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
Thank you for your response!
This is not what we are trying to do. We simply critiqued the way that ACE calculated historic cost-effectiveness, and how ACE gave Legal Impact for Chickens a relatively high historic cost-effectiveness rating despite have no historic success.
ACE does 2 separate analyses for past cost-effectiveness, and room for future funding. For example, those two sections in ACE's review of LIC are:
Our review focuses on ACE's Cost-Effectiveness analysis, not on their Room For More Funding analysis. In the future, we may evaluate ACE's Room For More Funding Analysis, but that is not what our review focused on. We wanted to keep our review short enough that people could read it without a huge time investment, so we could not include an assessment of every single part of ACE's evaluation process in our review.
It is also less reasonable to hold ACE accountable for their Room For More Funding analysis, since this is inherently more subjective and difficult to do. It is far easier for ACE (or any charity evaluator) to analyze historic cost-effectiveness than to analyze future cost-effectiveness. However, I would like to pose a question to you: Given the ACE often gives charities a worse historic cost-effectiveness rating for spending less money to achieve the exact same outcomes (see Problem 1), how confident do you feel in ACE's ability to analyze future cost-effectiveness?
ACE responded to this thread acknowledging that the problems listed in our review needed to be addressed, and that they changed their methodology (to a cost-effectiveness calculation of simply impact divided by cost) to do so: