Veganism is not the most effective way to help the world. Donating to animal welfare organizations is far more impactful. According to a calculation on an Effective Altruism (EA) forum, a donation of 5 cents to effective animal welfare organizations can offset the suffering caused by eating meat. Using this calculation, a lifetime of veganism is equivalent in expected utility (EU) to approximately $1,000 in donations. Personally, I would rather donate $1,000 than commit to a lifetime of veganism. Moreover, I believe that focusing my efforts on earning to give or pursuing a high-impact career would further increase my expected utility. Therefore, veganism does not make sense for someone aiming to maximize their EU.
The only other factor stopping me from eating meat was a deontological side-constraint. In other words, I wasn’t sure if I was comfortable with offsetting morally repugnant actions in the pursuit of EU maximization. However, I can’t find a compelling reason to maintain this discomfort. Here are my thoughts:
I would feel fine giving $1 to an organization that causes harm if I could simultaneously donate $10 to a cause that does good, resulting in a net positive EU (+$9 EU). I think most people would feel the same.
Eating meat seems indirect enough that offsetting feels acceptable. When you purchase meat, the harm unfolds as follows: A farm reviews the previous year's demand and decides to expand operations to supply another 1,000 chickens. Of course, this decision typically occurs for every 1,000th chicken sold. This level of indirectness feels similar to the harm caused by emitting CO₂ during a commute. For instance, my emissions might exacerbate a flood by 0.1% twenty years later, leading to one extra death for every 1,000 commutes on average.
Despite these parallels, the average EA seems much more comfortable offsetting emissions than offsetting meat consumption. Why? I suspect that even those with deontological side-constraints are more willing to tolerate harm when it feels sufficiently indirect. Otherwise, such people would have to commit all their resources to living a zero-emission, vegan, and entirely self-sustaining life. Failure to achieve this would render their very existence morally reprehensible. My argument is that most EAs are okay with offsetting harm—except when it comes to eating meat.
Furthermore, if an EA has a deontological side-constraint, does it compel them to prescribe veganism for others?
- If the EA says "yes," then why does deontology justify preventing others from maximizing EU?
- If the EA says "no," why is there an asymmetry between what they do themselves and what they want others to do?
My Problem with Deontology and Deontological Side-Constraints
When the only thing stopping you from making the world a better place via EU maximization is a personal unwillingness to commit harm, are you just being selfish? Are you prioritizing keeping your own hands clean over reducing overall suffering? Yes, causing harm may feel horrible, but do your feelings justify the suffering you could have alleviated? EA involves significant personal sacrifice, and I currently feel that sacrificing a “clean conscience” in the pursuit of EU maximization should be considered praiseworthy. I feel similarly about risk aversion.
More Questions About Deontology
Deontology posits that sacrificing one person to save two is wrong. Likewise, someone else deciding to sacrifice one to save two is also wrong. However, deontologists do not seem to apply this reasoning consistently across all actions. This is contradictory because all actions have butterfly effects, and in their aftermath, a completely different set of people may end up harmed. For instance, how can a deontologist justify something as simple as scrolling on TikTok? The algorithm adjusts based on their behavior, altering the feed of hundreds of other users. This might result in a drunk driver seeing a different video, which distracts them and causes them to hit a different car than they otherwise would have.
If every action leads to unpredictable but inevitable harm, shouldn’t all actions be classified as morally reprehensible under deontological reasoning?
Opinions and pushback are appreciated.
As an omnivore who wants to eat lots of protein for fitness, I would love to agree with this and just keep on piling up chicken breasts on my plate. However, I think there are some factors ignored here. Most of them have already been addressed, but I'd like to add another that I did not find so far:
Not eating meat has not only an effect in terms of less demand for meat, it also increases demand for alternatives. This should, in my opinion, not be underestimated, as it also makes the diet change much easier.
For example: In Germany, we have a company called Rügenwalder Mühle. The origins of this company go back to a butcher shop back in 1834 and consequently, they always sold meat-based products. However, in 2014 they introduced vegetarian and vegan alternatives that were so great in terms of taste, quality and nutritional value that the demand was incredibly high. By now, these products bring in more revenue for them than the meat products. Obviously, this company will now focus more and more on the alternatives and they keep expanding their catalogue, often times with very high protein. This makes it much easier for a person like me to consider alternatives, and leads people to consume less meat even if they don't have any moral motivation to go vegan.
I doubt that any realistic amount of donations can top this. Sure, e.g. The Good Food Institute is basically trying to go into this direction, but at the end the demand needs to be there for it to work out long-term. Similar to voting in democracies, I think the "small effect" of our decisions can have quite an impact here that is hard to replace with donations.
I know that you state this as a reason that has not been addressed so your argument is probably not your main argument. But if you are using this as a main reason for going vegan, I feel like it misses the point. Maybe going vegan yourself makes it 20% easier for the next person to go vegan. That is still nowhere near the cost-effectiveness/effort-effectiveness of donating to animal welfare since the one estimate I listed was $1000 to offset a lifetime of veganism.