Depression and other mental-health conditions often have a significant impact on productivity and income, though. This suggests that programs that alleviate them may have a significant effect on income (and thus meat consumption).
While I generally do not weigh the meat-eater problem much in evaluating global health charities, I think the indirect income-promoting effect would be of concern to some people.
With that criteria, you would be extremely hard pressed to find any global health charities that avoid the meat-eater problem (or, for that matter, any GCR charities, since those would save the lives of rich people).
However, I would suggest a focus on culturally vegetarian countries such as India could still meet that criteria. Kaya Guides operate there currently.
Yes, at some moral weights, it would be very hard to recommend ~any global-health charities, and perhaps any GCR ones. We don’t know how much incidental effect on meat consumption the OP is willing to accept. So I wouldn’t rule out the possibility that the answer to her question is ~none.
Depression and other mental-health conditions often have a significant impact on productivity and income, though. This suggests that programs that alleviate them may have a significant effect on income (and thus meat consumption).
While I generally do not weigh the meat-eater problem much in evaluating global health charities, I think the indirect income-promoting effect would be of concern to some people.
With that criteria, you would be extremely hard pressed to find any global health charities that avoid the meat-eater problem (or, for that matter, any GCR charities, since those would save the lives of rich people).
However, I would suggest a focus on culturally vegetarian countries such as India could still meet that criteria. Kaya Guides operate there currently.
Yes, at some moral weights, it would be very hard to recommend ~any global-health charities, and perhaps any GCR ones. We don’t know how much incidental effect on meat consumption the OP is willing to accept. So I wouldn’t rule out the possibility that the answer to her question is ~none.