and in particular, too little incentive for many people to generate formal wealth.
I'm skeptical of that. The undeveloped world has less welfare (since they have less money to give) which means people are more desperate to make money.
I suppose it's possible that the problem is that, since they tend to be much closer to the brink of starvation, their less willing to take risks for money. Better to have a sure subsistence wage than a risky luxury wage. In that case, giving the poor more of the wealth would seem to help.
I'm skeptical of that.
I strongly recommend reading The Mystery of Capital. Its basic premise is that most developing countries have very weak legal systems, which dramatically reduces the level of trust individuals can have with each other, leading to dramatically lower incentives for wealth accumulation. Why bother improving your tin shack when your neighbors could collectively agree that it's not your shack and kick you out, or the President's cousin who officially owns the land you're squatting on could bulldoze it at any time? Why enter into a busin...
In a recent Facebook status update, Eliezer Yudkowsky asked a question:
My first thought was object-level; the obvious answer is that some fraction of the money given will eventually be converted into imports, transferring the burden of inflation out and onto richer countries which can easily afford it. This seems plausible. If true, it implies that we should multiply our effectiveness estimates by dImports/d$, which is (asspull) 0.5. By this line of reasoning, direct giving is less effective than we thought, but still a reasonably good deal.
My second thought was that it's likely true that some developing country governments could improve their economies by printing and distributing money, but they won't because they're corrupt, and giving directly is a workaround to force that policy upon them. This seems plausible at first, but it feels forced; the leaders' incentives here are ambiguous, not clearly aligned against this sort of policy.
My third thought was that it's likely true that developing countries' governments could improve their economies by printing and distributing money, and they might not know this.
Sanity check. What sort of people do the poorest countries' governments have, in their economic advisory roles? Is anyone making a serious effort to connect good economists with governments that need them?
If developing countries are short on competent economic advisors at the top levels, and no one is working to fix this, then funding that charity would outperform direct giving by multiple orders of magnitude. But what reason do we have to think that a well-placed economist can make a difference? Well, history does contain at least one big, salient success story: Brazil, where a clever scheme halted hyperinflation and turned the economy around. And on a smaller scale, Otjivero-Namibia.
So now I have some questions for the efficient altruism community:
- Which developing nations have competent economic advisors, and which ones need them?
- If a developing nation's leader needs good economic advisors to fill his/her cabinet, does he/she get them?
- Do any nations have economic problems that seem especially amenable to fixing by clever economists?