Why Balsa Research is Worthwhile

Previously: Announcing Balsa Research

It is easy to see why improving government policy would be impactful. The part where one has a chance of pulling it off requires explanation. Here are four fair questions.

  1. Why believe there is an opening in what would appear to be a well-covered, highly crowded space of trained professionals pushing their preferred policies? 
  2. Why is this tractable or neglected? 
  3. What is the theory of change? 
  4. You?

Tell the Story So Far

My answer to all of these, as it is in most other places, has two central explanations.

  1. There are no adults. In most places, also no trained professionals. There are only a bunch of adaptation executors, rewarded when they are seen cutting the enemy rather than ensuring the enemy is cut, and for reinforcing the party line. 
  2. Where adults do exist, they do not have the right incentives. This causes them to mostly do things that don’t help solve the underlying problems. Existing organizations are instead focused on pleasing their donor bases and otherwise looking good. This makes them bad at generating effective solutions and at getting anything implemented. 

There are several entire ecosystems of think tanks and political activists seeking to make their case, have their voices heard and enact change. We have no shortage of such projects, from all sides: Left wing and right wing, statist, liberal and libertarian. Some generalize while others narrow their focus. 

Almost none of them are taking actions designed to cause change. That is not what gets them or their employees more status or more funding. That is not what their organizational memory or culture says to do.

This is why, from the perspective of someone looking for good policy as a result, such results seem to be few and far between, no matter one’s underlying preferences. When it comes time to choose policies on which to campaign or laws to enact, the choices and details reliably fail to seem to be anything approaching optimal and are often atrociously bad. They are not much informed by what preparatory work has been done. 

Recently I talked to a number of Democratic operatives, and all of them winced at most of what the party has been centrally attempting (often successfully) to pass, both on political and practical grounds.

When Republicans have had the power to pass legislation recently, they seem to have little idea how to in practice implement either general good governance or their own core principles. They have instead mostly focused on either looking tough on culture war issues and point making or trying to mechanically win future elections. 

When the time came to ‘repeal and replace’ the ACA, with years to prepare, the proposal that was voted on was the null proposal. No alternatives seem to have been seriously considered. 

Corporate tax reform was a top Republican priority forever. Its implementation was technically botched. 

With a new opportunity to pass abortion laws, we see once again that the research simply was not done, by anyone, on any side.

Leftist and statist organizations propose policy primarily on the basis of symbolism rather than whether the proposal would work in practice. Usually what they propose would sabotage the very cause they say they wish to promote if it were implemented. Often the motivations are various internal struggles.

Libertarian groups are good at pointing out the flaws in new proposals and existing laws. Alas, they mostly do not present these arguments in the forms or with the credibility that causes the system to listen. Everyone is tired of hearing it, often including me. Nor do they pack a sufficient lobbying punch. Nor do they sculpt proposals in ways that allow them to be picked up by the media or would make them popular with voters, or make them palatable enough to be seriously considered. 

Centrist-style thought is embodied by the Forward Party having zero policy stances at all. 

Effective altruist efforts have mostly chosen to hone in on a handful of narrow cause areas, neglecting the issues that impact elections and daily lives. It is too early to tell if those efforts will succeed on their own terms. 

Republicans seem to be post-policy, their groups doubly so.

The result, from all sides, is usually neither good policy for the country, good policy for the particular cause the group behind it cares about most, or even good politics, let alone all three. 

One can blame this on political practicalities. On lobbyists, individual lawmakers with leverage, various special interest groups and coalition members and the dynamics of primaries and increasing partisan division, the details of the filibuster rules and CBO scores and the echo chambers of Twitter and the mass media. On overworked and overwhelmed congressional staff and the impossibility of staying on top of all the issues while spending half one’s time fundraising and having to focus primarily on winning elections. Or on much of the work necessary to succeed being the type of long term, permanently private work for which no one can take credit.

These certainly make the problem harder. They also absorb almost all the money, which is spent fighting partisan battles. 

File these problems under Degree of Difficulty, and treat them for now as endogenous. 

You want to win? I say: Play better. 

A Better Way

What would one do differently, if one’s focus was not on who got the credit or which side was helped in a partisan struggle, but instead focused on what would improve the lives of citizens?

That means a full stack approach:

  1. Model the situation and figure out what would actually improve things. Use public writing both as an impetus to understand and to pass that knowledge onto others. Bring together a team, working partly in public, to understand the dynamics involved. Red team proposed solutions both politically and practically.
  2. Find solutions that balance improving things with the need for political viability, and for the likelihood a proposal survives political compromise while remaining effective. Assemble them into the Official Policy Binder (first draft currently in progress), and post sufficiently robust sections of it to the Official Solutions Website
  3. Quantify the gains (or avoided costs) in a way that is legible to the congress and to the media, in part via Proper Scientific Studies in the Proper Journals in the Proper Scientific Font by Credible Sources. Use as much officialness as is efficient and necessary in each case. Rather than doing this internally, reach out to and commission the right academics to do it, giving them a mission to find the real answers and publishing any negative results you find. They, too, are trapped by bad incentives, the need to publish or perish and ensure the flow of grants. The prices here are quite reasonable – one estimate for a comprehensive study on a key piece of harmful legislation in need of repeal, that has still somehow not been done, was only $75,000.  
  4. Collaborate during this process to figure out what else we can learn and quantify, and look for alternative approaches. I have found that often the most important implications of such work are not stated directly but instead need to be extracted and reasoned out, or require follow-ups, which reduces their punch greatly. Where feasible, this process should include running true experiments. One should not only rely on polls and focus groups and theorizing.
  5. Simultaneously, legislative language must be professionally drafted, red teamed and ensured to do what you want it to do. All congressional staff are massively overworked, you need to do this for them, and you need to ensure you get the thing you think you are getting. Plan ahead for how they will inevitably make it worse.
  6. With studies in hand, one is in a much better position to spread the word via the media and to pitch members of congress on the proposal and argue for it. Quantification via properly credible sources is a big game. One must play by rules of evidence. 
  7. To make it stick will require not only a lobbying effort but the ability to offer campaign support and good incentives. Lobbying effectively and ultimately helping support campaigns are more expensive than the previous steps, but still remarkably cheap compared to what is at stake and relative to potential funding sources. With a selfless positive agenda and a willingness to get involved in primaries the dollars will go farther, and ultimately even most politicians do want things to be better rather than worse. Do the work, find champions to do the work only members can do, support them. 
  8. Thus, the whole operation needs to be backed up, at some point, by a willingness to coordinate support, especially in primaries and also in general elections, to candidates that share the general agenda. 
  9. Wins beget wins, building momentum, as the coalition for good things is emboldened, learns to coordinate and gets more positive vibes. Thus it’s fine to start small.

Or in share-this-list-on-social-media list form:

  1. Model the world. Find improvements that balance viability with physical impact.
  2. Compile options into Official Policy Binder and Official Solutions Website.
  3. Commission proper academic work to credibly quantify impacts on all fronts.
  4. Use this as an opportunity to run experiments and learn more.
  5. Draft model legislation. 
  6. Spread the world via media and writing.
  7. Lobby. Pitch members of Congress and their staff. Do the work. Find champions.
  8. Back this up with the ability to support campaigns to help gather support.
  9. Start small if necessary. Wins beget wins.
  10. Profit.

To be most effective will require coordinating and implementing this full stack, but the individual steps are valuable on their own. Each represents an important missing piece and multiplier. In some cases some of the steps are done for us, and we can provide complements.

I believe that I bring a unique skill set, mindset, world model and brand that will be a great asset with the modeling and research parts of the program, figuring out what we can assert and how we can assert it. I have positioned myself to keep things focused on cutting the right enemy.

It is up to you to decide how much of that you agree with, based on what I have done so far.

For the parts that are not my comparative advantage, which ultimately will be most things, I am not only willing but eager to build a team and pass as much as possible off to them, including the credit. The goal is to do something, not be someone.

Gathering Support

There is a great hunger for a way to turn money into a combination of (1) a government that works better and implements pro-growth, pro-humans-and-living-life, technically sound policies on the margin, and convincing politicians to stand up for this positive vision and (2) stopping Donald Trump and others who turn to election denialism and authoritarianism, of whatever flavor. There is also an increasing acknowledgement that goal (1), in addition to being valuable in its own right, is vital to securing goal (2). 

It is also necessary for (3), enabling the economic dynamics and culture necessary to allow us to reasonably address an increasing array of things inside and outside of government. Growing the pie and returning to prosperity gives everything room to breathe, and everyone freedom to think.

I have found this hunger especially strong among those who have earned themselves quite a lot of money, only to find themselves in a world where they are implicitly told that they can only spend their new wealth in ways that do not matter – that they are helpless to turn it into the Doing of Things.

By focusing first on and funding first the non-campaign, fully non-partisan steps of getting the policy house in order and setting an actually effective and politically practical positive agenda in motion that would improve the lived experience of the average American, we can bring in support from those with an understandable reluctance to start funding zero-sum political fights and taking a public stance. 

I believe there is tremendous leverage in ultimately going after the biggest cause of them all. One does not need either large odds of success nor anything like a full realization of ambitions to make the cause worthwhile many times over. While the problem may not seem tractable or neglected, I am arguing here it is both those; compared to the stakes, the problem is remarkably tractable and neglected even if you give people highly generous credit for trying. Once one digs further into the dynamics, it is all far more tractable and neglected than it looks. Nor does any of this seem out of place on reflection. 

Another advantage of this approach is that it can fall under someone’s ‘fund the universities and research and general neutrally good things’ money bucket, rather than having to go into a partisan political bucket. One can do this without ‘taking a side.’ 

That holds true whether one is donating money, spending time and lending one’s expertise and knowledge, or anything else. Once again, if you would like to assist this effort in any way, including being happy to answer questions about the areas you know best, do not hesitate to contact us at hello@balsaresearch.com or by filling out this Google Form. I’ve been overwhelmed by the quantity and quality of those reaching out so far, so it might be a bit before you hear back, but I will strive to get back to everyone as soon as I can. 

In the short term, with this tsunami of people eager to get involved, the most valuable resource is my time. The biggest need is to find the right one or two people who can serve as force multipliers on my time, either via being a research assistant to whom I can offload intellectual subtasks and get to coordinate work, an executive assistant, or both. We also want to find people with experience in scaling research efforts so we can let experts contribute in the areas and ways they know best. If you are or think you know the right person for any or all of this, whether or not that person is you, please do not hesitate to get in touch. 

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23 Responses to Why Balsa Research is Worthwhile

  1. Doug S. says:

    Obviously the Jones Act basically banning shipping between US ports is a bad thing, but on the “politically feasible” level, what do we say when someone trots out bullshit like this, this, or this?

    • TheZvi says:

      It’s pretty easy to make up that sort of thing whenever you want in support of literally anything. It’s not like that is convincing anyone of anything beyond ‘the rent seekers behind this care about their rents.’ That’s a problem, but far from an infinite one.

  2. hnau says:

    This answers exactly the questions I had about Balsa after the announcement. Very encouraging! Just a few thoughts.

    > I believe there is tremendous leverage in ultimately going after the biggest cause of them all.

    Is this intentionally vague or am I missing something?

    > Republicans seem to be post-policy, their groups doubly so.

    As a non-Trump-voting Republican I have to admit this is an accurate, and fairly damning, diagnosis. If I were to steelman the Republican position here, it would be: “In our experience, political programs that claim to pursue more efficient / rational policy– and don’t kid yourself, that _is_ a political program– can’t be trusted to respect our value-based red lines in the long run.” Given the rationalist-sphere cultural background of Balsa you might want to have an answer for that. Unless you think Republican institutions have gone past the point of being able to accept such answers– which is unfortunately plausible to me.

    • J.S. Bangs says:

      I’m sort of the opposite: non-Republican, but Trump-sympathetic (in theory; in practice Trump was a dud). The issue is that every ostensibly “neutral” or “scientific” source of expertise has been converted into a front for left-leaning social causes, and this fact is common knowledge (everybody knows that everybody knows it). In hostile framing this gets spun as Republicans being “against the concept of expertise”, but to put the idea in the language of Zvi’s post, the reality is that the Republicans know that there are no adults in the room, and that those pretending to be so are using their “expertise” as a way to discredit opposition to their programme. In this environment it is adaptive and rational to assume that all designated experts are enemy agents.

      The problem with the Republicans, of course, is that they don’t have an alternate source of *real* expertise, so their only option is raw denialism.

      Bringing this back to Balsa: the problem you’re going to have is that once you actually start acting you will face *intense* pressure to align yourself with the causes and shibboleths which are already dominant in the rat-adjacent/EA-adjacent social milieu, which will quickly convert you into just another Democrat-aligned advocacy org. I am reminded of Vox, which started out with a vision for non-partisan data journalism, but was very quickly corrupted into being a soft-leftist propaganda rag just like every other news outlet.

      Therefore, the default outcome for Balsa is that it become indistinguishable from any other Democratic think tank within a few years. It will require great willpower and tremendous luck to avoid that fate. With total sincerity, I wish you the best of luck.

    • magic9mushroom says:

      “The biggest cause of them all” is presumably meant to indicate the US government, #1 or #2 in both size and power of all organisations in the world.

      (Whether it’s #1 or #2 varies depending on metric; the Chinese government is ahead on some but not all metrics.)

  3. Purplehermann says:

    You seem to think that having a prosperous society is good because Trump will do worse in a prosperous society.
    You’re either playing the political game already or you’ve got TDS, which isn’t going to help you be an ‘adult’ in the room.

    • hnau says:

      Eh, I read it in a Straussian way. It’s not _wrong_ that a prosperity agenda would decrease Trump’s appeal. Needless to say that’s not why Zvi & co. are doing it– they want it for its own sake, or at least for different cultural reasons– but it’s a good line to take with the political forces that might give them money.

      • Purplehermann says:

        Zvi has phrased things in this manner, apparently quite seriously, more than once now. I hope you’re right and he’s just method acting.

    • magic9mushroom says:

      Trump had/has three unfortunate qualities from a non-partisan POV.

      1) Trump wasn’t very good at making the US government do things, which is pretty relevant if you want things to get done.
      2) Trump is exceedingly divisive (more so since 6/1/2021), which is not good in the commander-in-chief because of fifth-columnist issues in a war situation and also because of the civil war possibility
      3) Trump was old when he started and is older now; a President over 70 is generally not good because of the stress of the job and the problems if a President dies during a crisis.

      Of course, Hillary Clinton had an almost-equally-bad case of problem #2 and an equally-bad case of problem #3, and Biden has a worse case of problem #3; improving the quality of the field all around in terms of “is this person actually qualified for leading the West in a potential WWIII” would be good.

      (NB: Zvi has a policy of silence when his options for speech are “false” and “personally damaging”; a careful look at which comments he conspicuously doesn’t respond to is often as informative as his actual comments.)

    • Itamar Levy-Or says:

      As others have said I believe Zvi is in favor of a prosperity agenda for it’s own sake. I think it’s hard to argue in good faith that Zvi has TDS. Zvi has repeatedly given Trump credit for one of the most important policy achievements of the decade, and acknowledged that replacement level presidents would have likely had two much respect for red tape to achieve the same outcome with operation warp speed. One can acknowledge this while still observing that Trump is a danger to society with authoritarian tendencies.

      • TheZvi says:

        I will simply say to anyone reading such threads: I value prosperity and abundance for their own sake. Better things are better, worse things are worse, more people should be better off. Things being better also has many beneficial secondary effects. If you do not believe that I inherently value better things and the world being better over worse things and the world being worse, then I do not know why you should spend your time reading what I write at this point or why you should believe anything else I say, either.

        • Purplehermann says:

          Valuing the world being better for its own sake, and being willing to make a cost/benefit analysis on whatever topic you’re looking at are big parts of why I read your blog.

          The way you’ve been writing these posts has been weird, with a tone implying that good things are good *mainly because* they serve some Democrat interest. I don’t know if you’re trying to come off that way on purpose or not, and I’ll trust that you still care about the good for its own sake.

          (PS I would expect zvi to manage to point out positive things trump has done while having tds. )

        • Ninety-Three says:

          Interestingly, this does not refute allegations of playing political games or having Trump Derangement Syndrome.

  4. AnonCo says:

    Really excited to see what Balsa can accomplish!

    Question:

    Say I accept everything you say here regarding think tanks and policy wonks.

    I often have the experience of listening to a podcast guest on CWT, Dishcast, Coleman, Honestly, etc where their career boils down to Academic > now Think tank who “works on policy” blah blah blah.

    Knowing I cannot consume and carefully consider everything, it now seems like a reasonable shortcut to update to something like:

    “policy wonk, can safely ignore, has no bearing or experience on real world getting things done. Maybe even net negative because removed from reality”

    Thoughts?

    • TheZvi says:

      Depends why you are listening. They can certainly Know Things, and often do – if they’re on CWT I wouldn’t skip them. And Academics also by default don’t impact things much. Still, one must understand this big limitation.

  5. David Speyer says:

    Matt Yglesias’s column this morning points out that the permitting regulations if you want to drill into the ground to make a geothermal power station are MORE restrictive than if you want to drill for oil. I know nothing more than he wrote, but this seems like the sort of terrible incentives Balsa should be interested in fixing. https://www.slowboring.com/p/we-need-permitting-reform-for-geothermal

    • TheZvi says:

      Yeah. This has been on our radar for a while and keeps coming up. It actually wasn’t this way in the original bills in question and was changed at the last minute for (as far as I know) unknown reasons to exclude geothermal, and it’s stand to include fixing this on the list of low hanging fruit.

  6. Basil Marte says:

    Does “death to pennies; they should die in a fire i.e. be melted down because their metal content is sometimes worth more than their face value, and more importantly, they are worth too little to be a functional medium of exchange” count as a neglected cause? Discontinuing the $1 bill in favor of the already-introduced-decades-ago $1 coin (because the benefits of such a replacement were already understood at the time)?

    • TheZvi says:

      I don’t think so? We’re rapidly using cash a lot less and I doubt there is that much win there, nor do I think it would do the psychological thing we would want.

  7. Ninety-Three says:

    You talk a lot about stopping Trump for someone claiming not to take a side. I understand this to mean “We’re going to fundraise from Trump-deranged liberals with our left hand and policy wonk moderates with our right”, but what are you doing saying that in public? If you’re going to adopt two different messaging strategies they need to actually be different strategies, say both parts in the same place and people will notice. What are you doing here?

  8. Itamar Levy-Or says:

    I’m very excited for Balsa Research, but I remain skeptical of the prospects of success — this of course doesn’t mean it’s a bad bet or not worthwhile +EV. I am most concerned about where theory meets practice, especially considering that this isn’t where your team currently has a comparative advantage. To that end, who specifically are you comparing yourself to, and what can you learn from them?

    The best people at any game with high stakes and lots of players are bound to be quite good. The best players simply don’t have the same agenda as yourself. That is we should separate competence from goals when analyzing politics. The evangelical right for example has been very effective at pursuing their anti abortion agenda. Israel while clearly losing the culture war on campuses has clearly been extremely effective at pursing its interests in congress. The NRA despite being a clearly dysfunctional and corrupt organization, has also been effective at pursuing its second amendment agenda. Similarly the Gay rights movement has also been very effective. I think we’re currently seeing the YIMBY movement making great strides. The list goes on and on. All of these groups have gotten at least a little lucky, and some might attribute all of their success to luck, and others might yet still see all of their progress lost in the coming years, but within them there are must be some people who know what they are doing, and I think it would behoove you to find out who and learn from them.

    I’m a little concerned about the full stack approach in so far as it feels a little banal. If you asked a group of smart people to come up with a list of steps to achieve good policy goals, I would think they would come up with a fairly similar list, and yet pushing good policy is still really hard. This leads me to believe that you haven’t yet identified the hard part, the great filter. In large part as others have pointed out I think you will likely hit a brick wall of incentives eg. “once you actually start acting you will face *intense* pressure to align yourself with the causes and shibboleths which are already dominant”. All of movements I listed above are narrowly focused, which is not a coincidence. The more structure you impose on a set the smaller it becomes. This becomes a problem both in passing policy, but also in building a team.

    The policy issue is obvious. The policy hydra will support your reform in its bill, but will also support two new rents. Now you have a difficult decision, even if you work out the cost benefit to be negative, you have intense pressure to pass the bill. At the end of the day you too are graded on passing legislation, and fighting a bill you helped in part create is not a good look. Passing no legislation is obviously a failure, while passing net negative legislation may or may not be a failure depending on spin.

    Building an effective team comes with its own challenges. Staying small is useful for the usual reasons, large company disease is real, but you have the countervailing pressure of politics where big tents and legwork is necessary. To add onto this, each additional person adds a risk of watering down your policy missions which are quite broad meaning there’s more likely to be a conflict. An official policy binder is a good start, but I suspect not enough. Theres lots of approaches to solving this problem, but I have no idea which is correct. The Stalinist top down approach stifles innovation, and is generally a bad time for everyone. Big tent democrat approach waters down your agenda to replacement level. I’m really at a loss as to how to solve this problem.

    Very excited to see where this goes, but still not convinced you’ve identified and solved the hard problem.

  9. TANSTAAFL says:

    I don’t see how it helps your goals to be explicitly anti-Trump. TDS or not, it undermines non-partisan aspect.
    On a practical side, Daylight Savings Time appears to offer some low-hanging fruit. A bunch of states want DST year-round, the Senate passed a bill allowing them to, the House can’t be bothered.

    • magic9mushroom says:

      Seems like there’d be a bunch of externalities there with the changing time-zone borders, so not obviously positive-sum.

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