GiveWell has published our annual update on how to accomplish as much good as possible with your donations. Our top two charities – out of hundreds we’ve examined – are (1) the Against Malaria Foundation, which fights malaria using insecticide-treated bednets, and (2) the Schistosomiasis Control Initiative, which treats children for intestinal worms. Our update…
The GiveWell Blog
Month: November 2011
New charity recommendations forthcoming by December 1; blog posts on hold until then
As we wrote previously, we’re expecting to have a substantially revised set of charity recommendations by December 1. We’re currently in the final stages of writing up our cases for top contenders and discussing which will be top-rated. Because of this, we plan to suspend our blog posts (which are normally at least weekly) until…
Maximizing cost-effectiveness via critical inquiry
We’ve recently been writing about the shortcomings of formal cost-effectiveness estimation (i.e., trying to estimate how much good, as measured in lives saved, DALYs or other units, is accomplished per dollar spent). After conceptually arguing that cost-effectiveness estimates can’t be taken literally when they are not robust, we found major problems in one of the…
Some considerations against more investment in cost-effectiveness estimates
When we started GiveWell, we were very interested in cost-effectiveness estimates: calculations aiming to determine, for example, the “cost per life saved” or “cost per DALY saved” of a charity or program. Over time, we’ve found ourselves putting less weight on these calculations, because we’ve been finding that these estimates tend to be extremely rough…