I should preface this by noting that the current charities are not EA ones. This giving plan is also a work in progress and could change.
Yet, the sharing on why and to whom may be of use to me and the EA community.
How Much
I currently donate 10% or more to charity.
It is not a magic number, but is one I am familiar with through the concept of tithing in religion and the Giving What We Can Pledge.
It also represents a greater commitment to the causes. Yet, it still means 90% for me as one person and 10% for the world, hardly a good deal for the world.
Where and Why
Poverty and global-health charities.
Doing something about poverty has always been a focus of mine. Global health becomes more and more of a priority because ill health can prevent not only life, but a quality of life and prosperity.
I tend to focus on direct relief and not advocacy or system change.
The evidence of impact for system change and advocacy is more unclear to me than direct relief.
If the advocacy is successful that does not mean the donation I gave to an advocacy group was effective. As there are so many actors involved in the campaign and the campaign may have been successful regardless of the group I have given to.
Political candidates can receive significant money with no certainty they will be elected or can achieve what they want, if elected.
So, I have more confidence in direct relief.
The Charities
The International Rescue Committee
I have changed from giving to single intervention charities like the Against Malaria Foundation to broader ones like the IRC.
I think if the circus is going to come to town that it should have more than just bed nets for those that do not already have malaria.
It should also have other medical interventions for those with it and other medical issues.
Yes, some of the programs in a broader charity may be less cost-effective than others or less effective than others. Yet, overall I think the broader ones are the better choice.
The Hollywood Sunset Free Clinic
It provides free primary healthcare to people in LA.
I am okay with helping people in developed as well as developing countries.
For me, the debate was primary healthcare or medical research.
I certainly support more funding for medical research, yet I did not know which medical research charity is the one more likely to get to a cure and sooner rather than later.
Yet, primary healthcare charities {no matter which one really} are likely to provide that primary healthcare to people. I also figured that my small donation could cover more of a primary healthcare service than a billion dollar cure, thus be of more use.
The Association to Benefit of Children.
ABC provides healthcare and education to kids in poverty in New York {including in a very poor Congressional district in America, The South Bronx}. It also provides job help and accommodation to families.
They claim to achieve high outcomes for people {much higher than those not in the program}. They have also been recommended by at least one independent program evaluator.
I must admit that education philanthropy is not something I am that supportive of.
I find people treat education as this magic wand that is the solution to everything, but things are not that simple.
Research notes what happens outside the school has more of an impact on educational outcomes and prosperity later in life. So, the focus on philanthropy should {in my mind} be outside the school.
I also want more immediate support to people and not a multi-year school program whose results {like a good job as an adult} is too far away.
I don't , however, want to completely ignore early intervention. I like the medical programs of the charity and education is important. So I support it.
The fourth area of giving is for one-off donations or irregular donations {unlike the above mentioned}, to a variety of charities.
One idea was that if a charity is good enough to receive one donation that it is good enough to receive more than one. Yet, I thought by having a fourth area of giving like this it means charities not missing out on donations because they are not the ones I give to regularly.
It also keeps me motivated to research other charities.
The focus is global, developing countries and developed countries.
They have to be effective and the donation has to equate to at least 1% of the intervention {that's a rough guide}.
So, I would imagine the one-off donations will be at least slightly higher than the regular donations to the charities I give to on a regular basis.
After reading about McKenzie Scott's donations including to lesser-known charities, I am interested in browsing the lesser known ones as well as the more known ones.
This coming year I am setting a target of donating £2000, going to:
In my life I have had the misfortune of experiencing extreme pain a few times. This pain required strong painkillers (e.g. morphine) to kill. These experiences had a hugely outsized impact on my wellbeing in relation to their duration, due to the intensity of the suffering I felt. The thought of not having access to pain relief in these moments of suffering is terrifying, and as such I believe eliminating or reducing extreme suffering should be one of, if not THE top moral priority for humanity. I plan to donate to OPIS (organisation for the prevention of intense suffering). I am a big fan of their work to increase access to morphine in developing countries, and to find effective pain relief for cluster headaches. In particular, their approach of lobbying for institutional change means that any donation to them could have an enduring impact e.g. if they are successful in changing laws preventing access to pain relief.
Having grown up in a developing country, it's very easy for me to summon the imaginative empathy required to donate towards this cause area, and doing so motivates me to keep earning to give. It's also a cause area that I believe has become more urgent in the last year, with covid-19 and the resulting blow to the world's economy threatening to undo much of the progress made towards eliminating global poverty over the last few decades.
-Give Directly: I believe there is a strong argument to the effectiveness of unconditional cash donations, with the term 'cash benchmarks' now being used to define the idea that we should measure any intervention against the equivalent amount of good that could be done simply by giving the recipient an amount of cash equal to the intervention. Another factor that motivates me to donate to Give Directly over other global health interventions that do no involve unconditional cash transfers is the that it has less of the shadow of Western parochialism. There is a long history of misguided Western interventions in developing countries, and if we are unsure what the most effective way of helping poor people are, it may be simplest to simply give them the money directly, as they are most familiar with their situation and will know best where to use it. Lastly, unconditional cash transfers appeal to a moral stance around global justice, the immorality of extreme global inequality and the legacy of colonialism, which I am sympathetic to. Lastly, the concept of GiveDrectly is very easy to explain., and I have received supportive responses when explaining it to non-EA friends. I think that by being public about my giving to this charity (e.g. Facebook fundraisers) I maybe be able to raise an additional 30% in donations from people who would otherwise be unlikely to give to effective charities
* Against Malaria Foundation: I have a monthly payment of £10 a month set up to AMF, and I'm very unlikely to change this in the future.Having a steady, predictable stream of income is very useful for charities and this is another reason for me to not change my donations to them. Lastly, I like the dashboard that shows me where the nets I have bought have gone to (this probably counts as 'buying fuzzies', although I know there's also a very good argument to the effectiveness of AMF)
I find it hard to feel enough empathy towards animals to donate large amounts of my donation budget towards animal interventions instead of human ones. To what degree this is based on legitimate questions towards how strongly we should weight the experiences of animals, and to what degree this is 'speciesism' prejudice, I'm not sure. Nevertheless, I plan to donate to the top recommended ACE charity for the following reasons:
-there is good evidence large mammals are sentient
-there is good evidence that factory farming causes lots of suffering to these animals
-you can save the lives/reduce the suffering of many of these animals per £, compared to human interventions
-many in the ea community think this is a good cause area
I plan to keep a portion of my donation budget undecided where I will spend it. This year I donated £200 to Family Empowerment Media. This was quite a spontaneous decision for me, and was based on the fact that they were recently founded and raising money for a pilot trial. As such, I felt my donation could have a large marginal benefit for reasons of
-neglectedness
-information value
I plan to give this portion of my giving budget to an opportunity(s) that are more speculative or time bound, but potentiality higher-impact that the interventions I have listed above.
Thanks for sharing this reasoning :)
Just for any readers who might be unfamiliar with that phrase, I believe it's a reference to the well-worth-reading post Purchase Fuzzies and Utilons Separately.