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Living in New Zealand can sometimes feel like an obstacle to doing good effectively. We’re far from the EA hubs in the UK/US, and from opportunities for direct work on global health & development.

But are there any areas where we might have an advantage? Here are some possibilities that the community has been discussing recently:

It’s interesting to see that some of the challenges of living in NZ— like our geographic isolation— also create some of the potential opportunities. 

Of course, this is just a preliminary list. If you have other thoughts or ideas, we’d love to hear from you! What do you think NZ should be focusing on? Or if you’re from elsewhere, what do you think your country’s comparative advantage is?

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So New Zealand actually has a quite unique situation that I'm not sure really exists elsewhere, and I've sent messages to people at EA NZ a few times advocating for research into this:

New Zealand has a Global Impact Visa:

  • Where selection is solely based on individuals' focus on positively impacting the world
  • That isn't tied to employment or other traditional immigration categories
  • And where a non-governmental non-profit organization selects the recipients

This is kind of remarkable anywhere, but especially given it's NZ. I'd be pretty excited for EA NZ (or a nonprofit made for this purpose) to try to gain access as the second-nominating organization for this visa.

This could unlock a rare, valuable immigration pathway for: 

• Early-stage talent from less-developed, or otherwise less-suitable countries to gain access to a top job market for skill development, earning to give/earning to gain runway, or just a more stable / useful situation for them to work and live in 

• People working on civilizational robustness or longtermist initiatives that would benefit from NZ’s status as a safe zone for global catastrophic risk

While this could take time, and has significant uncertainty of success, unlocking this sort of immigration possibility, which seems ~only possible in NZ, could be quite valuable.

Yes, and one other reason why I can have higher impact in New Zealand is that universities fund PhD students, unlike the US in general.

I moved away from New Zealand (to Switzerland) because of how poorly PhDs are funded in NZ. I mean, it's significantly less than minimum wage (because it's a scholarship, not a salary).

In Switzerland I earned about 3x as much. Yes, I had to pay tax, health insurance and so on. But I could still live comfortably and save, and it was motivating to think of it as a real job. Switzerland is one of the best places in the world to do a PhD - I think in Norway the pay is similar - but in many European countries you will earn much better than in NZ.

I guess we know what to put on Switzerland's list of advantages then! 🇨🇭
(Along with good chocolate)

:) though I was talking about whether there could be funding for a high impact project at all, rather than the amount.

I still don't think anything beats a good bar of Whittaker's :)

Fascinating! I didn't know that wasn't standard

A lot of PHD students do get funded in the US and Europe, but its not as much of a "standard" part of the process as New Zealand I don't think.

In the US, most funding for PhDs is external to the universities. In my experience, internal funding is more open to projects outside the mainstream.

Being a bit pedantic, sorry, you seem to be using the term “comparative advantage“ to refer to “absolute advantage, in comparison to other countries”. I think it’s important to keep these concepts separate to avoid confusion. Well every country (or every individual) basically must have a compared advantage in some thing not every country will necessarily have an absolute advantage in anything.

Yes, you're right— most of the examples are more in the absolute advantage camp. Would be keen to hear suggestions for NZ's comparative advantage in the technical/economic sense too though 🙂

I think about this question regarding Australia sometimes :) I asked about this at the "Australia's AI crossroads" event recently, i.e. whether / how Australia in particular could contribute on AI. I guess some of these things might also be relevant in NZ to some extent. Here's what the speakers said (there's also a recording):

  • Not hosting one of the major AI labs means we can be a trusted third party in negotiations
    • Relatedly I guess we also have history / relations with the west and with China
  • History working on catastrophic risks with the Canberra Commission (although this was 30 years ago so it's not obvious to me that it really means anything)
  • Apparently Australia is known for rolling out trustworthy regulatory software (I don't know if this is true). The person who said this thinks we have the potential to be world-leading in trustworthy AI if we get a good regulatory framework in place

I'm not sure I find these suggestions very compelling but thought they were interesting nonetheless!

Thanks for sharing! Australia and NZ have a lot of similarities, so there's probably some overlap.

That's an interesting point re: the west/China. Both having a colonial background and being in Asia-Pacific opens up some interesting sets of relationships.

The Mountains, the Sea, and the Rivers.

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