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Cody Kommers's avatar

What's your argument against doing grant lotteries? You mention Goodhart's law up front. But part of that idea is that if you replace suboptimal metrics with other metrics, people are just going to figure out other ways of optimizing for those new metrics. Even if they're fuzzier and less specific. So why not go all the way toward the unhackable? Maybe there's a comprise in there—with a threshold for who is a sufficiently trustworthy / competent applicant, or a weighted probability based on some subset of your proposed criteria.

The main problem that I have with your Trust Windfall argument is that it sounds, in essence, like the way being rich works. You get a little bit rich. This gets you closer to other rich people, who begin to trust you more. Then you get more rich, because they're in charge of the assets and these assets get allocated disproportionately to rich-adjacent you via trust. That totally seems like something you could hack! In your example, it's kind of like replacing one Lin-Manuel problem with another. The extent to which lots of people trust him is also going to go up after he won a Tony. So is the criteria to identify the trustworthy people who are most currently undervalued by the market, e.g., your gulag thespian friend?

To put my concern another way: you point out this is overtly based on choosing people who are your friends. I feel like people will either unconsciously choose in-group members / people they are interpersonally fond of; or they will try to address the unconscious bias and choose people who blatantly different from themselves. Both are hard to square with exactly how much they cloud of judgments of "merit". Curious to know what you think about that!

At any rate, I agree with the primary argument of your piece: Oxford degrees are useless.

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Rohit Krishnan's avatar

This is excellent! It's a cool idea and definitely deserving of at least a few turns of the evidence dice.

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