Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

80,000 Hours

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Founded
  
October 2011

Origins
  
Oxford, England, UK

Focus
  
Social impact coaching

Area served
  
Worldwide

Founder
  
William MacAskill and Benjamin Todd

Product
  
Free, evidence-based career advice

80,000 Hours is an Oxford, UK-based organisation that conducts research on the careers with positive social impact and provides career advice. It provides this advice online, through one-on-one advice sessions and through a community of like-minded individuals. The organisation is part of the Centre for Effective Altruism, affiliated with the University of Oxford Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics. The organisation's name refers to the typical amount of time someone spends working over a lifetime. It was one of the nonprofits funded by startup accelerator Y Combinator in 2015.

Contents

Principles

According to 80,000 Hours, some careers aimed at doing good are far more effective than others. On their framework for assessing different career options, the value of a career is regarded as depending on both its potential for impact and on the degree to which it gives the individual better opportunities to have an impact in the future.

The group emphasises that the positive impact of choosing a certain occupation should be measured by the amount of additional good that is done as a result of this choice, not by the amount of good directly done. It considers indirect ways of making a difference, such as earning a high salary in a conventional career and donating a portion of it, as well as direct ways, such as scientific research. The moral philosopher Peter Singer mentions the example of banking and finance as a potentially high impact career through such donations in his TED Talk, "The why and how of effective altruism," where he discusses the work of 80,000 Hours.

Members

Members of 80,000 Hours must "use [their] career[s], at least in part, in an effective way to make the world a better place." The only formal requirement is that they report on their altruistic activities once a year. William MacAskill is the Founder and President of 80,000 Hours, the Co-founder and Vice-President of Giving What We Can, and a Research Associate at the Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics, Oxford University.

Criticism

80,000 Hours has promoted the idea that pursuing a high-earning career and donating a significant portion of the income to cost-effective charities can be an effective philanthropic strategy for some people. John Humphrys criticised this idea on the BBC Today programme, saying that people interested in becoming wealthy tend to be selfish and that idealistic young people will become cynical as they age.

This idea was also criticised in the Oxford Left Review, where Pete Mills wrote that lucrative careers perpetuate an unjust system. In addition, he argues that because the likelihood of bringing about social change is difficult to quantify, 80,000 Hours is biased toward quantifiable methods of doing good.

David Brooks of The New York Times has criticised the organisation for its consequentialist approach to altruism and has argued that cultivating altruism is not purely a matter of maximising one's positive social impact.

The effective altruism movement, of which 80,000 Hours is a part, has been strongly criticised by Ken Berger, the founder of Charity Navigator for its efforts to objectively compare and prioritize charitable causes, which he believes to be a subjective process that is the responsibility of individual donors. He refers to effective altruism as "defective altruism".

References

80,000 Hours Wikipedia