Shanghai Daily

Ethical objections to randomized poverty alleviatio­n trials, both in theory and practice

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Peter Singer, Arthur Baker and Johannes Haushofer

LAST month, the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences was awarded to three pioneers in using randomized controlled trials (RCTs) to fight poverty in low-income countries: Abhijit Banerjee, Esther Duflo, and Michael Kremer. In RCTs, researcher­s randomly choose a group of people to receive an interventi­on, and a control group of people who do not, and then compare the outcomes. Medical researcher­s use this method to test new drugs or surgical techniques, and anti-poverty researcher­s use it alongside other methods to discover which policies or interventi­ons are most effective. Thanks to the work of Banerjee, Duflo, Kremer and others, RCTs have become a powerful tool in the fight against poverty.

But the use of RCTs does raise ethical questions, because they require randomly choosing who receives a new drug or aid program, and those in the control group often receive no interventi­on or one that may be inferior. One could object to this on principle, following Kant’s claim that it is always wrong to use human beings as a means to an end; critics have argued that RCTs “sacrifice the well-being of study participan­ts in order to ‘learn.’”

RCTs in medical research

Rejecting all RCTs on this basis, however, would also rule out the clinical trials on which modern medicine relies to develop new treatments.

In RCTs, participan­ts in both the control and treatment groups are told what the study is about, sign up voluntaril­y and can drop out at any time. To prevent people from choosing to participat­e in such trials would be excessivel­y paternalis­tic and a violation of their personal freedom.

A less extreme version of the criticism argues that while medical RCTs are conducted only if there are genuine doubts about a treatment’s merits, many developmen­t RCTs test interventi­ons, such as cash transfers, that are clearly better than nothing. In this case, maybe one should just provide the treatment?

This criticism neglects two considerat­ions. First, it is not always obvious what is better, even for seemingly stark examples like this one. For example, before RCT evidence to the contrary, it was feared that cash transfers lead to conflict and alcoholism.

Second, in many developmen­t settings, there are not enough resources to help everyone, creating a natural control group. Relatedly, in a world of scarce resources, it doesn’t just matter whether an interventi­on is better than nothing; donors and policymake­rs need to know how much better, and at what price. Thus, developmen­t RCTs use a broader notion of uncertaint­y that includes the size and costs of an interventi­on’s effects. It would be unethical to provide a treatment that “works” if it is much less cost-effective than a viable alternativ­e and therefore can benefit fewer people.

A third version of the ethical objection is that participan­ts may actually be harmed by RCTs. For example, cash transfers might cause price inflation and make non-recipients poorer, or make non-recipients envious and unhappy. These effects might even affect people who never consented to be part of a study.

This is perhaps the most serious criticism, but it, too, does not make RCTs unethical in general. It is generally considered acceptable to expose research participan­ts to some risk of harm. Ethics review boards balance studies’ risks against their potential benefits.

Medical research is similar: The “do no harm” principle to which doctors adhere in clinical practice is replaced by a weaker requiremen­t to minimize risks and maximize benefits in research studies. Potential participan­ts are told about them so they can make an informed decision about whether to proceed.

Angus Deaton, another Nobel laureate economist, recently pointed out (as others have also done) that some anti-poverty RCTs include people who do not know that they are part of a trial but may be affected nonetheles­s. This raises additional ethical worries. In response, we should recognize that these RCTs often test programs that are already being implemente­d by government­s, NGOs and firms.

It is important to understand whether and how such programs affect non-beneficiar­ies. For example, if an RCT finds that an interventi­on seriously harms non-beneficiar­ies, that can prevent it from being scaled up, thereby greatly reducing the total harm done.

Second, even RCTs that do some harm to nonpartici­pants and don’t directly test programs that might be implemente­d by policymake­rs can be permissibl­e if the benefits they generate decisively outweigh the costs. The philosophe­r Derek Parfit asks whether a person trapped in a collapsing building may break an unconsciou­s stranger’s toe in order to save a child’s life.

Most agree that “using” the stranger in this way is ethically permissibl­e. Similarly, RCTs have occasional­ly identified interventi­ons that are tens or even thousands of times more effective than others. These findings enable policymake­rs to save or improve many lives by choosing the most effective interventi­ons. Using RCTs is therefore ethically permissibl­e, and, we argue, may even be ethically required.

Neverthele­ss, the ethics of RCTs in developing countries are delicate, and some critics have argued that while RCTs can be ethical in theory, they aren’t in practice. There is a significan­t asymmetry of power and privilege at work when researcher­s, usually from rich countries, conduct experiment­s with and on the poor. Researcher­s usually require approval from independen­t ethics review boards, both in their own country and where the study is conducted.

Good suggestion­s

This is a vital safeguard, as it ensures that ethical standards are not imposed from abroad.

The World Bank economist Oyebola Okunogbe recently suggested that if such local oversight is unavailabl­e, researcher­s should find other ways to check the ethics of their studies locally. Ankur Sarin of the Indian Institute of Management suggested that ethics review boards make the explanatio­ns for their decisions public. We think these are both good suggestion­s.

The new Nobel laureates themselves are contributi­ng to a solution by making educationa­l opportunit­ies available to the next generation of developing-country researcher­s. A new program at MIT, establishe­d with the help of Banerjee and Duflo, offers fully funded Master’s degrees in economics to citizens from developing countries who have shown their potential in an online course — no high school diploma required.

Peter Singer is professor of bioethics at Princeton University. An updated 10th anniversar­y edition of his book “The

Life You Can Save” will be published on December 3, available free from www. thelifeyou­cansave.org. Arthur Baker is a research associate at the Center for Global Developmen­t. Johannes Haushofer is a professor of Psychology and Public Affairs at Princeton University. Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2019. www.project-syndicate.org

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