Information transmission and voting

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2021-10-01

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Abstract

I analyze an individual’s incentive to disclose hard evidence in the context of committee voting. A committee consists of three members: one left-leaning, one right-leaning, and the third ex ante unbiased. They decide on whether to pursue a left or right policy by majority rule. One of them has private information about the merits of the policies and can privately send verifiable messages to the others. If the informed member is unbiased, he withholds information to neutralize the other two’s votes when preferences are sufficiently diverse. If the informed member is biased, then the others can better infer his information, knowing that any information favoring his agenda will be shared. In the latter case, because more information is effectively shared, higher social welfare results.

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10.1007/s00199-019-01191-x

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Guo, Y (2021). Information transmission and voting. Economic Theory, 72(3). pp. 835–868. 10.1007/s00199-019-01191-x Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/32023.

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Scholars@Duke

Yingni Guo

Visiting Associate Professor of Economics

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