That still does not seem like reinventing the wheel to me. My read of that post is that it’s not saying “EAs should do these analyses that have already been done, from scratch” but something closer to “EAs should pay more attention to strategies from development economics and identify specific, cost-effective funding opportunities there”. Unless you think development economics is solved, there is presumably still work to be done, e.g., to evaluate and compare different opportunities. For example, GiveWell definitely engages with experts in global health, but still also needs to rigorously evaluate and compare different interventions and programs.
And again, the article mentions development economics repeatedly and cites development economics texts—why would someone mention a field, cite texts from a field, and then suggest reinventing it without giving any reason?
That still does not seem like reinventing the wheel to me. My read of that post is that it’s not saying “EAs should do these analyses that have already been done, from scratch” but something closer to “EAs should pay more attention to strategies from development economics and identify specific, cost-effective funding opportunities there”. Unless you think development economics is solved, there is presumably still work to be done, e.g., to evaluate and compare different opportunities. For example, GiveWell definitely engages with experts in global health, but still also needs to rigorously evaluate and compare different interventions and programs.
And again, the article mentions development economics repeatedly and cites development economics texts—why would someone mention a field, cite texts from a field, and then suggest reinventing it without giving any reason?
This job posting seems related.