Hi everyone! I’ll be doing an Ask Me Anything (AMA) here. Feel free to drop your questions in the comments below. I will aim to answer them by Monday, July 24.
Who am I?
I’m Peter. I co-founded Rethink Priorities (RP) with Marcus A. Davis in 2018. Previously, I worked as a data scientist in industry for five years. I’m an avid forecaster. I’ve been known to tweet here and blog here.
What does Rethink Priorities do?
RP is a research and implementation group that works with foundations and impact-focused non-profits to identify pressing opportunities to make the world better, figures out strategies for working on those problems, and does that work.
We focus on:
- Wild and farmed animal welfare (including invertebrate welfare)
- Global health and development (including climate change)
- AI governance and strategy
- Existential security and safeguarding a flourishing long-term future
- Understanding and supporting communities relevant to the above
What should you ask me?
Anything!
I oversee RP’s work related to existential security, AI, and surveys and data analysis research, but I can answer any question about RP (or anything).
I’m also excited to answer questions about the organization’s future plans and our funding gaps (see here for more information). We're pretty funding constrained right now and could use some help!
We also recently published a personal reflection on what Marcus and I have learned in the last five years as well as a review of the organization’s impacts, future plans, and funding needs that you might be interested in or have questions about.
RP’s publicly available research can be found in this database. If you’d like to support RP’s mission, please donate here or contact Director of Development Janique Behman.
To stay up-to-date on our work, please subscribe to our newsletter or engage with us on Twitter, Facebook, or LinkedIn.
We do broadly aim to maximize the cost-effectiveness of our research work and so we focus on allocating money to opportunities that we think are most cost-effective on the margin.
Given that, it may be surprising that we work in multiple cause areas, but we face some interesting constraints and considerations:
There is significant uncertainty about which priority area is most impactful. The general approach to RP has been that we can scale up multiple high-quality research teams in a variety of cause areas easier than we can figure out which cause area we ought to prioritize. Though we recently hired a Worldview Investigations Team to work a lot more on the broader question of how to allocate an EA portfolio. We also are investing a lot more in our own impact assessment. Together we hope that these will give us more insights into how to allocate our work going forward.
There may be diminishing returns to RP focusing on any one priority area.
A large amount of resources are not fungible across these different areas. The marginal opportunity cost to taking restricted funding is pretty low as we cannot easily allocate these resources to other areas, even if we were convinced they were higher impact.
Work on any single area might gain from our working on multiple areas as teams have much greater access to centralized resources, staff, funding, and productive oversight than what they would receive if the team existed independently and solely focused on that priority. Relationships within an area could poten be useful for work in another area.
Working across different priorities allows the organization to build capacity, reputation, and relations, and maintain option value for the future.