Voting Experiments: Measuring Vulnerability of Voting Procedures to Manipulation Cover Image

Voting Experiments: Measuring Vulnerability of Voting Procedures to Manipulation
Voting Experiments: Measuring Vulnerability of Voting Procedures to Manipulation

Author(s): Jan Palguta
Subject(s): Economy
Published by: Univerzita Karlova v Praze - Institut ekonomických studií
Keywords: Voting; manipulation; information; computation-based simulations

Summary/Abstract: A minimal reduction in strategic voter’s knowledge about other voters’ voting patterns severely limits her ability to strategically manipulate the voting outcome. In this paper I relax the implicit assumption made in the Gibbard-Satterthwaite’s impossibility theorem about strategic voter‘s complete information about all other voters’ preference profiles. Via a series of computation-based simulations I find that vulnerability to strategic voting is decreasing in the number of voters and increasing in the number of alternatives. Least vulnerable voting procedures are Condorcet-consistent procedures, followed by elimination procedures, while most prone to manipulation are the simplest rules. Strategic voting is vulnerable both to an absolute and relative reduction in amount of information.

  • Issue Year: 5/2011
  • Issue No: 03
  • Page Range: 324-345
  • Page Count: 22
  • Language: English
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