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GiveWell

American charity evaluator


Summary

American charity evaluator

FieldValue
nameGiveWell
logoGiveWell logo.svg
formation
founders{{plainlist
extinction
type501(c)(3) organization, ruling year 2007
tax_id
registration_id
purposeCharity evaluation
locationSan Francisco, U.S.
coordinates
regionGlobal
owner
sec_gen
leader_titlePresident
leader_nameElie Hassenfeld
disbursements$396,969,264 (FY 2024)
website
  • Holden Karnofsky
  • Elie Hassenfeld

GiveWell is an American non-profit charity assessment and effective altruism-focused organization. GiveWell focuses primarily on the cost-effectiveness of the organizations that it evaluates, rather than traditional metrics such as the percentage of the organization's budget that is spent on overhead. Since 2011, GiveWell has guided the donations of 150,000 donors and moved $2.6 billion to their recommended organizations. Under their cost-effectiveness estimates, this has averted 340,000 deaths.

History

In 2006, Holden Karnofsky and Elie Hassenfeld, who worked at a hedge fund in Connecticut, formed an informal group with colleagues to evaluate charities based on data and performance metrics similar to those they used at the fund, and were surprised to find the data often didn't exist. In the first year, funding to run the nonprofit was provided by a fund called the Clear Fund into which the former members of informal club, now directors of GiveWell, had put around $300,000, with about half of that going to fund the organization.

In the first year, Karnofsky and Hassenfeld advocated that charities should generally spend more money on overhead, so that they could pay for staff and record keeping to track how effective their efforts were; this ran counter to standard ways of evaluating charities based on the ratio of overhead to funds deployed for the charity work itself.

In late 2007, GiveWell's founders promoted the organization on several internet blogs and forums using sockpuppets to ask questions about where to find good information about how to donate and then answering them, recommending GiveWell. GiveWell's board of directors investigated and found that the founders Karnofsky and Hassenfeld had acted inappropriately and as a result, it fined each of them $5000 and Karnofsky was demoted from executive director to a program director.

In 2008, GiveWell received funding from the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation's Nonprofit Marketplace Initiative. The Hewlett Foundation continued to be a major funder of GiveWell until March 2014, when the Hewlett Foundation announced that it was ending the Nonprofit Marketplace Initiative based on a 2010 study it commissioned that found that only 3% of donors selected charities based on performance metrics (rather than e.g. loyalty, personal connections, or faith), and a subsequent 2012 study showing that efforts to provide better data were not changing that pattern.

In 2013, GiveWell moved its offices to San Francisco, where people in Silicon Valley had become strong supporters of the effective altruism philosophy.

In 2025, GiveWell operated a rapid response fund in reaction to cuts to USAID by DOGE, disbursing $39 million to aid programs that lost funding.

Approach

Givewell's approach is data-driven, and they recommend charities which work in the developing world.

American philosopher Leif Wenar has criticized the charity evaluator, saying that it does not sufficiently take into account harms caused by its recommended charities.

Open Philanthropy

Main article: Open Philanthropy

In 2011, Good Ventures, founded with $8.3 billion by husband and wife Dustin Moskovitz and Cari Tuna, partnered with GiveWell to set up a partner organization called Open Philanthropy, as a vehicle to direct the funding done by Good Ventures. In 2015, Mike Krieger and his fiancee Kaitlyn Trigger pledged $750,000 to Open Philanthropy over two years, with 10% going to fund the operations of the project.

Open Philanthropy has investigated giving money to criminal justice reform and has funded work into mitigating risks of artificial intelligence, biosecurity, and global health.

In 2017, Open Philanthropy separated from GiveWell, and upon Karnofsky stepping down as Co-Executive Director of GiveWell, Elie Hassenfeld became GiveWell's sole Executive Director.

References

References

  1. "Clear Fund".
  2. (2024). "GiveWell Metrics Report 2024".
  3. "GiveWell Homepage Sources {{!}} GiveWell".
  4. "GiveWell Homepage Sources {{!}} GiveWell".
  5. Pitney, Nico. (March 26, 2015). "That Time A Hedge Funder Quit His Job And Then Raised $60 Million For Charity". [[Huffington Post]].
  6. (2011). "Giving Well: The Ethics of Philanthropy". [[Oxford University Press]].
  7. [[Peter Singer]]. ''The Life You Can Save: Acting Now To End World Poverty'', Random House, 2009. Ch. 6, [https://books.google.com/books?id=gGn4cdxEgvEC&pg=PA81 pp. 81–104]
  8. (20 December 2007). "2 Young Hedge-Fund Veterans Stir Up the World of Philanthropy". The New York Times.
  9. "Young Duo to 'Clear' the Way for Charitable Giving". National Public Radio.
  10. Stephanie Strom. (8 January 2008). "Founder of a Nonprofit Is Punished by Its Board for Engaging in an Internet Ruse". [[The New York Times]].
  11. (15 January 2008). "Nonprofit Punishes a 2nd Founder for Ruse". The New York Times.
  12. (March 11, 2014). "Strengthening Our Sector". [[William and Flora Hewlett Foundation]].
  13. Childs, Mary. (2025-11-26). "Saving lives with fewer dollars". NPR.
  14. (November 27, 2017). "On #GivingTuesday, How To Get The Most Bang For Your Charity Buck". NPR.
  15. "The Deaths of Effective Altruism".
  16. Preston, Caroline. (January 10, 2012). "Another Facebook Co-Founder Gets Philanthropic". [[Chronicle of Philanthropy]].
  17. (February 10, 2016). "bcg.perspectives - How Tech Entrepreneurs Are Disrupting Philanthropy". The Boston Consulting Group.
  18. Matthews, Dylan. (April 24, 2015). "You have $8 billion. You want to do as much good as possible. What do you do?".
  19. "The Institutional Critique of Effective Altruism". Utilitas.
  20. Elizabeth Preston. (July 1, 2015). "Boston group awards $6m from Elon Musk to jump-start artificial intelligence research". Boston Globe.
  21. Jack Clark. (July 1, 2015). "Musk-Backed Group Probes Risks Behind Artificial Intelligence". Bloomberg Business.
  22. Vanian, Jonathan. (July 1, 2015). "Why Elon Musk is donating millions to make artificial intelligence safer". Fortune.
  23. (2017). "Reducing Global Catastrophic Biological Risks.". Health Security.
  24. (March 9, 2016). "Leverage: Why This Silicon Valley Funder Is Doubling Down on a Beltway Think Tank".
  25. Hollander, Catherine. (12 June 2017). "Separating GiveWell and the Open Philanthropy Project".
  26. (August 2022). "Our Top Charities".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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