Coefficient Giving's work is split across 13 funds, each of which is focused on a particular area. Each fund pools money from multiple donors and directs it toward what Coefficient Giving believes to be the most promising opportunities in its areas.
Abundance and Growth In 2025, the organization launched the Abundance and Growth Fund in partnership with Good Ventures,
Patrick Collison, and other donors. The fund will dedicate $120 million over three years to accelerate economic growth and boost scientific and technological progress, building on Coefficient Giving's previous work in housing and innovation policy.
Air Quality Coefficient Giving's support for global public health policy includes work to mitigate lead exposure, reduce
air pollution in India and other South Asian countries, which kills roughly 2 million people in the region each year.
Biosecurity and Pandemic Preparedness Coefficient Giving's work on
biosecurity and
pandemic preparedness includes support for disease surveillance, restrictions on
gain-of-function research, and the development of next-generation
personal protective equipment. Notable grantees include the
Bipartisan Commission on Biodefense, the
Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security, and the
World Health Organization. Program staff at the Biosecurity and Pandemic Preparedness Fund helped to convene a group of scientists to discuss potential risks from the creation of
mirror bacteria. This work was eventually published in
Science. Some have claimed that by "flooding" money into biosecurity, Coefficient Giving is "absorbing much of the field's experienced research capacity, focusing the attention of experts on this narrow, extremely unlikely, aspect of biosecurity risk" (i.e., biological
global catastrophic risks).
Effective Giving and Careers The Effective Giving and Careers Fund aims to "empower people to use their careers and donations to help others as much as possible." It supports organizations that encourage impact-focused career choices and charitable donations. Notable grantees include
Founders Pledge and
Giving What We Can.
Farm Animal Welfare The Farm Animal Welfare Fund supports reforming cruel practices on
factory farms, developing technologies to reduce animal pain and suffering, and promoting the development and adoption of
alternative proteins in hopes of reducing meat consumption. Coefficient Giving has been called "the world's biggest funder of farm animal welfare." Notable grantees include
The Humane League,
Mercy for Animals, and the
Good Food Institute.
Forecasting Coefficient Giving's Forecasting program works to enable the creation of "high-quality forecasts on questions relevant to high-stakes decisions". Notable grantees include
Philip Tetlock and
Metaculus.
Global Aid Policy Coefficient Giving's Global Aid Policy program supports efforts to increase aid spending and improve the cost-effectiveness of existing aid programs. Notable grantees include the
Joep Lange Institute, the
Center for Global Development, and the
Clinton Health Access Initiative.
Global Catastrophic Risks Opportunities This fund is dedicated to addressing
global catastrophic risks (GCRs) — threats that have the potential to "cause severe or even irreversible harm to humans on a global scale". While other Coefficient funds focus specifically on risks from AI and biotechnology, this fund supports cross-cutting and foundational work to build capacity for addressing GCRs more generally (e.g. helping people find jobs where they can work full-time on GCR mitigation, or building up related academic fields). Notable grantees include the
Centre for Effective Altruism,
Kurzgesagt, and several academics funded to develop courses on relevant topics.
Global Growth The Global Growth Fund supports work to “accelerate economic growth and reduce poverty in low- and middle-income countries [LMICs].” It explores strategies like increasing export-oriented manufacturing, developing trade links between advanced economies and LMICs, and supporting economics experts who live in LMICs to work as policy advisors.
Global Health & Wellbeing Opportunities This fund supports “evidence-backed interventions to improve health and wellbeing for people around the world”, including efforts to prevent malaria, promote routine vaccinations, and scale up
water chlorination efforts to reduce the spread of waterborne diseases. Notable grantees include the
Malaria Consortium,
New Incentives, and
Evidence Action.
Lead Exposure Action Fund In 2024, the organization launched the Lead Exposure Action Fund in collaboration with partners including Good Ventures and the
Gates Foundation. The fund has committed $100 million toward reducing lead exposure, approximately doubling the amount of global philanthropic spending on lead reduction. Coefficient Giving is also a founding member of the Partnership for a Lead-Free Future, a public-private partnership aimed at ending childhood lead poisoning. Other founding members include
UNICEF and
USAID.
Navigating Transformative AI The Navigating Transformative AI Fund is a leading supporter of research on
AI alignment and other work aimed at reducing
existential risk from advanced artificial intelligence. The organization believes that
artificial general intelligence could “soon outperform humans in nearly all cognitive domains”, which could “benefit people enormously” or “pose serious risks from misuse, accidents, loss of control, and other problems.” Ajeya Cotra, at the time a researcher at Coefficient Giving (now at
METR), has said that "a lens that [she uses] to think about the A.I. revolution is that it will play out like the Industrial Revolution but around 10 times faster." Notable grantees include the
Center for Security and Emerging Technology, the
Alignment Research Center, and
Mila.
Science and Global Health R&D Projects funded by Coefficient Giving's Scientific Research program include efforts to create new vaccines and antivirals, develop new scientific tools and techniques, and fund fellowship programs and conference travel for young scientists. Notable grantees include
David Baker,
Sherlock Biosciences, and the
International Vaccine Institute.
Past focus areas Past focus areas of Coefficient Giving (before its move from “focus areas” to “funds”) have included: •
Criminal justice reform (which spun out as a new organization in 2021) • U.S.
macroeconomic stabilization policy (which ceased to be a focus in 2021, though European macroeconomic policy grants have been made more recently) • Immigration policy (which ceased to be a focus in 2022). ==References==