On 17 February 2024, the mean length of the main text of the write-ups of Open Philanthropy’s largest grants in each of its 30 focus areas was only 2.50 paragraphs, whereas the mean amount was 14.2 M 2022-$[1]. For 23 of the 30 largest grants, it was just 1 paragraph. The calculations and information about the grants is in this Sheet.
Should the main text of the write-ups of Open Philanthropy’s large grants (e.g. at least 1 M$) be longer than 1 paragraph? I think greater reasoning transparency would be good, so I would like it if Open Philanthropy had longer write-ups.
In terms of other grantmakers aligned with effective altruism[2]:
- Charity Entrepreneurship (CE) produces an in-depth report for each organisation it incubates (see CE’s research).
- Effective Altruism Funds has write-ups of 1 sentence for the vast majority of the grants of its 4 funds.
- Founders Pledge has write-ups of 1 sentence for the vast majority of the grants of its 4 funds.
- Future of Life Institute’s grants have write-ups roughly as long as Open Philanthropy.
- Longview Philanthropy’s grants have write-ups roughly as long as Open Philanthropy.
- Manifund's grants have write-ups (comments) of a few paragraphs.
- Survival and Flourishing Fund has write-ups of a few words for the vast majority of its grants.
I encourage all of the above except for CE to have longer write-ups. I focussed on Open Philanthropy in this post given it accounts for the vast majority of the grants aligned with effective altruism.
Some context:
- Holden Karnofsky posted about how Open Philanthropy was thinking about openness and information sharing in 2016.
- There was a discussion in early 2023 about whether Open Philanthropy should share a ranking of grants it produced then.
- ^
Open Philanthropy has 17 broad focus areas, 9 under global health and wellbeing, 4 under global catastrophic risks (GCRs), and 4 under other areas. However, its grants are associated with 30 areas.
I define main text as that besides headings, and not including paragraphs of the type:
- “Grant investigator: [name]”.
- “This page was reviewed but not written by the grant investigator. [Organisation] staff also reviewed this page prior to publication”.
- “This follows our [dates with links to previous grants to the organisation] support, and falls within our focus area of [area]”.
- “The grant amount was updated in [date(s)]”.
- “See [organisation's] page on this grant for more details”.
- “This grant is part of our Regranting Challenge. See the Regranting Challenge website for more details on this grant”.
- “This is a discretionary grant”.
I count lists of bullets as 1 paragraph.
- ^
The grantmakers are ordered alphabetically.
I think a dedicated area would minimise the negative impact on people that aren't interested whilst potentially adding value (to prospective applicants in understanding what did and didn't get accepted, and possibly also to grant assessors if there was occasional additional insight offered by commenters)
I 'd expect there would be some details of some applications that wouldn't be appropriate to share on a public forum though