Point taken—I suppose my comment was a little oversimplified. I do think that identifying recipients is probably easier in the U.S., but that’s irrelevant considering a poor American lives on $50/day versus $1-2 in Kenya.
I suspect the real reason, which is maybe worth centering in this post, is that the pool of money that people are potentially willing to donate to Americans is a) very large, b) not fungible with money they would otherwise donate to global poverty.
Yes, this is the motivation behind my question. GiveDirectly states that “the additional attention from U.S. work generated $70 million in new donations for our Africa programs from donors who initially only gave to our U.S. COVID-19 response.” In some cases, it may be wise for EA-aligned organizations to funnel some of their interventions “closer to home” for their donors. GiveDirectly was able to spur new funding opportunities by directing some of their revenue to U.S. recipients. Perhaps an org focused on health media campaigns in Africa could better fundraise in the U.S. by touting a the success of an U.S. program. Again, I don’t think U.S.-based interventions are ever as effective as those in poorer nations, but they have the potential to expand the donor base of EA orgs.
Point taken—I suppose my comment was a little oversimplified. I do think that identifying recipients is probably easier in the U.S., but that’s irrelevant considering a poor American lives on $50/day versus $1-2 in Kenya.
Yes, this is the motivation behind my question. GiveDirectly states that “the additional attention from U.S. work generated $70 million in new donations for our Africa programs from donors who initially only gave to our U.S. COVID-19 response.” In some cases, it may be wise for EA-aligned organizations to funnel some of their interventions “closer to home” for their donors. GiveDirectly was able to spur new funding opportunities by directing some of their revenue to U.S. recipients. Perhaps an org focused on health media campaigns in Africa could better fundraise in the U.S. by touting a the success of an U.S. program. Again, I don’t think U.S.-based interventions are ever as effective as those in poorer nations, but they have the potential to expand the donor base of EA orgs.