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by JamesBarney
1304 days ago
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> Impact in corporate law is not necessarily close to neutral at all. You may, for example be promoting income inequality and housing affordability issues by facilitating international investment funds buying up huge swathes of real estate in a city. This is debatable. If they are renting out the houses this could reduce rents which would improve the lives of the poor who rent much more often than own. If they are sitting on them it's much more likely to be negative. > You may be helping plutocrats syphon resources and public funds away from developing countries. I'll give you that you shouldn't earn to give by working for Gaddafi. I think the vast majority of EA would agree. The third rule at 80,000 hours the biggest proponent of earn to give is 3. Doesn’t cause harm And their actual recommendations given are Tech startup founder Quantitative trading Software engineering Startup early employee Data science Management consulting Marketing Actuarial science Executive search Nursing Allied health |
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> Startup early employee
Plenty of these have caused harm. Many modern startups have the explicit goal of "disrupting" traditional labor rights or unions.
> Marketing
There's so much variability here, ranging from pretty benign activities to outright lying to people's faces about health outcomes of dangerous products.
My larger point is not that marketers or tech founders are inherently evil people, but that the system is rotten. For example, despite all the charities and philanthropy going to undeveloped countries, the net flow of resource is out of these countries and into more developed ones[1]. Nothing about ETG seems to contradict these tendencies, if you work in actuarial science and help a company minimize the taxes they pay in South Africa, but then donate 50% of your paycheque back to charitable causes in the country, your actions have not been a net benefit to the people of that country.
[1] https://www.howwemadeitinafrica.com/actual-flow-resources-de...