I can't articulate exactly what it is, but this leaves a bad taste in my mouth. Maybe it's that what you're saying only holds if there are brakes on the system- points after which you stop advocating people give money- but my impression is that either this never happens, or things move too fast for it to have a chance to happen. Certainly the politicians aren't saying "we have enough money, save it for the next guy".
I agree? This applies more to donating to orgs than donating to politicians. And regardless when my team recommends donating to politicians, usually we have a fundraising target after which we no longer recommend it (and sometimes we ask for pledges and then ask a subset of pledgers to donate, in order to hit the target and avoid using small donors unnecessarily), and other times we're like "this is one of the best opportunities; the optimal amount of money we could raise is more than we will actually be able to raise because there aren't enough small donors; everyone should donate (after donating to everything better and having a certain budget saved for future small-donor opportunities)." (Most of our recommendations are the former kind, but a donor might tend to hear about the latter kind because for the former we only need to tell a small set of donors while for the latter we're telling everyone who might be interested.)
Prospective donors often ask how cost-effective my team's various recommendations are — they want to donate to the most cost-effective opportunity. But the answer is often roughly:
This is a simplification:
But mostly when people ask "how good is this opportunity on the margin" to decide between opportunities we recommend, that's the wrong question.
We sometimes talk about the effectiveness of the first dollar or the average dollar to convey our excitement about an opportunity. But this shouldn't affect donors' decisions — e.g. you shouldn't wait for opportunities we're especially excited about; it all funges. (Total value matters to grantmakers; grantmakers generate value by recommending donation opportunities with total value much greater than their cost. But it's not relevant for marginal donors.)
Alternative framings are in this footnote.[3]
Thanks to Eric Neyman for suggestions.
This post is part of my sequence inspired by my prioritization research and donation advising work.
"Funge with" (or "funge against") means "substitute with" or "displace or be displaced by."
Our current bar is roughly $700M per 1% future-improvement for US direct political donations and $3B per 1% future-improvement for 501(c)(3) opportunities.
But for political donations, your first ~$50K/year is substantially more valuable, since it can go to opportunities where individual donations are capped and the constraint is the number of donors. For example, we might recommend: donate $7K to Alex Bores, then save $5K for unknown amazing future stuff, then donate $7K to Scott Wiener, then save a little more, then donate to the next best thing…
This post says: we have a political donation bar (and other bars for other kinds of money), and constraints like max $7K per donor or urgent can result in opportunities above the bar. Another framing is:
Another framing is: