world. I expect the median person aligned with effective altruism would make better decisions than the median citizen, but specialisation to still be good. So the median grantmaker of EA Funds is arguably better at grantmaking than the median person aligned with effective altruism. One compromise is having more grantmakers (currently one of 80,000 Hours' top carrer paths).