New podcast episode: Making cost-effective grants amid uncertainty

By GiveWell @ 2025-04-23T22:21 (+31)

The US government has historically spent approximately $12 billion to $15 billion annually in foreign assistance dedicated to global health. The funding cuts announced in the first few months of 2025 disrupted the global health landscape and created the possibility of enormous funding gaps that are still coming into focus. In response, GiveWell has approved around $18 million in grants to support urgent needs—but why has our research led us not to grant more funds yet?

In today’s episode, the third in our series examining the impact of these cuts, GiveWell CEO and co-founder Elie Hassenfeld is joined by Director of Research Teryn Mattox to explore this question. Building on our previous conversations about program disruptions and emergency responses, they dive into the nuanced reality of the current funding landscape and GiveWell’s evidence-based approach to grantmaking during uncertainty.

 

Listen to Episode 3: Making Cost-Effective Grants Amid Uncertainty

This episode was recorded on Tuesday, April 15, 2025 and represents our best understanding at that time.

 

Elie and Teryn discuss: 

GiveWell is actively identifying funding opportunities and recommending grants to help with urgent situations, but we are now primarily concerned with predicting and planning for likely significant cuts in the upcoming US government fiscal year, and with gathering the resources needed to respond. We’ve formed a “rapid response team” to quickly assess urgent funding gaps, and we are considering a “learn by giving” approach in promising new areas to build organizational knowledge while addressing immediate needs.

Visit our USAID Funding Cuts webpage to learn more about our response and how you can help, and listen or subscribe to our podcast for the latest updates.


Mo Putera @ 2025-04-24T07:59 (+4)

I thought the USAID Funding Cuts webpage buried the lede a bit given the stated purpose of the page is to "answer the most common question we’re hearing right now: How can donors help?", so in case it helps, GW's answer is "If you want to help respond to this situation, donating to our funds based on your giving preference remains our recommendation."

(Bit tangential, but I noticed the karma on this post drop from 17 to 9 within 3 minutes and wondered why the strong(?) downvote—a single downvote seems more plausible in 3 mins than a sudden flurry. Curious if strong-downvoters can say why.)

Jason @ 2025-04-24T13:40 (+4)

Wasn't me, but accidentally upgrading one's vote to a strongvote on mobile isn't difficult. So the possibility of the karma drop being from reversion of a strong upvote vs. being from a strong downvote should be considered.