Week 9 - Voting Flashcards
Political failures
Political failures occur when the actions taken by the government do not maximise a social welfare function and may create inefficiency
What is one of the political failures that exist in almost every country?
Corruption.
Moves money to those ppl with “connections” & creates bad incentives
4 axioms/agreeable criteria of Arrow’s (impossibility) theorem
Arrow proved that that there is no consistent social welfare function that will ALWAYS respect ALL 4 of his agreeable procedures, thus cannot set up a voting system that can avoid political failures
- Unrestricted domain - we should be able to apply the reasoning of the SWF to any policy and any type of preferences
- Non-dictatorship - societal ranking should not be implied by a single person’s ranking
- Pareto principle - if everyone prefers policy A to policy B the ranking should reflect this (A should be before B)
> ranking should reflect the preferred policy - Independence of irrelevant alternatives (IIA) - the ranking between 2 policies should depend only on the individual preferences over those policies
IIA violation
Where one person’s change in ranking would change societal outcome
- If ranking changed due to changing preferences over 1 person, even though the preferences/scores for others didn’t change
> Arrow’s theorem is saying whether Slutskaya skated before or after shouldn’t have flipped the ranking
Borda count
- measuring the sum of rankings instead of the intensity of preferences
- there is potential IIA violation but not always
Condorcet winner & Condorcet cycle
Condorcet winner - the option that wins the MAJORITY of pairwise comparisons
- if exist, there is a STABLE outcome
If no, we get a Condorcet cycle. No stable outcome.
Downsian politics
- About parties deciding where to set up political economies (left vs right) on the spectrum, according to Hotelling’s law
- (strong) assumption that parties only care about winning the election
- Voters will vote for the candidates offering the policy closest to their ideal
Median voter theorem
+ its issue
Political parties tend to converge to the middle option b/c there are no profitable deviations that allow them to win the election.
- the median option is the Condorcet winner, Nash equilibrium
Rmb that welfare should be judged based on a Social Welfare Function - it may or may not coincide with what the median voter wants!
eg. groups A and C’s preferences are not considered
3 main functions of a government
- Taxation
- Regulation
- Spending