Estimating Charity Effectiveness: Vegan Outreach |
November 10th, 2011 |
charity_evaluation, ea, veg |
Wayne has convinced me that the fraction of people who become vegetarian because of receiving a brochure is probably much much lower than estimated below. The evidence Vegan Outreach provides on this is very weak, and you shouldn't expect 1% of people to make a large change to their behavior in response to a leaflet.
Alan Dwarst calculates that preventing a year of direct suffering on factory farms costs between $0.02 and $3.65 (pdf) via Vegan Outreach. [1] While I don't (currently) believe we should value animal suffering, I was curious about his calculation. The main part that seemed high was his estimate of how cheaply Vegan Outreach 'makes' vegetarians. His calculation was:
b
= the number of people who receive a brochure per dollar donated = 4.7 to 8.0 people
v
= the fraction ofb
who become vegetarian or vegan who wouldn't otherwise have done so = 0.43% to 2.5%
s
= the fraction ofv
who stay vegetarian or vegan = 30% to 100%
t
= years those people would otherwise have eaten factory-farmed meat = 10 to 56 yearsvegetarian-years per dollar =
b*v*s*t
= 0.06 to 11
cost of a vegetarian-year = 1/(b*v*s*t) = $16.5 to $0.09details on these estimates (pdf)
I decided to try and get an alternate estimate, calculating through Vegan Outreach's revenue and the number of vegetarians.
There are around 7M vegetarians in the US and 10% say "animal rights" is their main reason (wikipedia). At the high end, I would put Vegan Outreach's work at being responsible for 1/4 of these people, and at the low end I'd say maybe around 1/500.
n
= number of US vegetarians = 7M people
a
= fraction ofn
who are primarily concerned with animal rights = 10%
r
= fraction ofa
that Vegan Outreach is responsible for = 1/4 to 1/500
m
= annual budget of Vegan Outreach = ~$750Kvegan outreach caused vegetarian years =
n*a*r
= 175K to 1.4K
cost of a vegetarian year =m/(n*a*r)
= $4.29 to $536
I think the main reason my cost estimate comes out much higher is
Alan's estimate for s
, the fraction of people who stay
vegetarian. I know more lapsed vegetarians than vegetarians, so I
think 100% is definitely too high, but 30% may also be. I'm also not
so sure about v
. They seem amenable to measurement, but I
don't think anyone's done that.
[1] His goal is reducing suffering, including wild
animal suffering, which would put him at odds with many
vegans. He also is not coming at this from an environmental
angle, so he advocates eating beef
over chicken or eggs if you are going to eat animal protein.
Comment via: google plus, facebook