As we set resolutions to achieve personal goals and give back, the beginning of the year is a time to envision the positive changes we can bring to the world in the months ahead. Shining a light on the power of doing good, it is a time to consider how we can extend our impact to do the most that we possibly can.
Globally, all countries have promised to fix all the world’s big issues by 2030, through the so-called Sustainable Development Goals. The world’s governments came together in 2015 to promise to end hunger, poverty, and disease, to fix corruption, climate change, and war, to ensure jobs, growth, and education along with a bewildering array of major and minor promises like developing more urban gardens. Unfortunately, this year even the UN admitted that we are failing badly. Promising everything means nothing is a priority.
We need to insist that our politicians get real in 2024 and focus first on the most efficient policies. And in our own, end-of-year donations, we should similarly look to achieve the most good we can for every dollar spent.
Together with my think-tank, the Copenhagen Consensus, in recent years I have worked with more than a hundred of the world’s top economists and several Nobel Laureates to discover where each of us can help the most first.
Our free, peer-reviewed findings, which can also be read in the book “Best Things First”, offer a road map for the 12 smartest initiatives for politicians around the world. They highlight proven solutions to persistent problems that deliver immense benefits at low cost. These are policies like delivering more mosquito nets to tackle malaria, nutritional supplements for pregnant women to boost the baby’s opportunities even before it is born, or better legal protection to ensure poor farmers’ rights over their land, increasing productivity.
In total, politicians could set aside just $35 billion a year — a rounding error in most global negotiations — to deliver immense benefits: implementing these 12 policies would save 4.2 million lives annually and make the poorer half of the world more than $1 trillion better off every year. On average, a dollar invested would deliver an astounding $52 of social benefits.
But just as these overarching goals should inspire and guide politicians, they can also guide us as we make our own, end-of-year donations to help make a better 2024.
“We need to insist that our politicians get real in 2024 and focus first on the most efficient policies”
We need to focus more on the tuberculosis epidemic. Tuberculosis has been treatable for more than 50 years, yet still kills more than 1.4 million people annually. The solution is quite straight-forward: Make sure more people get diagnosed and make it easier for patients to stay on their medication, which is needed for a grueling six months. Many organisations push for these simple solutions, and you can help them. We find that governments should similarly increase their funding. Just $6.2 billion annually can save a million lives a year over the coming decades. Each dollar delivers an amazing $46 of social benefits.
We also need to pay attention to cheap and efficient ways to increase learning for kids in schools. Shared tablets with educational software used just one hour a day cost only $31 per student over a year and result in learning that normally would take three years. Semi-structured teaching plans can make teachers teach more efficiently, doubling learning outcomes each year for just $9 per student.
As individuals, we can donate to organisations doing amazing work in these areas, across Africa and beyond. And governments could collectively dramatically improve education for almost half a billion primary school students in the world’s poorer half for less than $10 billion annually—to generate long-term productivity increases worth $65 for each dollar spent.
And we can help much more with maternal and child health. The research shows a simple package of policies that improve basic care and family planning access are incredibly powerful – and many organisations are working hard in these areas, today. If we could convince politicians to commit less than $5 billion annually, we could actually save the lives of 166,000 mothers and 1.2 million newborns annually.
Across all the 12 policies we identified, there are inspiring organisations doing incredible work. These are the areas where our donations—and any additional government spending—can have the biggest impact.
As the New Year kicks off, we are presented with an occasion to break free from the never-ending cycle of negativity. For 2024, let us resolve not only to help more, but to help better. In the twelve months ahead, let’s focus on making the most effective and impactful contributions to create a brighter world.
Bjorn Lomborg is the President of the Copenhagen Consensus Centre