Tyler Maule's helpful spreadsheet collates the historical public grants data from EA-aligned grantmakers. However, some EA charities also presumably get some funding from individual donors and not-specifically-EA-aligned foundations. Is there a sense of what proportion of total EA funding comes from Open Philanthropy, GiveWell, and other specifically-EA foundations? (as opposed to non-EA foundations and individual donors)
I think a lot of the difficulty here is what counts as an EA charity. I mean, CEA and GiveWell surely counts, but what about Against Malaria Foundation? GiveDirectly? UNICEF?
The broader your definitions are, the more likely it'd look like EA charity funding mostly comes from non-EA sources.
That's a good question. Here's a couple of hot subjective takes.
Its hard to call any direct action charity an "EA" charity, maybe "EA aligned" or similar. Those of us who run charities know that effectiveness estimates can constantly change, so it's possible to be an EA hero today, while being zero tomorrow and vice versa. Even charity entrepreneurship charities could potentially fall out of EA favor with changing cost effectiveness estimates or just because they struggle to operationally achieve their potentially cost effective goal.
EA aligned charities c... (read more)