This weekend Melbourne is hosting a conference on effective altruism. The 
aim of effective altruism 
<http://www.givewell.org/effective-altruism?gclid=CLv3jJjng84CFQqkvQod6Q4GDQ> 
(EA) 
is to do “as much good as possible per dollar spent”. Its premise is that 
much giving is wasted because it goes to causes where the benefits per 
dollar are low when, if only the donors knew, there are causes whose 
benefits per dollar are high.

In his 2013 TED talk 
<http://www.ted.com/talks/peter_singer_the_why_and_how_of_effective_altruism#t-726714>
 that 
launched the movement the Australian ethicist Peter Singer said that we 
need to use our intelligence to understand that there is no justification 
to give to causes close to home when there are better causes far away.

So EA calls on us to use both our hearts, so that we are moved to give 
more, and our heads, so that we can work out where best to give. It is our 
reason, Singer said, that distinguishes EA from other forms of altruism and 
that is why “many of the most significant people in effective altruism 
[come from] philosophy or economics or maths”.

It sounds impressive. These people have PhDs in the disciplines requiring 
the highest level of *analytical* intelligence, but are they clever enough 
to understand the limits of reason? Do they have an inner alarm bell that 
goes off when the chain of logical deductions produces a result that in 
most people causes revulsion?

Singer’s personal commitment to encouraging more and better giving is truly 
admirable, but just as his purist approach to bioethics led him to argue 
that, because they are not self-aware, human babies “are not persons” and 
therefore “the life of a newborn is of less value than the life of a pig, a 
dog, or a chimpanzee,” his purist approach to giving has also landed him in 
hot water.

To illustrate the force of EA’s altruistic calculus he told his TED 
audience that “if you do the sums” then “you can provide one guide dog for 
one blind American or you could cure between 400 and 2,000 people of 
blindness [in developing countries]”. It’s clear, he said, which is the 
better thing to do.

It makes one wonder whether he would be willing to cough up for a guide dog 
for his blind son. “Sorry, Billy, there are blind people in Bangladesh more 
deserving”.
The economics of effective altruism

A number of objections to EA have been put 
<http://ieet.org/index.php/IEET/more/pellissier20150713>, but it seems to 
me that the essential danger of effective altruism lies in its assumption 
about the kind of society that would be peopled by effective altruists.

To be an effective altruist one must override the urge to give when one’s 
heart is opened up and instead engage in a process of data gathering and 
computation to decide whether the planned donation could be better spent 
elsewhere.

If effective altruists adopt this kind of utilitarian calculus as the basis 
for daily life (for it would be irrational to confine it to acts of 
charity) then good luck to them. The problem is that they believe everyone 
should behave in the same hyper-rational way; in other words, they believe 
society should be remade in their own image.

If the reader is thinking that it sounds suspiciously like the kind of 
society the Institute for Public Affairs has been working away at for 
decades, and which many of us have been attempting to resist, then that is 
no accident.

Singer’s philosophy of utilitarianism is the same philosophical and 
practical basis for neoliberal or “free market” economics, the ideology 
that attempts to “apply the logic of individual [economic] decisionmaking 
to questions concerning morality” (from Mankiw’s textbook).

Some believe that the greatest threat posed by neoliberalism is not so much 
its commitment to freeing markets but its determination to apply free 
market principles to domains of life where they have no place, such as 
schooling, environmental protection and family relationships. It’s the 
worldview captured by the old saying that economists know the price of 
everything and the value of nothing.
The mathematics of love

In an apt formulation (though one liable to cause offense 
<http://gregmankiw.blogspot.com.au/2007/12/autism-and-economics.html>), 
French critics of neoliberal economics refer 
<http://www.paecon.net/PAEReview/issue38/AlcornSolarz38.htm> to it as 
“autistic economics” because of its unworldliness, deficit in social 
engagement and repetitive behaviours.

It’s a way of thinking taken to its absurd but perfectly logical conclusion 
by the ur-Chicago economist Gary Becker in an analysis of the economics of 
the marriage market. In an article published in one of the profession’s 
most prestigious journals, he defined marriage as an arrangement to secure 
the mutual benefit of exchange between two agents of different endowments.

In other words, people marry in order to more efficiently produce 
“household commodities”, including “the quality of meals, the quality and 
quantity of children, prestige, recreation, companionship, love, and health 
status”. Like effective altruism, the marriage decision is based on 
quantifiable costs and benefits.

Becker went on to analyse the effect of “love and caring” on the nature of 
the “equilibrium in the marriage market”, where love is defined as “a 
non-marketable household commodity”. After pages of differential calculus, 
Becker reached a triumphant conclusion: since love produces more efficient 
marriages, “love and caring between two persons increase their chances of 
being married to each other”.

The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences was so taken by the implacable logic 
of Becker’s work that in 1992 it awarded him the Nobel Memorial Prize for 
Economics.

I suspect that, for most people, following the rules of effective altruism 
would be like being married to Gary Becker, a highly efficient arrangement 
between contracting parties, but one deprived of all human warmth and 
compassion.
Addendum at 2.20 pm Friday 22 July

The interesting debate among commentators below prompts me to make the 
following point of clarification.

Although I am not a fan of their work, Jonathon Haidt and Steven Pinker 
have recently expressed an essential truth.

“Many ethical convictions are underpinned by strongly felt intuitions that 
some action is inherently good or bad. Sometimes those intuitions can be 
justified by philosophical reflection and analysis. But sometimes they can 
be debunked and shown to be indefensible gut reactions, without moral 
warrant.” (NYRB, April 7, 2016)

There is a third kind of reaction to a situation in which reasoning clashes 
with a strong intuition and that is not to engage in moral reasoning but to 
use analytical reason as a bulldozer to crush and dismiss the gut reaction. 
This, it seems to me, is what effective altruism does.

Dean Taylor notes that Peter Singer “frequently acknowledges his own 
hypocrisy, and that the results of his work often clash with his feelings / 
intuitions / morality.” But setting it aside as “hypocrisy”, a personal 
weakness, is an avoidance device. Instead of asking whether the clash of 
reason with gut feeling means that the reasoning has to be changed to 
somehow accommodate the intuition, the (emotional!) commitment to logical 
deduction at all costs is used to simply override the facts.

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