Does Vote Trading Improve Welfare?

Author:

Casella Alessandra1,Macé Antonin23

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Economics and Political Science, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027, USA;

2. Economics Department, École Normale Supérieure, 75230 Paris, France;

3. CNRS, Paris School of Economics, 75014 Paris, France

Abstract

Voters have strong incentives to increase their influence by trading votes, acquiring others’ votes when preferences are strong in exchange for giving votes away when preferences are weak. But is vote trading welfare improving or welfare decreasing? For a practice long believed to be central to collective decisions, the lack of a clear answer is surprising. We review the theoretical literature and, when available, its related experimental tests. We begin with the analysis of logrolling, the exchange of votes for votes. We then focus on vote markets, where votes can be traded against a numeraire. We conclude with procedures allowing voters to shift votes across decisions—that is, allowing one to trade votes with oneself only. We find that vote trading and vote markets are typically inefficient; more encouraging results are obtained by allowing voters to allocate votes across decisions.

Publisher

Annual Reviews

Subject

Economics and Econometrics

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