Jump to ContentJump to Main Navigation

Online

99,00 € / $149.00*

* Prices subject to change. Shipping costs will be added if applicable.
Publication Date:
October 2010
ISSN:
1935-1682
DOI:
10.2202/1935-1682.2560

See all formats and pricing

Online
Individual Subscription Online only
Euro [D] 99.00
RRP for USA, Canada, Mexico
US$ 149.00 *
Print
Individual Subscription Online only
Euro [D] 345.00
RRP for USA, Canada, Mexico
US$ 473.00 *
Print + Online
Individual Subscription Online only
Euro [D] 414.00
RRP for USA, Canada, Mexico
US$ 568.00 *
*Prices subject to change. Shipping costs will be added if applicable.

Supplementary Article Materials

Ed. by Auriol , Emmanuelle / Brunner, Johann / Fleck, Robert / Friebel, Guido / Ludwig, Sandra / Requate, Till / Schneider, Hilmar / Tsui, Kevin / Wichardt, Philipp

2 Issues per year

IMPACT FACTOR 2011: 0.550

 

 

VolumeIssuePage

Protecting Minorities in Large Binary Elections: A Test of Storable Votes Using Field Data

Alessandra Casella1 / Shuky Ehrenberg2 / Andrew Gelman3 / Jie Shen4

1Columbia University, ac186@columbia.edu

2JGB Capital, shuky.ehrenberg@aya.yale.edu

3Columbia University, gelman@stat.columbia.edu

4UC Irvine, jshen3@uci.edu

Citation Information: The B.E. Journal of Economic Analysis & Policy. Volume 10, Issue 1, Pages –, ISSN (Online) 1935-1682, DOI: 10.2202/1935-1682.2560, October 2010

Publication History:
Published Online:
2010-10-20

Abstract

The legitimacy of democratic systems requires the protection of minority preferences while ideally treating every voter equally. During the 2006 student elections at Columbia University, we asked voters to rank the importance of different contests and to choose where to cast a single extra "bonus vote," had one been available — a simple version of Storable Votes. We then constructed distributions of intensities and electoral outcomes and estimated the probable impact of the bonus vote through bootstrapping techniques. The bonus vote performs well: when minority preferences are particularly intense, the minority wins at least one contest with 15-30 percent probability; when the minority wins, aggregate welfare increases with 85-95 percent probability. The paper makes two contributions: it tests the performance of storable votes in a setting where preferences were not controlled, and it suggests the use of bootstrapping techniques when appropriate replications of the data cannot be obtained.

Keywords: voting; minorities; storable votes; elections; bootstrap

Comments (0)

Please log in or register to comment.