Thanks, Gleb! I definitely struggle with the PR aspect of this—it’s certainly a weird topic but one that I think matters a lot.
Definitely think that we should include increased meat consumption in our cost-effectiveness analysis for interventions that increase income. My guess is that this amount is much smaller than for interventions that save lives, like bed nets, but that’s certainly an open question.
I agree with Brian’s remarks on chicken consumption in India—it didn’t seem the case when I looked at the data.
Thanks, Gleb! I definitely struggle with the PR aspect of this—it’s certainly a weird topic but one that I think matters a lot.
Definitely think that we should include increased meat consumption in our cost-effectiveness analysis for interventions that increase income. My guess is that this amount is much smaller than for interventions that save lives, like bed nets, but that’s certainly an open question.
I agree with Brian’s remarks on chicken consumption in India—it didn’t seem the case when I looked at the data.
The PR aspect is pretty nuanced. I think we’d need to do some market research to actually know how it will cash out.
Regarding meat consumption, this shouldn’t be hard to figure out in a detailed analysis.
Yup, I updated based on Brian’s points regarding chicken consumption in India.