Interesting. I agree that second or third-order effects such that as the good done later by people you have helped are an important consideration. Maximising such effects could be an underexplored effective giving strategy, and this organization you refer to looks like a group of people trying to do that. However, to really assess an organization’s effectiveness, epecially if it focuses in educational or social interventions, some empirical evidence is needed.
Does SENG follow-up on the outcomes of aid recipients?
How do they compare with those of similar people in similar situations, but who didn’t recieve help?
Interesting. I agree that second or third-order effects such that as the good done later by people you have helped are an important consideration. Maximising such effects could be an underexplored effective giving strategy, and this organization you refer to looks like a group of people trying to do that. However, to really assess an organization’s effectiveness, epecially if it focuses in educational or social interventions, some empirical evidence is needed.
Does SENG follow-up on the outcomes of aid recipients?
How do they compare with those of similar people in similar situations, but who didn’t recieve help?
What programs does SENG run?
How much does each cost per recipient helped?