I am sceptical of the idea that a substantial amount of EA funds should be allocated democratically. In my view there are some strong reasons to believe that the existing model of allocating funding (that is funders giving money to organisations which allocate money with the allocators' best judgement) does better than a simple democratic vote.
The main problem in my opinion is that individual voters do not have sufficient incentives to allocate collective funds in an effective manner
Rational Ignorance (or even irrationality)?
The main problem is that getting decisions to be correct requires a large amount of information (which is costly to collect) and decision making (which is again costly to make correctly).
Consider the decision on whether EA funders should spend more money on reducing civil conflict. This is a hard decision to make because it involves a large amount of information (like historical statistics on civil wars, their causes, historical efforts to reduce them etc)., subjective judgement (how tractable it is, comparing it to other funding opportunities, weighing PR concerns), and finally decisions based on the above judgements (how much to fund and to whom). The above process costs many hours of high intensity thinking.
The most obvious response to this is that EA voters aren’t going to be ignorant because they care about EA causes. The argument would go that EA voters are going to spend more time than what political scientists would consider rational because they have a deep commitment to the cause. I do find this plausible. Many EAs regularly donate over 10% of their income to cause areas. Many of them spend hours explaining and debating these issues online, and for some of them working in an EA cause area will be their main career priority.
My first response to this is that these people are going to be a minority of the total voter population (if broadly defined). Not everyone will have the same level of engagement with EA ideas, and not everyone will have the same level of personal interest in getting them right. These qualities are going to be concentrated in a minority of people because, relative to the total EA population (say as defined as DAUs or MAUs of the EA forum, or a larger one as GWWC pledge takers), this is a small number of people.
But my second critique is more substantive. It is that apart from being rationally ignorant on these issues, most voters probably will be irrational on them too. On several EA topics voters will be biassed in the sense that they will have beliefs that are systematically wrong in some direction. They might be in favour of some cause area without updating when new information or arguments are produced. Their notions about certain people or organisations might make them systematically biassed against them and lead to bad voting outcomes.
What incentive do voters in this have to improve? I don’t think they have many. Each voter does not think that their vote is very important. They won’t have a large chance of influencing the vote, so why bother doing all the reading anyways? Their previous notions will influence the voting decision and they will have no incentive to change if they are wrong.
The existing method for EA orgs to allocate money has been for donors to give them money, then to analyse the costs and benefits of whatever opportunities they investigate and decide on what grants to give.
I think this would lead to better outcomes because there are clearly identifiable people who have reputations to build by doing good analysis and recommending good grants. This can work in the opposite direction (people are too afraid to propose high risk grants because they feel it might stick to their name if it fails), but everything considered, it is a good thing that this incentive exists.
These people are better informed about the topic in ways that voters will not be able to. Many of them have years of experience in the cause area, both inside and outside EA. Some have advanced degrees in the subject and this is also valuable in building a base of knowledge to allocate donor money
(Conflict of interest: I will receive money from an organisation funded by Open Philanthropy)
I appreciate the spirit of this post, and agree with many of the specific concerns you raise. However, you seem to be making assumptions about what it'd look like to allocate funding democratically (with regard to who would get to weigh in, what they'd be weighing in on, and how they'd be weighing in), and then drawing much broader conclusions about whether democratizing funding is a good idea. I think you persuasively argue against one such approach, but that others are worth considering.
For instance, I agree with this point with regard to EA voters, but why would the voters have to be EAs? Why not find the stakeholders who do have sufficient incentives to allocate funding well; i.e., those who stand to benefit most from the decisions that are made? And why have them vote on different cause areas, versus weighing in on specific initiatives within a given cause area? Etc.
Any proposal to democratize funding is going to face challenges—I suspect it will inevitably be expensive and burdensome to do this well. But presumably, the way to figure out whether this is worth pursuing is to determine the point of allocating funding (more) democratically, generate specific proposals on this basis, and then evaluate whether any could be implemented effectively.
Sure! A couple of thoughts:
I agree that democratizing funding is easier for GWH causes than for more longtermist ones, and there is correspondingly more precedent for this in global health. I'm not going to do a lit review, but Tables 3 and 4 here list some of the things that have been tried (though I wouldn't read the paper). Personally, I think the move is probably to survey potential beneficiaries—rather than doing something more deliberative—and then factor their preferences/values into decisions about which projects within a given cause area to priori... (read more)