Thanks very much for sharing this. I appreciated the explicit section on the lives prevented from existing. Having said that, I’m pretty skeptical of some of your reasoning.
Our understanding from these conversations is that there’s no philosophical consensus on how to value potential lives,24 and this gets especially complex when considering unwanted births where valuing potential lives could conflict with respecting autonomy.25
We currently do not assign any value, positive or negative, to these potential lives.
As an initial framing, I think this should be a bit of a red flag. Typically in the absence of an expert consensus on the value of some parameter (how much to discount potential lives), we would adopt an intermediate value as our prior, perhaps weighted by the rough distribution of experts. Exactly what is the most appropriate prior is up for debate, but it seems clear it should be somewhere within the range. In contrast, assuming a 100% discount for potential lives, as you do, it taking one of the most extreme positions possible.[1]
You offer some specific reasons for this extreme position, but all seem weak to me.
First reason:
Many mentioned respecting reproductive autonomy as a rationale for not placing a value on lives that don’t occur.
Autonomy might be a good, to be weighed against potential lives—but it doesn’t mean you get to just zero-out part of the cost-benefit ledger. Or it might be a side constraint on what we can do—but ‘decline to donate to this specific thing’ is not the sort of action that would typically be considered to violate a side constraint. (If it was, then you would arguably be guilty anyway, for failing to donate to IVF and other fertility treatments for couples who want them).
This is an especially big deal because you do consider autonomy as a positive contributor, with quite large weight:
This could include reduced anxiety about becoming pregnant or improved subjective well-being from greater perceived control over reproductive decisions.
We roughly estimate that each year of modern contraceptive use adds the equivalent of ~0.1 DALYs due to improvements in the woman’s subjective well-being (~0.2 additional units of value). [emphasis added]
The category they are in (admittedly they are not all of this category, but surely a lot of them), accounts for 0.23 ‘units of value’ out of a total of 0.7, or 0.23/0.7 = 33% of the total.
So autonomy is getting double-counted: [at least one aspect of it] both adds to the positive and somehow ‘nullifies’ a negative.
Second reason:
A relatively high number of women and men in LMICs desire to have no more children.28 While this doesn’t mean they assign neutral value to lives that don’t exist as a result of contraception, it does suggest this consideration is not enough to fully override the perceived benefits of avoiding unwanted pregnancies.
This seems like a situation where it is important to read the citation… given the text, I was not expecting the citation to say that actually most women and men want more children! But regardless, this argument seems… beside the point? The fact that (a minority of) people don’t wish to experience the costs of more children doesn’t mean that those children wouldn’t have valuable experiences and worthwhile existences. You are taking into account many of the costs that parents experience from having children (e.g. opportunity cost), and then assuming the benefits are zero. In fact, because parents pay most of the costs of having children, but do not capture all or even most of the benefits, which suggests they should under-value having more children.
Third reason:
Local governments29 and organizations like WHO30 support family planning programs, indicating that decision-makers in these contexts (at least implicitly) don’t see prevented births as a major downside, even if they don’t take an explicit stance on the issue.
The fact that someone does an activity doesn’t mean they evaluate the costs as being zero—it just means they think the costs are smaller than the aggregate benefits. (Or, perhaps more likely, that they have never done a proper cost-benefit analysis).
I’m not sure why we should be deferring to these groups here. To the extent that other groups have specific arguments for their position, we should consider them. But the mere fact that some other funder is supporting a program… should surely update us against the program, because it reduces neglectedness, not in favour of it.
Finally, I don’t think you would make this argument in other contexts. You call out the government of Ghana specifically as a positive example worthy of deference to their moral views—would you also exhibit significant deference to them on the issue of LGBT rights, where they recently unanimously passed a bill imposing prison sentences for same-sex intercourse or promoting LGBT? (The bill seems to have not gone into effect for procedural reasons, but might be re-introduced). I suspect not—I think you would assign this basically zero moral weight when considering an AIDS charity—which suggests to me that your moral view came first, and then you looked for congenial authorities to defer to.
And the question of moral weight on potential lives turns out to matter a great deal! I think you deserve a lot of credit for making this explicit:
However, we’re uncertain about this, and this decision has significant implications for our assessment of family planning programs. Valuing lives that don’t occur as a result of contraception as 20% as valuable as existing lives would make family planning programs net negative in our model.
I encourage you to take this seriously. If you are uncertain, probably you shouldn’t set the parameter at one of the most extreme values possible!
Yes, technically you could assign values less than 0% or more than 100%, but I don’t think this is very credible, especially as we generally consider young children to have positive lives in expectation.
One reason to be suspicious of taking into account lost potential lives here is that if you always do so, it looks like you might get a general argument for “development is bad”. Rich countries have low fertility compared to poor countries. So anything that helps poor countries develop is likely to prevent some people from being born. But it seems pretty strange to think we should wait until we find out how much development reduces fertility before we can decide if it is good or bad.
I agree that all else equal it is an argument against development, though I still think development is good overall on net, and I think the extent to which development specifically is the cause of reduced fertility has been overstated.
More generally, I am very skeptical of arguments of the form “We must ignore X, because otherwise Y would be bad”. Maybe Y is bad! What gives you the confidence that Y is good? If you have some strong argument that Y is good, why can’t that argument outweigh X, rather than forcing us to simply close our eyes and pretend X doesn’t exist?
Yes, I have an intuition that development is good, just like I have an intuition that ice cream is good. That doesn’t mean that the price of the ice-cream should be ignored and assumed to be zero when deciding when to buy it, and nor should the costs of development be ignored and assumed to be zero.
Yes, but if at some point you find out, for example, that your model of morality leads to a conclusion that one should kill all humans, you’d probably conclude that your model is wrong rather than actually go through with it.
It’s an extreme example, but at its basis every model is somehow an approximation stemming from our internal moral intuition. Be it that life is better than death, or happiness better than pain, or satisfying desires better than frustration, or that following god’s commands is better than ignoring them, etc.
“More generally, I am very skeptical of arguments of the form “We must ignore X, because otherwise Y would be bad”. Maybe Y is bad! What gives you the confidence that Y is good? If you have some strong argument that Y is good, why can’t that argument outweigh X, rather than forcing us to simply close our eyes and pretend X doesn’t exist?”
This is very difficult philosophical territory, but I guess my instinct is to draw a distinction between:
a) ignoring new evidence about what properties something has, because that would overturn your prior moral evaluation of that thing.
b) Deciding that well-known properties of a thing don’t contribute towards it being bad enough to overturn the standard evaluation of it, because you are committed to the standard moral evaluation. (This doesn’t involve inferring that something has particular non-moral properties from the claim that it is morally good/bad, unlike a).)
A) feels always dodgy to me, but b) seems like the kind of thing that could be right, depending on how much you should trust judgments about individual cases versus judgements about abstract moral principles. And I think I was only doing b) here, not a).
Having said that, I remember a conversation I had in grad school with a faculty member who was probably much better at philosophy than me claimed that even a) is only automatically bad if you assume moral anti-realism.
Thanks very much for sharing this. I appreciated the explicit section on the lives prevented from existing. Having said that, I’m pretty skeptical of some of your reasoning.
As an initial framing, I think this should be a bit of a red flag. Typically in the absence of an expert consensus on the value of some parameter (how much to discount potential lives), we would adopt an intermediate value as our prior, perhaps weighted by the rough distribution of experts. Exactly what is the most appropriate prior is up for debate, but it seems clear it should be somewhere within the range. In contrast, assuming a 100% discount for potential lives, as you do, it taking one of the most extreme positions possible.[1]
You offer some specific reasons for this extreme position, but all seem weak to me.
First reason:
Autonomy might be a good, to be weighed against potential lives—but it doesn’t mean you get to just zero-out part of the cost-benefit ledger. Or it might be a side constraint on what we can do—but ‘decline to donate to this specific thing’ is not the sort of action that would typically be considered to violate a side constraint. (If it was, then you would arguably be guilty anyway, for failing to donate to IVF and other fertility treatments for couples who want them).
This is an especially big deal because you do consider autonomy as a positive contributor, with quite large weight:
The category they are in (admittedly they are not all of this category, but surely a lot of them), accounts for 0.23 ‘units of value’ out of a total of 0.7, or 0.23/0.7 = 33% of the total.
So autonomy is getting double-counted: [at least one aspect of it] both adds to the positive and somehow ‘nullifies’ a negative.
Second reason:
This seems like a situation where it is important to read the citation… given the text, I was not expecting the citation to say that actually most women and men want more children! But regardless, this argument seems… beside the point? The fact that (a minority of) people don’t wish to experience the costs of more children doesn’t mean that those children wouldn’t have valuable experiences and worthwhile existences. You are taking into account many of the costs that parents experience from having children (e.g. opportunity cost), and then assuming the benefits are zero. In fact, because parents pay most of the costs of having children, but do not capture all or even most of the benefits, which suggests they should under-value having more children.
Third reason:
The fact that someone does an activity doesn’t mean they evaluate the costs as being zero—it just means they think the costs are smaller than the aggregate benefits. (Or, perhaps more likely, that they have never done a proper cost-benefit analysis).
I’m not sure why we should be deferring to these groups here. To the extent that other groups have specific arguments for their position, we should consider them. But the mere fact that some other funder is supporting a program… should surely update us against the program, because it reduces neglectedness, not in favour of it.
Finally, I don’t think you would make this argument in other contexts. You call out the government of Ghana specifically as a positive example worthy of deference to their moral views—would you also exhibit significant deference to them on the issue of LGBT rights, where they recently unanimously passed a bill imposing prison sentences for same-sex intercourse or promoting LGBT? (The bill seems to have not gone into effect for procedural reasons, but might be re-introduced). I suspect not—I think you would assign this basically zero moral weight when considering an AIDS charity—which suggests to me that your moral view came first, and then you looked for congenial authorities to defer to.
And the question of moral weight on potential lives turns out to matter a great deal! I think you deserve a lot of credit for making this explicit:
I encourage you to take this seriously. If you are uncertain, probably you shouldn’t set the parameter at one of the most extreme values possible!
Yes, technically you could assign values less than 0% or more than 100%, but I don’t think this is very credible, especially as we generally consider young children to have positive lives in expectation.
Quick note I think this is GiveWells reasoning not @Meghan Blakes the OP. She might want to respond though regardless.
One reason to be suspicious of taking into account lost potential lives here is that if you always do so, it looks like you might get a general argument for “development is bad”. Rich countries have low fertility compared to poor countries. So anything that helps poor countries develop is likely to prevent some people from being born. But it seems pretty strange to think we should wait until we find out how much development reduces fertility before we can decide if it is good or bad.
I agree that all else equal it is an argument against development, though I still think development is good overall on net, and I think the extent to which development specifically is the cause of reduced fertility has been overstated.
More generally, I am very skeptical of arguments of the form “We must ignore X, because otherwise Y would be bad”. Maybe Y is bad! What gives you the confidence that Y is good? If you have some strong argument that Y is good, why can’t that argument outweigh X, rather than forcing us to simply close our eyes and pretend X doesn’t exist?
Is not every moral theory based on assumptions that X must be better than Y, around which some model is built?
Yes, I have an intuition that development is good, just like I have an intuition that ice cream is good. That doesn’t mean that the price of the ice-cream should be ignored and assumed to be zero when deciding when to buy it, and nor should the costs of development be ignored and assumed to be zero.
Yes, but if at some point you find out, for example, that your model of morality leads to a conclusion that one should kill all humans, you’d probably conclude that your model is wrong rather than actually go through with it.
It’s an extreme example, but at its basis every model is somehow an approximation stemming from our internal moral intuition. Be it that life is better than death, or happiness better than pain, or satisfying desires better than frustration, or that following god’s commands is better than ignoring them, etc.
“More generally, I am very skeptical of arguments of the form “We must ignore X, because otherwise Y would be bad”. Maybe Y is bad! What gives you the confidence that Y is good? If you have some strong argument that Y is good, why can’t that argument outweigh X, rather than forcing us to simply close our eyes and pretend X doesn’t exist?”
This is very difficult philosophical territory, but I guess my instinct is to draw a distinction between:
a) ignoring new evidence about what properties something has, because that would overturn your prior moral evaluation of that thing.
b) Deciding that well-known properties of a thing don’t contribute towards it being bad enough to overturn the standard evaluation of it, because you are committed to the standard moral evaluation. (This doesn’t involve inferring that something has particular non-moral properties from the claim that it is morally good/bad, unlike a).)
A) feels always dodgy to me, but b) seems like the kind of thing that could be right, depending on how much you should trust judgments about individual cases versus judgements about abstract moral principles. And I think I was only doing b) here, not a).
Having said that, I remember a conversation I had in grad school with a faculty member who was probably much better at philosophy than me claimed that even a) is only automatically bad if you assume moral anti-realism.