We would guess that if we, for example, gave households the choice between 3-4 months of therapy and a $1,000 transfer, many more would choose the transfer.
To clarify, the intervention is not to provide therapy to anyone, it’s just to provide it to those who are depressed. I expect that even some depressed people would choose cash over therapy. But it’s reasonable to assume people don’t always know what’s best for them and under/overconsume on certain goods due to lack of information, etc. That’s why we need studies to see what truly improves people’s subjective well-being.
If one was serious about always giving people what they choose, then you would just give people cash and let them decide. Given that GiveWell claims that bednets and deworming are better than cash, it seems they already accept cash is not necessarily best. Hence, it’s unclear how they could raise this as a problem for therapy without being inconsistent.
To clarify, the intervention is not to provide therapy to anyone, it’s just to provide it to those who are depressed. I expect that even some depressed people would choose cash over therapy. But it’s reasonable to assume people don’t always know what’s best for them and under/overconsume on certain goods due to lack of information, etc. That’s why we need studies to see what truly improves people’s subjective well-being.
If one was serious about always giving people what they choose, then you would just give people cash and let them decide. Given that GiveWell claims that bednets and deworming are better than cash, it seems they already accept cash is not necessarily best. Hence, it’s unclear how they could raise this as a problem for therapy without being inconsistent.