Hi everyone,
Recently, I decided to read one of ACE’s charity evaluations in detail, and I was extremely disappointed with what I read. I felt that ACE's charity evaluation was long and wordy, but said very little.
Upon further investigation, I realized that ACE’s methodology for evaluating charities often rates charities more cost-effective for spending more money to achieve the exact same results. This rewards charities for being inefficient, and punishes them for being efficient.
ACE’s poor evaluation process leads to ineffective charities receiving recommendations, and many animals are suffering as a result. After realizing this, I decided to start a new charity evaluator for animal charities called Vetted Causes. We wrote our first charity evaluation assessing ACE, and you can read it by clicking the attached link.
Best,
Isaac
If you're correct in the linked analysis, this sounds like a really important limitation in ACE's methodology, and I'm very glad you've shared this!
In case anyone else has the same confusion as me when reading your summary: I think there is nothing wrong with calculating a charity's cost effectiveness by taking the weighted sum of the cost-effectiveness of all of their interventions (weighted by share of total funding that intervention receives). This should mathematically be the same as (Total Impact / Total cost), and so should indeed go up if their spending on a particular intervention goes down (while achieving the same impact).
The (claimed) cause of the problem is just that ACE's cost-effectiveness estimate does not go up by anywhere near as much as it should when the cost of an intervention is reduced, leading the cost-effectiveness of the charity as a whole to actually change in the wrong direction when doing the above weighted sum!
If this is true it sounds pretty bad. Would be interested to read a response from them.
Of course, the other thing that could be going on here, is that average cost-effectiveness is not the same as cost-effectiveness on the margin, which is presumably what ACE should care about. Though I don't see why an intervention representing a smaller share of a charity's expenditure should automatically mean that this is not where extra dollars would be allocated. The two things seem independent to me.
This is very helpful, thanks!