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Conclave

Conclave
Conclave
A committee is choosing between two alternatives. If the required supermajority is not reached, voting is repeated indefinitely, although there is a cost to delay. Under suitable assumptions the equilibrium analysis provides a sharp prediction. The result can be interpreted as a generalization of the seminal median voter theorem known from the simple majority case. If a supermajority is required instead, the power to select the outcome moves from the median voter to the more extreme voters. Normative analysis indicates that, in the utilitarian sense, simple majority is strictly inferior to some supermajorities. Even if unanimity is a bad voting rule, voting rules close to unanimity may be efficient. The more likely it is to have very many almost indifferent voters and some very opinionated ones, the more stringent a supermajority is required for efficiency.
supermajority, qualified majority, repeated voting, conclave, war of attrition
0014-2921
258-275
Kwiek, Maksymilian
84ba7dab-b54b-4d22-8cf3-817b2a2077cf
Kwiek, Maksymilian
84ba7dab-b54b-4d22-8cf3-817b2a2077cf

Kwiek, Maksymilian (2014) Conclave. European Economic Review, 70, 258-275. (doi:10.1016/j.euroecorev.2014.05.004).

Record type: Article

Abstract

A committee is choosing between two alternatives. If the required supermajority is not reached, voting is repeated indefinitely, although there is a cost to delay. Under suitable assumptions the equilibrium analysis provides a sharp prediction. The result can be interpreted as a generalization of the seminal median voter theorem known from the simple majority case. If a supermajority is required instead, the power to select the outcome moves from the median voter to the more extreme voters. Normative analysis indicates that, in the utilitarian sense, simple majority is strictly inferior to some supermajorities. Even if unanimity is a bad voting rule, voting rules close to unanimity may be efficient. The more likely it is to have very many almost indifferent voters and some very opinionated ones, the more stringent a supermajority is required for efficiency.

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More information

Published date: August 2014
Keywords: supermajority, qualified majority, repeated voting, conclave, war of attrition
Organisations: Economics

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 368820
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/368820
ISSN: 0014-2921
PURE UUID: f17a09aa-2056-423a-bf3e-86301fc2ce7b

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Date deposited: 13 Sep 2014 10:06
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 17:54

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