I think the biggest criticism that this cause will face from an EA perspective is that it’s going to be pretty hard to argue for moving more talent to first-world countries to do random things than either convincing more medical, educational or business talent to move to developing countries to help them develop or to focus on bringing more talent to top cause areas. I’m not saying that such a case couldn’t be made, just that I think it’d be tricky.
Yeah I have a feeling that the best way to argue for this on EA grounds might surprisingly be on the basis of richer world economic growth, which is kind of antithetical with EA’s origins, but has been argued to be of overwhelming importance e.g.:
The question of whether net outflows of talented workers might be bad for some of the worst off countries is a thorny one which probably differs on a sector by sector and even person by person basis (LMICs have shortages of certain skillsets themselves, but there are other fields in which talented workers simply won’t get the opportunity without moving, and sending remittances home adds value to overseas economies too). It’s interesting the white paper picks UK social care institutions generally being unable to recruit in Africa as an example, since the reason isn’t that agencies specialising in social care recruitment from overseas don’t exist, but that they’re restricted from doing so by the UK respecting a WHO red list identifying countries with domestic healthcare worker shortages.
But I’d have thought the most straightforward criticism from an EA perspective is that the issue of skilled migration isn’t exactly neglected, and (in the medium run at least) migration to richer countries is self funding, implying that most institutions aiding the process need not depend on philanthropy. Firms and research institutions have strong incentives to acquire overseas talent, middlemen have financial incentives to help them, and the pay differences cover those costs. (The flip side of this, I guess, is that grants to incubate new projects can have returns that compound in the long term)
Not sure I entirely agree with the second paragraph. The white paper outlines how philanthropy in this area is quite neglected, and there are organisations like LaMP which could certainly use more funding. Page 5 of the white paper also outlines bottlenecks in the process—even if firms do have strong incentives to acquire talent there can be informational gaps that prevent them from finding the best individuals, and similar informational gaps exist for the individuals that prevent them from actively utilising the best pathways.
Having said that I’m not claiming this is the best use of EA dollars—just posting for people’s information.
I think the biggest criticism that this cause will face from an EA perspective is that it’s going to be pretty hard to argue for moving more talent to first-world countries to do random things than either convincing more medical, educational or business talent to move to developing countries to help them develop or to focus on bringing more talent to top cause areas. I’m not saying that such a case couldn’t be made, just that I think it’d be tricky.
Yeah I have a feeling that the best way to argue for this on EA grounds might surprisingly be on the basis of richer world economic growth, which is kind of antithetical with EA’s origins, but has been argued to be of overwhelming importance e.g.:
Economist Tyler Cowen says our overwhelming priorities should be maximising economic growth and making civilisation more stable. Is he right?
The Moral Consequences of Economic Growth
The question of whether net outflows of talented workers might be bad for some of the worst off countries is a thorny one which probably differs on a sector by sector and even person by person basis (LMICs have shortages of certain skillsets themselves, but there are other fields in which talented workers simply won’t get the opportunity without moving, and sending remittances home adds value to overseas economies too). It’s interesting the white paper picks UK social care institutions generally being unable to recruit in Africa as an example, since the reason isn’t that agencies specialising in social care recruitment from overseas don’t exist, but that they’re restricted from doing so by the UK respecting a WHO red list identifying countries with domestic healthcare worker shortages.
But I’d have thought the most straightforward criticism from an EA perspective is that the issue of skilled migration isn’t exactly neglected, and (in the medium run at least) migration to richer countries is self funding, implying that most institutions aiding the process need not depend on philanthropy. Firms and research institutions have strong incentives to acquire overseas talent, middlemen have financial incentives to help them, and the pay differences cover those costs. (The flip side of this, I guess, is that grants to incubate new projects can have returns that compound in the long term)
Not sure I entirely agree with the second paragraph. The white paper outlines how philanthropy in this area is quite neglected, and there are organisations like LaMP which could certainly use more funding. Page 5 of the white paper also outlines bottlenecks in the process—even if firms do have strong incentives to acquire talent there can be informational gaps that prevent them from finding the best individuals, and similar informational gaps exist for the individuals that prevent them from actively utilising the best pathways.
Having said that I’m not claiming this is the best use of EA dollars—just posting for people’s information.