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
Did you ask ACE to review this before publishing? It seems like the kind of thing that would be worth getting feedback on before publishing. I didn't look at this for more than a couple minutes, but I saw immediately that there might be some conceptual disagreements between you and ACE - for example, I noticed that in your first example, you assume in your example (I believe), that if LIC didn't spend 200k on the lawsuit against Costco, they wouldn't spend it on anything else. It's unclear to me that this is the counterfactual, or how ACE is conceptualizing those funds. There might be reasoning behind their decisionmaking that would be useful to your critiques they could share.
I also felt like this felt pretty politically motivated. Not sure if that is your intention, but paragraphs like this:
Without any evidence feels pretty intense. ACE is kind of low hanging fruit to pick on in the EA space, so this read to me like more of that, without necessarily the evidence base to back it. Reading your report, I felt kind of like "oh, there are interesting assumptions here, would be interested to learn more", and not "ACE is doing an extremely bad job."
E.g. I think the questions that would be good to ask in a critique of ACE might be:
I also think getting feedback on statements like this would be really helpful:
I think ACE has wanted to do this at points in their history — my impression is just that it is incredibly difficult, so they've approached it from other angles instead. I also don't think it's clear to me that ACE's goal is to report cost-effectiveness. I think clarifying this with them, and getting a sense of why they don't do what you see as the simple approach would be useful for making this critique stronger. And, I don't think people should make giving decisions based only on historic cost-effectiveness - just because an opportunity was impactful doesn't mean the organization needs more funds to do that work, that it will scale, work in the future, etc.
I don't disagree that ACE might be directing funds to ineffective charities! I don't really think non-OpenPhil EA donors should give to farmed animal welfare, for example. But, I don't think it is obvious to me that ACE going away means money going to more effective charities - I expect it would mostly be worse - people giving to animal charities with basically no vetting.
That being said, critique of critical organizations is great in my opinion, so appreciate you putting this out there!