We’re the research team at Giving What We Can:
Ask us anything!
We’ll be answering questions Monday the 27th from 2pm UTC until Tuesday the 28th at 9pm UTC.
Update 28 November 6.20pm UTC: thank you for all the great questions! We've answered most of them by now, and plan continue to answer questions for a bit longer, probably until tomorrow morning ~5am UTC.
Please post your questions as comments to this post, to the post on our evaluations of evaluators, or to the post on our recommendations and cause area funds. And please upvote the questions you’d like us to answer most. We’ll do our best to answer as many as we can, though we can’t guarantee we’ll be able to answer all of them.
In addition to discussing our new reports, recommendations and funds, we are happy to answer any questions you may have about our research plans for next year, about the impact evaluation we did earlier this year, about GWWC more broadly, or about anything else you are interested in!
Thanks for the thoughtful reply, and being transparent about your approach, Michael! Strongly upvoted.
To better reflect how your different recommendations are linked to particular worldviews, I think it would be good to change the name of your area/fund "global health and wellbeing" to "global human health and wellbeing" (I would also drop "health", as it is included in "wellbeing"). Another reason for this is that Open Phil's area "global health and wellbeing" encompasses both human and animal welfare.
I think it would be great if you looked into this at least a little.
I think it makes sense GWWC's recommendations are informed by the research team. However, I wonder how much of your and Sjir's views are being driven by path dependence. GWWC's pledge donations from 2020 to 2022 towards improving human wellbeing were 9.29 (= 0.65/0.07) times those towards improving animal welfare. Given this, I worry you may hesitate to recommend interventions in animal welfare over human welfare even if you found it much more plausible that both areas should be assessed under the same (impartial welfarist) worldview. This might be a common issue across evaluators. Maybe some popular evaluators realised at some point that rating charities by overhead was not a plausible worldview, but meanwhile they had built a reputation for assessing them along that metric, and had influenced significant donations based on such rankings, so they continued to produce them. I hope GWWC remains attentive to this.