EAs Should Promote Frugality More

There are three ways EAs typically do good:

  • Donating to effective charities.

  • Working on high impact cause areas.

  • Getting others to become EAs.

All of these require either time and/​or money. To donate to effective charities, one needs to have a sufficiently high level of financial security to justify their donations. If someone wants to work in a high impact cause area, they need enough time and money to pursue their desired career. Lastly, if one wants to get others to become EAs, they need enough time to find others who may be interested in EA.

Despite this, I’ve observed almost no references to the importance of saving money or how to save money within the EA forum or sites dedicated to EA outreach such as effectivealtruism.org, 80,000 Hours, and Giving What We Can.

As such, I think that frugality, the optimization of one’s financial resources to maximize one’s time, should be more widely discussed and promoted within the EA community.

Pros:

  1. Saving even small amounts of money can enable one to donate much more money to high impact cause areas.

    • For example, by cutting one’s own hair rather than getting a professional haircut, one can save around $30 every 8 weeks. If one does this for fifty years, one can save around $10,000 in today’s money.

  2. Sufficient savings can enable one to engage in more risk taking.

    • If one has sufficient money, they may be able to justify taking time out of their career to work on an important project or to make a major career change.

    • Similarly, if one has a lot of money and is extremely frugal, they may be able to retire early and devote even more of their time to doing good.

  3. By asking for donations, EA organizations are implying that people have enough money to donate. By giving examples of people who save money to donate to and how they do it, these organizations can reduce the view that the EA community is asking people to excessively financially burden themselves.

  4. Frugality has many valuable second-order effects:

    1. Frugality reduces how many resources one consumes and waste one produces.

      • This can help the environment, which can reduce future harm from global warming and other known and unknown risks.

    2. Frugality reduces animal suffering.

      • If one is trying to spend as little as possible on food, they will likely avoid meat because it is one of the most expensive proteins. This would ultimately result in less animal suffering overall.

Cons:

  1. If EA organizations are seen promoting frugality, their actions could be perceived as an example of the rich promoting their own interests over those of the poor. This would increase the view that EA is an elitist movement.

    1. This is because, if EAs are encouraging poor people in their own country to donate to people who are poor on a global scale, it would be seen as EAs supporting their own interests over those of poor people in their own country.

  2. If EA organizations promote frugality, their actions could be seen as encouraging people to accept harm to themselves for the sake of reducing a greater harm to others. This would increase the view that EA is synonymous with utilitarianism.

  3. By focusing on how to reduce one’s spending, EAs could become distracted from doing goo, especially if their money saving techniques are especially time-consuming.

  4. If discussions of frugality become more common in EA spaces, it may dilute the focus of EA, making the movement as a whole less impactful.

  5. Frugality encourages people to move to lower cost of living areas. If EAs did an exodus from EA hotspots such as New York, the Bay Area, or London, this would substantially reduce how often EAs talk to each other in-person. This could significantly reduce the rate of knowledge transfer and innovation, which could reduce the impact of EA.

  6. Personal finance is a taboo subject. By discussing it, EAs could alienate people who would otherwise be interested in doing good effectively.