Some reasons for not prioritising animal welfare very strongly
Disclaimer: I work at EA animal welfare organisations but this piece reflects my personal views, not the views of the organisations I am involved with.
I am pleasantly surprised by the amount of support for animal welfare in this debate. There were more than a hundred people who voted very strongly for animal welfare which makes about %25 of all votes (I voted in favour of animal welfare too!) . But I also think there are some strong reasons for being more cautious (this is why I voted for a more moderate position). I think it might be beneficial to be mindful of these.
There are not a lot of pro-GHD arguments in the debate too—so I hope this also adds some more balance to the debate:)
Scale and neglectedness of the problem might be irrelevant unless it is solvable: When comparing animal welfare and human welfare, and the scale of the problems, the number of animals dominates. Similarly, the amount of funding in the animal welfare cause area is much smaller than global health. These points are repeatedly mentioned in the debate. But these points are only relevant if animal advocacy organisations can make meaningful progress that improves animal welfare with available funds.
It doesn’t really matter how much animals suffer (trillions), what really matters is how many we can realistically help (in some cases, only thousands). It also doesn’t really matter how much funding is available (millions), it matters how much funding can be effectively spent on actually helping animals (again, in some cases only millions). So I don’t think we should immediately get excited or be intimidated by numbers.
Track record of animal advocacy (including effective animal advocacy) is mixed:
It is safe to say that cage-free campaigns were a great success. But they are mostly limited to certain regions (Americas and Europe mostly). And it was the most modest reform with minimal cost to the industry. In addition, it is not certain that all corporations will implement their commitments, especially the global ones.
Progress in broiler welfare has been much slower. Much fewer corporations committed due to higher costs and complexities.
There have been important reforms for aquatic animals. But these either also benefited producers via efficiency reforms (better water quality) or partly financed by the organisations themselves, which suggest that progress may stall when additional reforms require real costs on the producers.
Alternative protein space is also very uncertain. Major scientific breakthroughs are needed for cultured meat to be produced and consumed at scale. Plant-based alternatives also remain uncompetitive and thus need further development. It is also uncertain whether even price-, quality-, convenience competitive alternatives can substitute animal products due to social norms and habits. Current market pricing of alternative protein companies (and meat companies) also do not predict major change in the food system.
Wild animal welfare field has grown but it is not still clear which interventions may really help wild animals. We still don’t have a clear example of a program actually improving wild animal welfare at scale.
So it can be argued that “clear wins for animals” in effective animal advocacy are not abundant, in contrast with very confident claims that more funding in animal advocacy easily converts into high impact.
Most of the “impact” claims are actually “expected value”, which expect that impact will occur under certain assumptions.
It is hard to make future predictions based on past performance: Most optimistic and “animal welfare friendly” cost-effectiveness estimates in the EA community refer to RP’s estimates . But as expressed in the report, these are based on past success of cage-free and broiler campaigns (perhaps a more nuanced title could be “corporate campaigns affected 9 to 12 years of chicken life per dollar spent”). This may be an exception, not the rule. It is possible that cage-free campaigns were successful in certain regions at a certain time by picking low hanging fruits. Maybe this will not repeat in other regions and for other campaigns. And there are reasons for this: there is a huge socioeconomic gap between countries and regions, which also include differences in corporate culture and institutional development. Cage-free may also be an exception due to its minimal costs. Broiler commitments are much less frequent than cage-free commitments—which is also mentioned in the report.
It is hard to make broad cost effectiveness estimates, especially about marginal use of funds: It is very probable that “core” programs/departments of animal advocacy organisations differ significantly from “supporting” programs/departments in terms of cost effectiveness. For example, the first 1-2 staff working on corporate outreach or campaigning can be x100 times more impactful than the 3. volunteer coordinator working on university outreach. So the marginal utility of additional funding that will be typically used to hire another staff member in animal advocacy organisations can be much lower than additional funding for buying more bed nets that will be used in global health efforts.
Monitoring and evaluation in animal advocacy is not very strong: We cannot assume that all efforts that claim to aim for impact and cost-effectiveness, really achieve impact and cost-effectiveness. Robust M&E is required to see what works and what does not. Unfortunately EAA is way behind GHD in terms of M&E. This is mostly due to the complexities of animal advocacy which makes simple M&E impossible. But excuses aside, many EA organisations and funds do not even have basic impact evaluations—at least in public. And there is not much accountability work done about this problem. So at least in some cases it is doubtful that the use of funds by individual organisations for individual projects is really cost-effective- which is the primary thing that a donor should consider, rather than animal headcounts (scale) or total funding available (neglectedness).
There are things that money cannot (easily) buy: Many organisations fail to achieve their goals not because they lack funding, but because they lack good leadership, competent team members, or simply because they face challenges too high to overcome (more on that below). Although money can be of some use to fix these problems, the function is not straightforward. In theory, organisations can buy leadership “training” or “consultancy” to improve leadership. But these don’t work smoothly all the time. Sometimes they are completely useless. In theory, if organisations can offer better wages they can attract better staff. But many people just do not consider animal advocacy as a career, regardless of its potential benefits. Or some people want to join regardless of the benefits.
So although money helps, one might need to discount its effect due to its limited power to really make an impact in animal advocacy.
The threshold for the “next level” might be too high: In GHD, one can make progress village by village, bed net by bed net (I am simplifying). The threshold for each next level is so low that almost each dollar (or each thousand dollar) can make an impact. In animal advocacy, the majority of impact is driven from large institutions or major research breakthroughs. These require lengthy and steady engagement (or pressure) which require much more than “each dollar”. And if advocates fail to achieve the threshold for success, the outcome is not proportionate—it is close to zero. And in many cases the threshold might be so high that even lots of funding (100 million dollars) may not reach it—and only deliver close to “zero” impact (R&D on cultured meat can be an example). This is widely different from aggregate estimates which propose extremely high outcomes like “years of suffering relieved per dollar”. So unless there are other donors who can join forces and coordinate to give much more (say 500 million), one can reasonably decide to give none or very little even if they would be willing to give if others would join. A cause can be too neglected.
Social conditions are not very favourable for animal advocacy at this point in time: Let’s leave the numerical estimates for a while and look at the state of the “movement”. It is rare to see continuous gatherings with waves of people advocating for animal welfare. Protests for farmed animals gather at best a hundred people or slightly more. Usually, there are only ten or so people—and some of them are the paid staff members of the organisations, and some of them are EA conference attendants. The social media following of major organisations does not grow exponentially—most seem to be staying at the same level. Although we typically use the term “movement”, there is not a high number of people who are very engaged with this cause. There has also not been an instance where a company went bankrupt or clearly lost value in real terms due to a boycott or disruption.
Although surveys tend to show optimistic signs about the potential public support for animal welfare (which is typically used by organisations to increase expectations and gather support), this might be an illusion. It is possible that animal advocacy organisations don’t have much power really and it might be a matter of time that corporations (the ones that focus on profits only—meaning the overwhelming majority of corporations) realise this. It may be that all we can achieve is either efficiency reforms that marginally benefit animals (and corporations), or extremely modest moral reforms such as cage-free in a number of countries where conditions are very favourable—but not much further.
The alternative protein field also needs more investment and financial support. But it may be that governments and investors have other priorities at this point in time. Many animal advocates are a bit alarmist: climate change is getting worse, antibiotic resistance is a major risk, the world cannot feed its population unless we adopt a plant-based diet, etc. But maybe governments can adopt and manage these problems without making significant changes in the food system, which might be more costly both financially and politically. And investors might also find this field less profitable after all.
Progress in animal advocacy may need to wait for further progress in human welfare or civilisation: Imagine that you time travel to the 19th century, would you still prioritise animal welfare? Probably not, because clearly social conditions wouldn’t be right. There needs to be more development in terms of human welfare and civilisation before animals are taken more seriously in the public agenda.
But what makes the 21th century “the right century”? Maybe our time is not the right century too. Maybe the 21st century is similar to the 19th century in terms of its possibilities for progress for animals.
By the way, this point does not necessarily support prioritisation of GHD (in LMICs) over animal welfare. Perhaps it supports the prioritisation of further socioeconomic development (or mitigating more risks) in developed countries in order to achieve suitable socioeconomic conditions for viable animal advocacy work in the future (25th century hopefully?:( ).
Hedonism and utilitarianism may be wrong: Animal advocates typically focus on sentience in order to base their moral claims. This similarity with humans can easily justify some form of similar (moral) treatment of animals and humans. And under the assumption that pain and pleasure are the sole things that have moral worth, extremely high numbers of sentient animals and their suffering has an overwhelming effect on moral considerations.
As a result, if one only considers the headcounts and the sufferings, the obvious conclusion is: total animal welfare >>> total human welfare.
But one needs to keep in mind that the immediate conclusion of the “unrestricted sentience approach” is not only that animal welfare >>> human welfare. It is rather:
total invertebrate welfare >>>>>>>>>> total rest of the animal welfare >>> human welfare .
This is precisely because of the same reason: total invertebrate welfare is also overwhelming due to their astronomical numbers.
I don’t think most people realise this or really adjust their actions/positions accordingly. If your main starting point is exclusively sentience and hedonism, your vote in the debate should not be only “%100 agree with 100 million dollars spent on animal welfare”, it should also be “%99.99 agree with 100 million dollars spent on invertebrate welfare”.
One might reasonably think that this moral weight framework should be wrong. “Unless you have confidence in the ruler’s reliability, if you use a ruler to measure a table, you may also use the table to measure the ruler”.
There might be other goods that cannot be adequately reduced to pain and pleasure: like friendship, knowledge, play, reason, etc. And these may have even more moral weight than mere pleasure and pain. Humans might have much higher capacity to actualize these different goods and therefore have higher status due to their nature. Some animals can also actualize these goods in their own limited capacities which can also justify some form of moral hierarchy between mammals, birds and invertebrates. This can then justify more (at least some) attention to non-invertabrate welfare as well. This can then also justify more (or at least some) attention to human welfare, despite overwhelming numbers of animals.
Priority of different types of duties: Imagine that you have 100 million dollars and you are willing and committed to donate 100 million dollars to animal welfare. BUT you also have a pending debt (say 10 million). Let’s also assume that the person who you are indebted to will not use this money “effectively” and the risk of legal sanctions and other risks in case you don’t pay your debt are close to zero.
Would you still be okay donating 100 million dollars to animal charities and choose to ignore your debt?
I guess most people would pay their debts first and then give the remaining money as charitable donations.
This assumes that there is a difference between duties in strict justice and in charity.
One can also argue that we have such duties in strict justice to persons who happen to be extremely poor and have a duty to distribute what we possess to those persons (humans) in great need. It can be argued that we don’t necessarily “own” 100 million dollars wholly in the first place (perhaps only %90 at best?) since we happen to possess it (at least partially) due to arbitrary factors like being born in a wealthy country. The main claim here is that one can only pursue charitable acts legitimately only after completing duties in strict justice.
The strong version of this argument can also be constructed as not giving to animal welfare at all until there is no person living in extreme poverty or need. But this strong version also has to concede that since we are under such a heavy duty that is unlikely to be completed in a lifetime, we should not also spend on nonessential goods (for our own welfare) at all, as we should not donate to animal welfare at all, since duties in strict justice also have priority over any spending on nonessential goods too. This is similar to a situation where one has a huge debt one cannot realistically repay in a lifetime. The only legitimate expenses in that case would be the essentials.
To conclude, I still think that animal welfare deserves more attention and support, but there are also good reasons for moderation too.
Engin, as an animal advocate to have this clear of thinking and publicly write it, when it might seem to go against your own people’s goals is astonishingly noble. The thoughtfulness is so strong, I look forward to following your thinking in all areas in the future. All the people and all the animals owe you a tribute.
Dear Jeffrey,
Thank you very much for your kind words. I really appreciate it. This made my day.
Thank you for these interesting insights!
As a worker in community building for animal welfare, I concur with this observation:
That said, I think a main question is whether this can be overcome (and at what cost). My perception is that we’ve barely tried to massify the movement and bring about a cultural change in society: for the moment, the bulk of funding has gone towards lobbying efforts targeting companies and politicians, but not so much towards the general public. I sometimes dream of seeing Open Phil publish a call for projects for efforts of this kind, with significant funding at stake: then perhaps we could start to see to what extent these social and cultural conditions are immutable or not.
Thanks for the comment!
I definitely agree that things could be wildly different if there was a massive cultural change. But as you point out the main question is whether it is doable. I think that the bulk of funding has not gone “only” towards lobbying efforts targeting companies and politicians. There is a lot of “society outreach” work done by existing EA organisations in order to effectively pressure these companies and politicians: like petitions, protests, media outreach etc. So I guess the contrast is not necessarily “corporations” vs. “culture” but rather it is “social change for an institutional short term goal” vs. “social change for an indeterminate long term goal”. I am more supportive of the former because it has better feedback loops and it is also a good test of figuring out what is really doable and choosing the right objectives proportional to our existing capabilities. I think it would be very unlikely that a qualified animal advocacy organisation would fail to generate enough social reaction to convince a retailer to adopt a better welfare standard but at the same time would succeed in generating enough social reaction to achieve transformative legislative progress.
I guess another problem is that “culture” is very complex and cannot be changed by a small number of actors. This can also explain relative scepticism of funders since they face a practical problem of finding individual giving opportunities—not just deciding the general approach like “culture” or “corporate work”. Their job would be much harder if they need to figure out and evaluate hundreds of different actors from different fields and backgrounds.
Thanks for sharing this! One of the points that resonates most with me is the idea that animal advocacy has to deal with situations where the threshold for reaching the ‘next level’ might be too high at the moment. We’ve all seen cases where animal advocates have gone to great lengths to create innovative, well-informed campaigns, but which failed to gain the traction needed to drive meaningful progress. It’s like their efforts create ripples but no tsunami. It’s sobering to see that you can put lots of smart work into the cause, and don’t get any substantial results because of external factors. It’s also dangerous because advocates might cling to the hope that the threshold is within reach, or that they’re getting closer and closer, so they continue pouring resources into something that ultimately won’t deliver.
I feel like this threshold thing is one reason why synergy between the various parts of the ‘ecosystem of social change’ is promising. If each group within this ecosystem is trying their best, but independently, they may never gather enough momentum to break through the inertia and status quo. But by coordinating around a topic or campaign, a movement might be able to create sufficient waves to get to the ‘next level’, and get ambitious reforms passed that seemed unattainable years ago. I’ve recently come across some interesting initiatives on this front via the Social Change Lab, including organizations like The Ayni Institute, Breakthrough, Changing Ideas. Their goal is to build strong, mass social movements and to train and propel effective movement leaders. There’s also Link for Change, which connects activists, lawyers and journalists to create synergy and amplify the impact of social movements.
Money is probably not the limiting factor here. What I’d love to see is a team of people crafting this kind of synergy among various actors for a major national campaign (perhaps around broiler chickens?). The skills required would include excellent project management, a network in various influential circles, a good grasp of the ways cultural change might happen, experience in the media and PR… And yet, I agree that it may still not suffice.
Thanks for the comment!
I definately agree with your point that we should think more about how to create more social momentum.
But while I am very open and curious about testing new ideas about this, I am also a bit pessimistic about these efforts. I guess the main difficulty is that we just can’t “short circuit” building a movement. Many things need to come together in a long time period: social conditions, public opinion, elite opinion, corporate culture, competent leaders, team cohesion, patient funders, other stakeholders, etc. And these things need a lot of time to change and mature.
Thank you for writing this post; I thought that some of the points you mentioned here were among the strongest arguments I’ve seen during Debate Week for why one might not prioritize animal welfare as highly. (Note: I run an animal advocacy organization focused on ending factory farming and voted “strongly agree” for spending the $100m on animal welfare.)
Specifically, I think your comments about solvability/tractability are very important to keep in mind. This idea becomes clearer for me (and probably others) when considering wild animal welfare and invertebrate welfare, as you brought up. Those are areas where my gut reaction is something like “wow those are really tough, maybe we should just focus right now on animal suffering that humans are actively causing (like factory farming) since that is more tractable.” Not that I think my gut reaction is correct—just that I can see this being an important consideration to keep in mind.
The thought experiment of traveling back in time is very interesting, as well. As one specific personal anecdote, the idea of “the correct era for advocacy” comes up for me when wondering if artificial intelligence may one day be able to help us with wild animal welfare at scale. If AI were to end up being crucial for certain efforts (like wild animal welfare), then I could see how that consideration might change one’s prioritization of what to work on right now. (Note: I’m familiar with wild animal welfare/suffering work, but am certainly not an expert.) But of course, society would need to want to use AI for wild animal welfare work, and so I think in this specific instance it might just shift your resources potentially away from direct work and more towards field building and convincing people of the importance of the cause. (Which may be exactly what some wild animal welfare advocates are doing these days.)
I’m not sure if these considerations would necessarily change my vote of how to prioritize the funding in this specific $100m question, partially because I have taken many of these ideas into account already, but I think these are the some of the right questions to be asking, and I haven’t seen these ideas discussed as much. (I’ve seen moral value comparison stuff discussed way more, how much do you value chickens vs. humans, etc.) I think questions of present tractability become much more important when dealing with overall funding allocations, such as the question of should a much larger percentage of our funding be going towards animal welfare, rather than a marginal $100m (which we can more confidently allocate to animal welfare).
Also, I have notes in my comment here about some organizations that I think could effectively use quite a bit more funding, and some new initiatives (like plant-based defaults in institutional food settings, like the work done by Greener By Default) that seem possibly very impactful but haven’t scaled up (primarily due to lack of funding, I would guess).
Thanks for the post Engin. Also echoing what you wrote Steven. Wanted to add that my (still limited) experience with training orgs in M&E, is that there’s a lot we can learn about the effectiveness of animal interventions by improving the use of M&E. Calculating actual impact seems more difficult, but hopefully we can step by step narrow the knowlegde gap, and better know how to spend an additional 100m.
Hey Nicoll! Thank you very much. I definately agree that M&E work is very valuable and very needed. Not only because it may reveal how to spend additional 100m but also because it may allow us to better understand how to use the existing ~300m.
Thanks for the comment!
I completely agree that the funding can be absorbed by many organisations who will try their best. I also agree that there are a lot of things that we might reasonably experiment. But overall I am a bit pessimistic about them since earlier and somewhat similar campaigns did not lead to very positive results unfortunately. I also think most of the outcomes are related largely due to the performance of leaders and keystaff—so maybe some new project might succeed afterall! So I guess allocating “some” funding to new initiatives (and new leaders) makes sense but I would not expect a huge win even if we spend 100m on new initiatives. But I might wrong.
As a person coming from one of the least developed countries; and someone who has been trying to wrap head around this topic the part about “is this really the right century?” strikes with me.
Thanks for your honesty Engin. This section truly reflects my doubts about animal welfare, which I guess has little to do with cost effectiveness or monitorability.. but more about the shadow of the the repugnant conclusion. The fear that we could end up prioritizing moths over humans simply because we keep insisting that the only thing that reflects value in the world is doing arithmetics with pain and pleasure.
I tried to express some of these fears in https://forum.effectivealtruism.org/posts/QFh6kiwv36mR8QSiE/are-we-as-rigorous-in-addressing-utilitarianism-s
Thanks!
I definately agree there is a lot of room of improvement in animal ethics. Most animal welfare people are cool with being unconventional but I think this kind of misses the point which is that we might not currently have the right moral framework.
I also think utilitarianism got “some” things right like extreme pain is really immoral, or one should be seeking efficiency (within reasonable limits) etc. But it remains weak and weird by itself, without any additional (and multiple) values and principles.
This is another great piece of writing from you Engin, thanks!
Thank you @ASuchy
Executive summary: While animal welfare deserves support, there are several reasons to be cautious about prioritizing it very strongly, including mixed track records, uncertain cost-effectiveness, and potential flaws in moral frameworks based solely on sentience.
Key points:
Scale and neglectedness of animal welfare may be irrelevant if meaningful progress is not achievable with available funds.
Animal advocacy has a mixed track record, with some successes but many challenges and uncertainties.
Cost-effectiveness estimates are difficult to make and may not accurately reflect marginal utility of additional funding.
Social conditions may not be favorable for significant progress in animal welfare at present.
Moral frameworks based solely on sentience and hedonism may be flawed or lead to counterintuitive conclusions.
There may be competing moral duties, such as addressing extreme human poverty, that should take precedence over animal welfare efforts.
This comment was auto-generated by the EA Forum Team. Feel free to point out issues with this summary by replying to the comment, and contact us if you have feedback.