Is the most efficient way really to have a high paying job in the west and donate as much as possible to Malaria projects (as givewell.org suggests)?<p>Or are there some less known niches to do good, where my money or personal projects would have an even larger impact?<p>(Please do not discuss here the tradeoffs between helping people suffering now or preventing that people suffer in the (far) future. I want to focus on short term altruism)
Start by not contributing to the mess, so do no harm principles are important in one's personal life. Yes that includes being careful with natural resources.<p>After that, consider that very large charities might have considerable overheard and their practical aid on the ground very limited, or very politicized.<p>Local community organizations might have higher needs, have and allow you to make more more impact, though they will not have the marketing and outreach capabilities of a large organization.
But...finding those might take a little more work on your side.
As you want to do good in the short term, and I assume you wouldn't mind a local focus and getting the feeling you're contributing something, you could get in touch with e.g. a city social services department, they probably know which organizations exist close to you which could use some help.
<a href="https://80000hours.org/" rel="nofollow">https://80000hours.org/</a> (conceptually related to GiveWell) can help you figure out ways to use your career to do good, aside from simply earning a lot and donating. They also do free 1:1 coaching along these lines.
When you are walking down the street and you see some parking meters and you have coins in your pocket. Drop them in the meter and keep walking and tell no one ever.<p>Oh also... Work really really hard at being nice person to everybody you meet. From the janitor to the CEO.<p>Anybody can donate money.
Share knowledge as much as you can, it's lifesaving for folks like me who are from poor countries. It's not as direct as giving money to buy food/shelter, but in the long run it pays. I'm learning computer science, for example. Just from internet and course that people put up on there to be accessible from anywhere, that is still something that blows my mind. What poor people lack is access to "good" education. It's not restricted to tech only, it can be about anything that's worth studying. More knowledge = more open mind = more free to think.
Do your research on charities. Does the CEO have an extortionate salary? Look in your local area. Donate to food banks if available. They <i>will</i> help people. Personally attend the depot where people gather items from food banks to see first-hand how helpful it is, if you don't believe your contribution is helpful. In my area, everything gets cleared each week.
Engineers love to overengineer <i>everything</i> in their lives<p>Stop worrying about "the most efficient" everything<p>Just go DO it - what's "efficient" (whatever <i>that</i> means) for you may or may not be "efficient (again, whatever <i>that</i> means) for me
This is impossible to answer and a seemingly constantly moving target. The truth of the premise relies upon a bunch of assumptions, including that other people are staffing the aid agencies, manning the ships that send supplies, directly providing aid in the field wherever it is needed, founding, running, and investing in companies that can pay you a high salary. That specific strategy might work perfectly well for the average marginal person searching the Internet from the US to figure out what they should do, but it can't be universalized, because if everyone tried to do it, the entire system would collapse on itself.<p>Just do whatever good you can do. If you're in a position where a high-paying job in the west is something you're likely to slip into anyway and none of the other roles you'd be relying on seem appealing or likely, then sure, donate some of that high salary. But we can't possibly recommend unqualified that everyone should do that.
Be aware of the world around you and do things to make it better. Close bugs in open source projects you use and understand. Help someone solve a problem you know how to solve and they don’t. Do what makes you happy and use that happiness to help you see more clearly than those around you who aren’t happy and can’t see clearly. Learn to meditate to silence your mind so you can be present enough to see when you can be most effective in helping do good. After you do these things, look at your excess and your experiences and you’ll know where to put your money to do the most good.
I'm surprised we don't see much more discussion about B corps or other "ethical capitalism" type things.<p>The idea of earning money doing X and giving it away seems popular, and most startups claim they are "going to change the world" (presumably for the better) but you don't see as much about creating/running businesses that have a positive impact on society and/or the planet.<p>Do people just not believe that is even possible? Or is there too much risk of failure?
You have ~80,000 hours in your career. Make them count. :-)<p><a href="https://80000hours.org/" rel="nofollow">https://80000hours.org/</a>
I believe that local community networking is the best place to start making the world a better place.<p>I believe that knowing how the world actually functions is best for avoiding harm in both the long and short term.
Find out the needs of your local schools. Help them get it. This could be money, school supplies, used computer equipment. You will impact a lot of young people's lives.
Have five solid friends, stay in touch with weekly calls, hear about their struggles, support them in their endeavors, know their hearts and let them know yours.
I think the "most efficient" and effective way to do good is to look around near you, i.e. to see first-hand the issues and the effect of your actions.