Effective Altruism in New York City: Introduction

By Rockwell, Arthur Malone🔸, Alex Rahl-Kaplan 🔸, MeganNelson 🔸 @ 2023-07-25T19:46 (+35)

This post was co-written by the EA NYC team: Arthur Malone, Alex Rahl-Kaplan, Megan Nelson, and Rocky Schwartz

This post is part of the new Forum Sequence EA in NYC. Our central thesis is that NYC is already home to a flourishing EA community and we recommend that the EA community as a whole invests more into leveraging the city's unique impact potential. We explore how we came to believe this below and in subsequent posts.

Introduction

In May of this year, EA NYC turned ten, and in August New York will host its first official EA conference, EAGxNYC (applications still open until July 31)! Inspired by these milestones, we’re sharing a series of posts detailing our community, our approach to community building, and our larger goals.

We've found that EAs outside of NYC often know surprisingly little about our community here. This contrasts the EA Survey consistently finding that NYC is the city with the third-highest number of respondents. And while some in the community joke we should keep EA NYC low-profile, lest we get invaded by EAs from other locales, NYC itself is far from low-profile by its very nature. And we actually really love newcomers! So we’d like to spotlight the incredible work being done here and hopefully provide some context and guidance for other local groups as they grow. 

The first post in this new sequence is about our community health infrastructure and can be found here. And, if this series inspires you to check out our little town, we’ve also just published a guide to visiting NYC.

A group photo from EA NYC's 10th birthday and Annual Picnic!

In future posts, we intend to cover questions including:

We also welcome feedback on topics you would find valuable for us to cover.

To kick things off, let's first take a stab at answering a foundational question:

What makes NYC important to EA?

New York City has an overwhelming presence in relevant EA domains. The statistics below only gesture toward the available resources. In NYC, no one industry dominates; and as we'll show in later posts, in the EA NYC community, no one cause area dominates. Instead, NYC is a massive, dynamic metropolis positioned for high-impact initiatives that cross cause areas, industries, and academic disciplines.

In later posts that describe EA NYC’s current strategy and programming, we will address how we are working to leverage these significant and unique resources. We will also detail a call to action for local EAs as well as the broader EA movement. We believe this small snapshot illustrates the untapped potential in New York City for EA impact, which requires more investment to fully utilize.

In our next post, we will discuss what makes for an EA Hub, how NYC holds up to some suggested standards, and why a deliberate focus on geographic areas could be useful to the EA movement.

  1. ^

    We are not at all trying to overstate or claim that NYC "does more tech" than the Bay; by relevant metrics (e.g. total funding, number of established companies, perception among tech workers and by the general public) the Bay clearly dominates. Our linked statistics here are to demonstrate that despite the Bay's clear lead, NYC's tech ecosystem is also quite substantial and growing relative to other locations.


Abby Hoskin @ 2023-07-30T10:46 (+22)

I have been excited about NYC having more of a longtermist presence for a long time ;) Thanks for pointing out some of NYC's unique features/comparative advantages.

I would also add: there are just a ton of people who live within commuting distance to central NYC (like 20 million). 
-Having a strong EA presence in a populous city seems like an efficient way to market our ideas to a bunch of people. 
-NYC being high population density makes it an attractive place for people to live; odds are you can live near a bunch of your friends/family, and there will be lots of employment opportunities for non-EA partners. 
-36% of NYC residents were not born in the USA. NYC is super friendly to immigrants, which makes it an attractive place for the world's best and brightest. 

Arthur Malone @ 2023-07-25T20:35 (+5)

As the primary author who looked for citations, I want to flag that while I think it is great to cite sources and provide quantitative evidence when possible, I have a general wariness about including the kinds of links and numbers I chose here when trying to write persuasive content.

Even if one tries to find true and balanced sources, the nature of searching for answers to questions like “What percentage of US philanthropic capital flows through New York City based institutions?” or “How many tech workers are based in the NYC-metro area compared to other similar cities?” is likely to return a skewed set of results. Where possible, I tried to find sources and articles that were about a particular topic and just included NYC among all relevant cities over sources that were about NYC.

Unfortunately, in some cases the only place I could find relevant data was in a piece trying to make a story about NYC. I think this is bad because of incentives to massage or selectively choose statistics to sell stories. You can find a preponderance of news stories selling the idea that “X city is taking over the Bay as the new tech hub” catering to the local audience in X, so the existence of such an article is poor evidence that X is actually the important, up-and-coming, tech hub. That said, if X actually was a place with a reasonable claim to being the important, up-and-coming, tech hub, you would expect to see those same articles, so the weak evidence is still in favor. 

I am trying to balance the two conflicting principles of “it is good to include evidence” and “it is difficult to tell what is good evidence when searching for support for a claim” by including this disclaimer. The fundamental case made in the sequence is primarily based on local knowledge and on dozens-to-hundreds of conversations I’ve had after spending many years in both the Bay and NYC EA communities, not on the relatively-quickly sourced links I included here to try to help communicate the case to those without the direct experience.