Why we still need effective altruism in corporate philanthropy
Elliot Dellys
What is "effective altruism" and what does the future hold for the philosophy in the wake of the spectacular downfall of its high-profile champion, former bitcoin billionaire Sam Bankman-Fried? Elliot Dellys weighs in.
On 11 November 2022, the cryptocurrency exchange FTX filed for bankruptcy as its CEO Sam Bankman-Fried (also known as SBF) handed in his resignation. This followed a revelation that its largest competitor Binance had unexpectedly pulled out of an acquisition deal, after an announcement on 06 November 2022 that it would sell its stake in FTX (via FTT tokens) due to then-unknown ?recent revelations?.
What followed was a spectacular collapse, and the uncovering of a total lack of oversight and corporate controls in the company?s management. Equally shocking was the revelation that FTX had misappropriated $4.1 billion in customer funds to Alameda Research, a hedge fund operated by SBF that was nominally committed to the philosophy of ?effective altruism?. Allegedly, Alameda Research was donating half its profits to effective altruism related charities for a period time.
Many are now questioning how a single person could bring down a US$32 billion company in a matter of days. Some are going as far as to speculate whether effective altruism itself was to blame, by enabling SBF to believe that any means could justify the ends. SBF has done great harm to the concept over the last few weeks, however it?s important we distinguish between a good philosophy and a bad actor that represents it.
Effective altruism is a collection of ideas with the stated goal of using evidence and reason to determine how to help others as much as possible. As a proponent of the core philosophy, but not necessarily the movement, I consider it reducible to three simple concepts:
- Some methods of reducing harm are orders of magnitude more impactful than others
- We should aim to reduce harm as much as we can within our means
- A careful and data-driven selection of the causes to which we donate our money and time can therefore have a massive impact on how effective our harm reduction efforts are