I should preface this by noting that the current charities are not EA ones. This giving plan is also a work in progress and could change.
Yet, the sharing on why and to whom may be of use to me and the EA community.
How Much
I currently donate 10% or more to charity.
It is not a magic number, but is one I am familiar with through the concept of tithing in religion and the Giving What We Can Pledge.
It also represents a greater commitment to the causes. Yet, it still means 90% for me as one person and 10% for the world, hardly a good deal for the world.
Where and Why
Poverty and global-health charities.
Doing something about poverty has always been a focus of mine. Global health becomes more and more of a priority because ill health can prevent not only life, but a quality of life and prosperity.
I tend to focus on direct relief and not advocacy or system change.
The evidence of impact for system change and advocacy is more unclear to me than direct relief.
If the advocacy is successful that does not mean the donation I gave to an advocacy group was effective. As there are so many actors involved in the campaign and the campaign may have been successful regardless of the group I have given to.
Political candidates can receive significant money with no certainty they will be elected or can achieve what they want, if elected.
So, I have more confidence in direct relief.
The Charities
The International Rescue Committee
I have changed from giving to single intervention charities like the Against Malaria Foundation to broader ones like the IRC.
I think if the circus is going to come to town that it should have more than just bed nets for those that do not already have malaria.
It should also have other medical interventions for those with it and other medical issues.
Yes, some of the programs in a broader charity may be less cost-effective than others or less effective than others. Yet, overall I think the broader ones are the better choice.
The Hollywood Sunset Free Clinic
It provides free primary healthcare to people in LA.
I am okay with helping people in developed as well as developing countries.
For me, the debate was primary healthcare or medical research.
I certainly support more funding for medical research, yet I did not know which medical research charity is the one more likely to get to a cure and sooner rather than later.
Yet, primary healthcare charities {no matter which one really} are likely to provide that primary healthcare to people. I also figured that my small donation could cover more of a primary healthcare service than a billion dollar cure, thus be of more use.
The Association to Benefit of Children.
ABC provides healthcare and education to kids in poverty in New York {including in a very poor Congressional district in America, The South Bronx}. It also provides job help and accommodation to families.
They claim to achieve high outcomes for people {much higher than those not in the program}. They have also been recommended by at least one independent program evaluator.
I must admit that education philanthropy is not something I am that supportive of.
I find people treat education as this magic wand that is the solution to everything, but things are not that simple.
Research notes what happens outside the school has more of an impact on educational outcomes and prosperity later in life. So, the focus on philanthropy should {in my mind} be outside the school.
I also want more immediate support to people and not a multi-year school program whose results {like a good job as an adult} is too far away.
I don't , however, want to completely ignore early intervention. I like the medical programs of the charity and education is important. So I support it.
The fourth area of giving is for one-off donations or irregular donations {unlike the above mentioned}, to a variety of charities.
One idea was that if a charity is good enough to receive one donation that it is good enough to receive more than one. Yet, I thought by having a fourth area of giving like this it means charities not missing out on donations because they are not the ones I give to regularly.
It also keeps me motivated to research other charities.
The focus is global, developing countries and developed countries.
They have to be effective and the donation has to equate to at least 1% of the intervention {that's a rough guide}.
So, I would imagine the one-off donations will be at least slightly higher than the regular donations to the charities I give to on a regular basis.
After reading about McKenzie Scott's donations including to lesser-known charities, I am interested in browsing the lesser known ones as well as the more known ones.
[This comment is partly an update of my April 2020 post about my donation plans.]
Where I’m giving: This year, I plan to give 10% of my income (as per my Giving What We Can Pledge), and “invest to give” a larger portion.
I gave ~2% of my income to CEEALAR (formerly known as the EA Hotel). I currently plan to give another ~4% to GCRI and ~4% to ALLFED.
I’m open to feedback on these plans :)
Why mostly investing to give + giving 10%?
Ultimately, I plan to give away a very high proportion of the income I earned over my lifetime. But I find it very plausible (~30-80% likely) that marginal EA dollars would do more good if invested and given later (with interest) than if invested now. And “investing to give” arguably maintains more option value than “giving now”, which is relevant because I expect there’ll be additional useful work on the “giving now vs later” question over the coming year, which can inform my decision then.
But this is a complicated matter; see this post, this comment, and this post for more details and caveats.
But I currently still plan to give 10% this year anyway. This is partly just because I want to, and partly for secondary benefits - e.g., maybe many EAs “putting their money where their mouth is” helps with movement-building and with EA’s external reputation. (That said, “investing to give” via a donor-advised fund rather than regular investments may also capture those secondary benefits.)
Why CEEALAR (aka the EA Hotel)?
When I decided in April to give to CEEALAR, I had three different types of rationale.
First, I spent a month at CEEALAR in Jan/Feb. I was a “grantee”, so I didn’t have to pay for my stay. But I was able to pay, and it seems like probably a good norm for those who stay at CEEALAR and are able to pay to do so. And I enjoyed my time there, and it was useful to be able to stay there (in order to have my first month of work for a previous employer be in-person).
Second, my understanding was that CEEALAR had a fairly limited runway, such that, if they’d received little donations for something like 3-12 months, they might have had to make hard-to-reverse decisions that’d lastingly damage its ability to have an impact in future. I thought it was plausible that COVID could cause this. (I haven’t checked since then whether that seems to have been an accurate assessment and how much runway they now have.)
Third, I think the marginal impact of donations to CEEALAR in general is plausibly fairly high. This is mostly based on the sorts of arguments that have been discussed in the links given here; I don’t think I have much in the way of separate knowledge or insights to add, and I’m fairly uncertain about this (as I am about most important things!).
Why GCRI?
See also Summary of 2020-2021 GCRI Accomplishments, Plans, and Fundraising
Some potential arguments for giving to GCRI:
Some potential arguments against giving to GCRI:
Why ALLFED?
See also ALLFED 2020 Highlights
Some potential arguments for giving to ALLFED:
Some potential arguments against giving to ALLFED:
What might I do otherwise/next year?
I think it’s pretty plausible that I should do one of the following things instead of my current plan:
Note: I haven’t mentioned organisations which I work for or previously worked for, but you shouldn't interpret that as a signal of my opinions about them. I think that there should probably be a weak norm against donating to one’s employers - even if they seem like they could use marginal dollars well - for the reasons outlined here (e.g., donating to one's employer could introduce biases and conflicts of interest).
Update: I ended up giving ~5% of my income from this year to GCRI, ~2.5% to ALLFED, ~2% to CEELAR, and small amounts to some other places.
Part of why I gave more to GCRI was simply that I offered donation swaps for my giving to both GCRI and ALLFED (since I'm in Australia), and the GCRI offer got a match first, and for the full amount.