Electoral Competition when Candidates are Better Informed than Voters

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Electoral Competition when Candidates are Better Informed than Voters. / Jensen, Thomas.

Economic Policy Research Unit. Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen, 2009.

Research output: Working paperResearch

Harvard

Jensen, T 2009 'Electoral Competition when Candidates are Better Informed than Voters' Economic Policy Research Unit. Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen.

APA

Jensen, T. (2009). Electoral Competition when Candidates are Better Informed than Voters. Economic Policy Research Unit. Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen.

Vancouver

Jensen T. Electoral Competition when Candidates are Better Informed than Voters. Economic Policy Research Unit. Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen. 2009.

Author

Jensen, Thomas. / Electoral Competition when Candidates are Better Informed than Voters. Economic Policy Research Unit. Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen, 2009.

Bibtex

@techreport{0b189f7097c811de8bc9000ea68e967b,
title = "Electoral Competition when Candidates are Better Informed than Voters",
abstract = "In this paper we study the functioning of representative democracy when politicians are better informed than the electorate about conditions relevant for policy choice. We consider a model with two states of the world. The distribution of voters' preferred policies shifts with the state. The two candidates are both completely office-motivated but differ in state-dependent quality. Voters have some information about the state but candidates are better informed. If voters' information is unknown to the candidates when they take positions and sufficiently accurate then candidates will, in refined equilibrium, reveal their information by converging to the most likely median. If voters' information is not sufficiently accurate then there is polarization and the candidates'information is not revealed to the voters. We also show that if voters'information is known to the candidates then they will never reveal their information to the voters. The candidates will either pander by converging on the median that is most likely given only the voters'information or be polarized. With respect to welfare, if voters are well informed then they all prefer that their information is unknown to the candidates. However, if voters are not well informed then it is the other way around, all voters prefer that their information is known by the candidates.",
keywords = "Faculty of Social Sciences, uncertainty, information, candidate quality",
author = "Thomas Jensen",
note = "JEL Classification: D72, D82",
year = "2009",
language = "English",
publisher = "Economic Policy Research Unit. Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "Economic Policy Research Unit. Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Electoral Competition when Candidates are Better Informed than Voters

AU - Jensen, Thomas

N1 - JEL Classification: D72, D82

PY - 2009

Y1 - 2009

N2 - In this paper we study the functioning of representative democracy when politicians are better informed than the electorate about conditions relevant for policy choice. We consider a model with two states of the world. The distribution of voters' preferred policies shifts with the state. The two candidates are both completely office-motivated but differ in state-dependent quality. Voters have some information about the state but candidates are better informed. If voters' information is unknown to the candidates when they take positions and sufficiently accurate then candidates will, in refined equilibrium, reveal their information by converging to the most likely median. If voters' information is not sufficiently accurate then there is polarization and the candidates'information is not revealed to the voters. We also show that if voters'information is known to the candidates then they will never reveal their information to the voters. The candidates will either pander by converging on the median that is most likely given only the voters'information or be polarized. With respect to welfare, if voters are well informed then they all prefer that their information is unknown to the candidates. However, if voters are not well informed then it is the other way around, all voters prefer that their information is known by the candidates.

AB - In this paper we study the functioning of representative democracy when politicians are better informed than the electorate about conditions relevant for policy choice. We consider a model with two states of the world. The distribution of voters' preferred policies shifts with the state. The two candidates are both completely office-motivated but differ in state-dependent quality. Voters have some information about the state but candidates are better informed. If voters' information is unknown to the candidates when they take positions and sufficiently accurate then candidates will, in refined equilibrium, reveal their information by converging to the most likely median. If voters' information is not sufficiently accurate then there is polarization and the candidates'information is not revealed to the voters. We also show that if voters'information is known to the candidates then they will never reveal their information to the voters. The candidates will either pander by converging on the median that is most likely given only the voters'information or be polarized. With respect to welfare, if voters are well informed then they all prefer that their information is unknown to the candidates. However, if voters are not well informed then it is the other way around, all voters prefer that their information is known by the candidates.

KW - Faculty of Social Sciences

KW - uncertainty

KW - information

KW - candidate quality

M3 - Working paper

BT - Electoral Competition when Candidates are Better Informed than Voters

PB - Economic Policy Research Unit. Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen

ER -

ID: 14146969