So I am a philosopher and thus fundamentally unqualified to answer this question. So take these thoughts with a grain of salt. However:
From my outsider’s perspective, it seems as though AI safety uses a lot of concepts from economics (especially expected utility theory). And if you’re at the grad level in economics, then you probably have a decent math background. So at least many of your skills seem like they would transfer over.
I don’t know how much impact you can expect to have as an AI researcher compared to an economist. But that seems like the kind of question an economist would be well-equipped to work on answering! If you happen to not already be familiar with cause prioritization research, you might consider staying in economics and focusing on it, rather than switching to AI, as cause prioritization is pretty important in its own right.
In other words, it seems like you might have a shot at transitioning (though I am very, very unqualified to assess this), but also there seem to be good, longtermist-relevant research opportunities even within economics proper.
Thanks for all this! I’m not familiar with AI safety, and even if some concepts are used both in AI and economics, I suspect there would still be a lot of retraining involved, but I could be wrong.
So I am a philosopher and thus fundamentally unqualified to answer this question. So take these thoughts with a grain of salt. However:
From my outsider’s perspective, it seems as though AI safety uses a lot of concepts from economics (especially expected utility theory). And if you’re at the grad level in economics, then you probably have a decent math background. So at least many of your skills seem like they would transfer over.
I don’t know how much impact you can expect to have as an AI researcher compared to an economist. But that seems like the kind of question an economist would be well-equipped to work on answering! If you happen to not already be familiar with cause prioritization research, you might consider staying in economics and focusing on it, rather than switching to AI, as cause prioritization is pretty important in its own right.
Similarly, you might focus on global priorities research: https://forum.effectivealtruism.org/posts/dia3NcGCqLXhWmsaX/an-introduction-to-global-priorities-research-for-economists. Last I knew the Global Priorities Institute was looking to hire more economists; don’t know if that will still be true when you finish your grad program, but at the very least I expect they’ll still be looking to collaborate with economists at that time.
In other words, it seems like you might have a shot at transitioning (though I am very, very unqualified to assess this), but also there seem to be good, longtermist-relevant research opportunities even within economics proper.
Thanks for all this! I’m not familiar with AI safety, and even if some concepts are used both in AI and economics, I suspect there would still be a lot of retraining involved, but I could be wrong.
I’ll take a look at the blog posts you mentioned!