Next week the Effective Altruism Forum is doing a Pledge Highlight week, and they asked if I could post an Ask Me Anything (AMA) about my experiences.
Most of the helpful background on me is in my post from last year, 10 years of Earning To Give. To highlight some potential prompts for questions:
- I work as a quantitative trader in London.
- I took the Giving What We Can pledge in 2013 upon leaving university, with a pledged percentage of 20%.
- My household has donated £1.5m over the last decade, or just under 50% of our household income.
- I've had a relatively high level of involvement in the EA community during much of that time period, though less in the past few years.
- My wife and I have 4 kids (14, 7, 3, 0).
I plan to answer questions on Tuesday 17th December, likely during the London afternoon.
Even with attempts to prevent it, I think annual risk of value drift for me is greater than the annual expected real return on equities, which tends to defeat the usual argument for giving later.
Another exercise I've done occasionally is to look at my donations from say 5-10 years ago and muse on whether I would rather have invested the money and given now. So far that hasn't been close to true, and that's in spite of an impressive bull market in stocks over the last decade. Money was just so much more of an issue back then. I thought this from Will MacAskill was a good reflection on just how money-constrained things were 'in the old days', for those who didn't see it:
Of course the directly relevant question is: When I look back on this relatively abundant period in 2034, will I feel the same way? I honestly don't know, realistically the biggest factors will be what Good Ventures decides to do with their money and how well EA attracts other money.