EA Forum Podcast (All audio)

EA Forum Team

Audio narrations from the Effective Altruism Forum, including curated posts, posts with 30 karma, and other great writing. If you'd like fewer episodes, subscribe to the "EA Forum (Curated & Popular)" podcast instead.

  1. 8H AGO

    [Linkpost] “The Charity Trap: Brain Misallocation” by DavidNash

    This is a link post. In Ugandan villages where non-governmental organisations (NGOs) hired away the existing government health worker, infant mortality went up. This happened in 39%[1] of villages that already had a government worker. The NGO arrived with funding and good intentions, but the likelihood that villagers received care from any health worker declined by ~23%. Brain Misallocation “Brain drain”, - the movement of people from poorer countries to wealthier ones, has been extensively discussed for decades[2]. But there's a different dynamic that gets far less attention: “brain misallocation”. In many low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), the brightest talents are being incentivised towards organisations that don’t utilise their potential for national development. They’re learning how to get grants from multilateral alphabet organisations rather than build businesses or make good policy. This isn’t about talent leaving the country. It's about talent being misdirected and mistrained within it. Examples Nick Laing [...] --- Outline: (00:36) Brain Misallocation (01:16) Examples (05:37) The Incentive Trap (07:48) When Help Becomes Harm (08:48) Conclusion --- First published: October 23rd, 2025 Source: https://forum.effectivealtruism.org/posts/6rmdyddEateJFWb4L/the-charity-trap-brain-misallocation Linkpost URL:https://gdea.substack.com/p/the-charity-trap-brain-misallocation --- Narrated by TYPE III AUDIO.

    10 min
  2. 1D AGO

    “AI and Animal Welfare: A Policy Case Study from Aotearoa New Zealand Policy” by Karen Singleton

    TL;DR AI systems manage hundreds of thousands of animals in NZ (billions globally) under decades-old regulations with zero AI-specific welfare provisions I spent 3 months part-time + $0 writing a policy brief highlighting this gap for local policymakers The pattern is universal: deploy first, regulate later (maybe) The resulting policy brief proposes practical solutions using existing frameworks Takeaway: this work is doable without massive resources, similar gaps likely exist in your jurisdiction and the window of opportunity is closing Introduction AI systems are already being deployed to manage potentially billions of animals across agriculture and wildlife control, with essentially zero welfare-specific regulation. The regulatory frameworks being established right now, in the next 1-3 years, will likely lock in for decades. And almost no one is working on this. EA has strong work on AI safety and animal welfare separately, but the intersection is only beginning to be explored. [...] --- Outline: (00:13) TL;DR (00:53) Introduction (02:27) Aotearoa New Zealand case study (04:35) The Regulatory Context and Pattern (06:09) Global AI governance: the animal welfare gap (07:19) Why This Was Doable (08:30) Four Implementation Insights (10:24) Practical Pathways (11:43) So what's next? --- First published: October 20th, 2025 Source: https://forum.effectivealtruism.org/posts/G3bsSL2LoKSN4Cyic/ai-and-animal-welfare-a-policy-case-study-from-aotearoa-new --- Narrated by TYPE III AUDIO.

    14 min
  3. 1D AGO

    “The First Global Accounting Standard for Nonprofits Just Launched — And It Might Actually Matter” by Yufeng (Andy) Tao

    Disclaimer: I work for the Centre for Effective Altruism, though these are purely my personal thoughts and should not be taken to represent my employer or any other organization. I'm interested in this topic as someone who values organizational transparency and financial accountability across the nonprofit sector, not because of any organizational mandate. TLDR:  After 50+ years of for-profit companies having international accounting standards, nonprofits finally have their own: INPAS (International Non-Profit Accounting Standard), launched in October 2025. This could make it easier to compare nonprofits across borders, reduce administrative overhead, and build donor trust. However, adoption is uncertain and there are legitimate concerns about implementation burden. Why this matters (even if accounting sounds boring) Picture this: You're trying to decide between two global health charities. One operates in Kenya, the other in India. You want to know which uses unrestricted funds more efficiently. But their financial statements use [...] --- Outline: (00:34) TLDR: (01:05) Why this matters (even if accounting sounds boring) (01:54) What problem is this actually solving? (03:17) The case for cautious optimism (04:42) The case for skepticism (05:24) What could the EA community do about this? (06:39) My tentative take --- First published: October 22nd, 2025 Source: https://forum.effectivealtruism.org/posts/q6mrfbyY7btumHeB2/the-first-global-accounting-standard-for-nonprofits-just --- Narrated by TYPE III AUDIO.

    8 min

About

Audio narrations from the Effective Altruism Forum, including curated posts, posts with 30 karma, and other great writing. If you'd like fewer episodes, subscribe to the "EA Forum (Curated & Popular)" podcast instead.

You Might Also Like