[Question] How many people should get self-study grants and how can we find them?

Most individuals are heavily constrained by income. They’re spending the majority of their time and energy on generating an income, which is usually low-impact. Meanwhile, as EA grows, the inferential distance one needs to cover to become able to contribute is growing.

By “bridging the inferential gap”, I don’t just mean learning the basics of EA, but also putting in the time to find highly impactful ideas for projects and learning the skills required to execute them. I would wager that it is many times easier to bridge this gap if someone is working on it full-time. For the sake of simplicity, I’d like to focus on individuals who are self-starting, i.e. all they need is an income and they can take care of the rest.

So let’s divide self-starting EA’s into three buckets.
A) the ones who are already working on effective projects full-time through employment or a grant
B) the ones who are not working on effective projects, but would put themselves in that position through self-study if they had a year’s runway
C) the ones who would not be able to work on effective projects even after a year of self-study

I have three related questions:
- How large is bucket B? How large is it relative to bucket A?
- How can we identify individuals that belong in bucket B?
- If we do identify such an individual, under what conditions is it cost-effective to throw a year’s salary at them to let them figure things out?