Voting Agendas and Preferences on Trees: Theory and Practice

We study how parliaments and committees select one out of several alternatives when options cannot be ordered along a “left-right” axis. Which voting agendas are used in practice, and how should they be designed? We assume that preferences are single peaked on a tree and study convex agendas where,...

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Veröffentlicht in:American economic journal. Microeconomics 2022-11, Vol.14 (4), p.583-615
Hauptverfasser: Kleiner, Andreas, Moldovanu, Benny
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We study how parliaments and committees select one out of several alternatives when options cannot be ordered along a “left-right” axis. Which voting agendas are used in practice, and how should they be designed? We assume that preferences are single peaked on a tree and study convex agendas where, at each stage in the voting process, the tree of remaining alternatives is divided into two subtrees that are subjected to a Yes-No vote. We show that strategic voting coincides with sincere, unsophisticated voting. Based on inference results and revealed preference arguments, we illustrate the empirical implications for two case studies.
ISSN:1945-7669
1945-7685
DOI:10.1257/mic.20200147