80,000 Hours Podcast

Village gossip, pesticide bans, and gene drives: 17 experts on the future of global health

Apr 7, 2026
Claire Walsh, J-PAL leader offering career tips; Mushtaq Khan, political-economy economist; Leah Utyasheva, researcher on pesticide bans; James Snowden, funder on moral tradeoffs; Alexander Berger, cause-prioritization strategist; Varsha Venugopal, community immunisation innovator; James Tibenderana, malaria and gene-drive expert; Lucia Coulter, lead-paint campaigner; Hannah Ritchie, agricultural data scientist; Rachel Glennerster, RCT specialist; Sarah Eustis-Guthrie, evaluator; Dean Spears, neonatal nutrition researcher; Karen Levy, governance consultant. They discuss pesticide bans, gene drives for malaria, boosting African farm productivity, lead-paint regulation, village influencers for vaccination, and how institutions and incentives shape what scales.
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INSIGHT

Cash Transfers Let Recipients Choose High‑Return Uses

  • GiveDirectly values recipient choice because locals best know high‑return investments and autonomy has intrinsic value.
  • Paul Niehaus: cash often funds durable assets like metal roofs with practical multifunctional benefits.
ADVICE

Align Charity Incentives With Beneficiary Outcomes

  • Align donor incentives to beneficiaries by measuring outcomes not outputs and reduce burdensome reporting.
  • Sarah Eustis‑Guthrie: charities are biased toward pleasing donors; shift power toward beneficiary‑facing metrics.
INSIGHT

High‑Value RCTs Test General Behavioural Rules

  • Well‑designed RCTs that test general behavioural theories yield broadly useful policy insights.
  • Rachel Glennerster: testing principles (e.g., price sensitivity, teaching at right level) is higher value than testing complex bundled programs.
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