Corruption in Committees: An Experimental Study of Information Aggregation through Voting

We investigate experimentally the effects of corrupt experts on information aggregation in committees. We find that nonexperts are significantly less likely to delegate through abstention when there is a probability that experts are corrupt. Such decreased abstention, when the probability of corrupt...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of public economic theory 2015-08, Vol.17 (4), p.553-579
Hauptverfasser: MORTON, REBECCA B., TYRAN, JEAN-ROBERT
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We investigate experimentally the effects of corrupt experts on information aggregation in committees. We find that nonexperts are significantly less likely to delegate through abstention when there is a probability that experts are corrupt. Such decreased abstention, when the probability of corrupt experts is low, actually increases information efficiency in committee decision‐making. However, if the probability of corrupt experts is large, the effect is not sufficient to offset the mechanical effect of decreased information efficiency due to corrupt experts. Our results demonstrate that the norm of “letting the expert decide” in committee voting is influenced by the probability of corrupt experts, and that influence can have, to a limited extent, a positive effect on information efficiency.
ISSN:1097-3923
1467-9779
DOI:10.1111/jpet.12153