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Parent Topic: Animal welfare
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The Meat-Eater Problem is the concern that some interventions helping humans might increase animal product consumption and harm animals as a result, e.g. by increasing income or increasing the size of the human population. This tag is for posts discussing the meat-eater problem, including to what degree it is significant, if at all.

Further details

Saving human lives, and making humans more prosperous, seem to be obviously good in terms of direct effects. However, humans consume animal products, and these animal products may cause considerable animal suffering. Therefore, improving human lives may lead to negative effects that outweigh the direct positive effects. This “meat eater problem” suggests that working on global poverty may be less effective than is commonly assumed.

Although it is very difficult to quantify these effects, one estimate suggests that each additional $1,000 per year for a relatively poor individual may cause between 1 and 190 days of animal suffering, though the estimate should not be taken literally (Bogossian 2015). Some have argued that the problem is less significant by claiming that animals have net positive lives, or by arguing that the effect on consumption is relatively small (Weathers 2016).

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Posts tagged Meat-eater problem

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