I would still consider the leading epidemiologist’s endorsement to be a standard sort of prestige-indicator. If an anti-disease charity is endorsed by leading epidemiologists, you hardly need GiveWell. (At least for the epidemiological aspects. The financial/accounting part may be another matter.)
I would argue that this is precisely what GiveWell does in evaluating malaria charity. If the epidemiological consensus changed, and bednets were held to be an unsustainable solution (this is less thoroughly implausible than it might sound, though probably still unlikely), then even given the past success of certain bednet charities on all GiveWell’s other criteria, GiveWell might still downgrade those charities. And don’t underestimate the size of the gap between “a scientifically plausible mechanism for improving lives” and “good value in lives saved/improved per dollar.” There are plenty of bednet charities, and there’s a reason GiveWell recommends AMF and not, say, Nothing But Nets.
The endorsement, in other words, is about the plausibility of the mechanism, which is only one of several things to consider in donating to a charity, but it’s the area in which a particular kind of expert endorsement is most meaningful.
If the epidemiological consensus changed, and bednets were held to be an unsustainable solution...then even given the past success of certain bednet charities on all GiveWell’s other criteria, GiveWell might still downgrade those charities.
As they should. But the point is that, in so doing, GiveWell would not be adding any new information not already contained in the epidemiological consensus (assuming they don’t have privileged information about the latter).
And don’t underestimate the size of the gap between “a scientifically plausible mechanism for improving lives” and “good value in lives saved/improved per dollar.”
Indeed. The latter is where GiveWell enters the picture; it is their unique niche. The science itself, on the other hand, is not really their purview, as opposed to the experts. If GiveWell downgrades a charity solely because of the epidemiological consensus, and (for some reason) I have good reason to think the epidemiological consensus is wrong, or inadequately informative, then GiveWell hasn’t told me anything, and I have no reason to pay attention to them. Their rating is screened off.
Imagine that 60% of epidemiologists think that Method A is not effective against Disease X, while 40% think it is effective. Suppose Holden goes to a big conference of epidemiologists and says “GiveWell recommends against donating to Charity C because it uses Method A, which the majority of epidemiologists say is not effective.” Assuming they already knew Charity C uses Method A, should they listen to him?
Of course not. The people at the conference are all epidemiologists themselves, and those in the majority are presumably already foregoing donations to Charity C, while those in the minority already know that the majority of their colleagues disagree with them. Holden hasn’t told them anything new. So, if his organization is going to be of any use to such an audience, it should focus on the things they can’t already evaluate themselves, like financial transparency, accounting procedures, and the like; unless it can itself engage the scientific details.
This is analogous to the case at hand: if all that GiveWell is going to tell the world is that SI hasn’t signaled enough status, well, the world already knows that. Their raison d’être is to tell people info that they can’t find (or is costly to find) via other channels: such as info about non-high-status charities that may be worth supporting despite their non-high-status. If it limits its endorsements to high-status charities, then it may as well not even bother—just as it need not bother telling a conference of epidemiologists that it doesn’t endorse a charity because of the epidemiological consensus.
“Possesses expert endorsement of its method” does not necessarily equal “high-status charity.” A clear example here is de-worming and other parasite control, which epidemiologists all agree works well, but which doesn’t get the funding a lot of other developing world charity does because it’s not well advertised. GiveWell would like SIAI to be closer to de-worming charities in that outside experts give some credence to the plausibility of the methods by which SIAI proposes to do good.
Moreover, “other high-status charities using one’s method” also doesn’t equal “high-status charity.” Compare the number of Facebook likes for AMF and Nothing But Nets. The reason GiveWell endorses one but not the other is that AMF, unlike NBN, has given compelling evidence that it can scale the additional funding that a GiveWell endorsement promises into more lives saved/improved at a dollar rate comparable to their current lives saved/improved per dollar.
So we should distinguish a charity’s method being “high-status” from the charity itself being “high-status.” But if you define “high status method” as “there exists compelling consensus among the experts GiveWell has judged to be trustworthy that the proposed method for doing good is even plausible,” then I, as a Bayesian, am perfectly comfortable with GiveWell only endorsing “high-status method” charities. They still might buck the prevailing trends on optimal method; perhaps some of the experts are on GiveWell’s own staff, or aren’t prominent in the world at large. But by demanding that sort of “high-status method” from a charity, GiveWell discourages crankism and is unlikely to miss a truly good cause for too long.
Expert opinion on method plausibility is all the more important with more speculative charity like SIAI because there isn’t a corpus of “effectiveness data to date” to evaluate directly.
I would still consider the leading epidemiologist’s endorsement to be a standard sort of prestige-indicator. If an anti-disease charity is endorsed by leading epidemiologists, you hardly need GiveWell. (At least for the epidemiological aspects. The financial/accounting part may be another matter.)
I would argue that this is precisely what GiveWell does in evaluating malaria charity. If the epidemiological consensus changed, and bednets were held to be an unsustainable solution (this is less thoroughly implausible than it might sound, though probably still unlikely), then even given the past success of certain bednet charities on all GiveWell’s other criteria, GiveWell might still downgrade those charities. And don’t underestimate the size of the gap between “a scientifically plausible mechanism for improving lives” and “good value in lives saved/improved per dollar.” There are plenty of bednet charities, and there’s a reason GiveWell recommends AMF and not, say, Nothing But Nets.
The endorsement, in other words, is about the plausibility of the mechanism, which is only one of several things to consider in donating to a charity, but it’s the area in which a particular kind of expert endorsement is most meaningful.
As they should. But the point is that, in so doing, GiveWell would not be adding any new information not already contained in the epidemiological consensus (assuming they don’t have privileged information about the latter).
Indeed. The latter is where GiveWell enters the picture; it is their unique niche. The science itself, on the other hand, is not really their purview, as opposed to the experts. If GiveWell downgrades a charity solely because of the epidemiological consensus, and (for some reason) I have good reason to think the epidemiological consensus is wrong, or inadequately informative, then GiveWell hasn’t told me anything, and I have no reason to pay attention to them. Their rating is screened off.
Imagine that 60% of epidemiologists think that Method A is not effective against Disease X, while 40% think it is effective. Suppose Holden goes to a big conference of epidemiologists and says “GiveWell recommends against donating to Charity C because it uses Method A, which the majority of epidemiologists say is not effective.” Assuming they already knew Charity C uses Method A, should they listen to him?
Of course not. The people at the conference are all epidemiologists themselves, and those in the majority are presumably already foregoing donations to Charity C, while those in the minority already know that the majority of their colleagues disagree with them. Holden hasn’t told them anything new. So, if his organization is going to be of any use to such an audience, it should focus on the things they can’t already evaluate themselves, like financial transparency, accounting procedures, and the like; unless it can itself engage the scientific details.
This is analogous to the case at hand: if all that GiveWell is going to tell the world is that SI hasn’t signaled enough status, well, the world already knows that. Their raison d’être is to tell people info that they can’t find (or is costly to find) via other channels: such as info about non-high-status charities that may be worth supporting despite their non-high-status. If it limits its endorsements to high-status charities, then it may as well not even bother—just as it need not bother telling a conference of epidemiologists that it doesn’t endorse a charity because of the epidemiological consensus.
A few points:
“Possesses expert endorsement of its method” does not necessarily equal “high-status charity.” A clear example here is de-worming and other parasite control, which epidemiologists all agree works well, but which doesn’t get the funding a lot of other developing world charity does because it’s not well advertised. GiveWell would like SIAI to be closer to de-worming charities in that outside experts give some credence to the plausibility of the methods by which SIAI proposes to do good.
Moreover, “other high-status charities using one’s method” also doesn’t equal “high-status charity.” Compare the number of Facebook likes for AMF and Nothing But Nets. The reason GiveWell endorses one but not the other is that AMF, unlike NBN, has given compelling evidence that it can scale the additional funding that a GiveWell endorsement promises into more lives saved/improved at a dollar rate comparable to their current lives saved/improved per dollar.
So we should distinguish a charity’s method being “high-status” from the charity itself being “high-status.” But if you define “high status method” as “there exists compelling consensus among the experts GiveWell has judged to be trustworthy that the proposed method for doing good is even plausible,” then I, as a Bayesian, am perfectly comfortable with GiveWell only endorsing “high-status method” charities. They still might buck the prevailing trends on optimal method; perhaps some of the experts are on GiveWell’s own staff, or aren’t prominent in the world at large. But by demanding that sort of “high-status method” from a charity, GiveWell discourages crankism and is unlikely to miss a truly good cause for too long.
Expert opinion on method plausibility is all the more important with more speculative charity like SIAI because there isn’t a corpus of “effectiveness data to date” to evaluate directly.