Voting theory: cui bono?
Hannu Nurmi
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2021042720547
Tiivistelmä
The theory
of voting has largely developed independently of the mechanism design research,
but with the introduction of the concept of strategic voting the two traditions
found a common ground. This happened some fifty years ago. Yet, despite the
voluminous literature that has emerged since then, the impact of voting theory
to the design of political institutions remains marginal. Often the assumptions
are deemed too simplistic or too abstract or plainly `out of this world'. It
looks as if there is a demand for research that aims at building bridges over
the wide gap that exists between the abstract social choice results and the
behavioral-institutional realities characterizing political systems of today
and tomorrow. We illustrate the
applicability problems by discussing a relatively recent proposal for electoral
reform of the single-member constituency system in electing the members for the
House of Representatives in the United States. The proposed reform would seem
to solve a major flaw in the existing system. As is often the case, this comes with a price,
though: the proposal is plagued with problems of its own. However, the voting
theory results have a wide area of applicability beyond voting. Yet the
applicability of the voting theory results in these areas have remained largely
unexplored. This article aims at suggesting some applications. Most straight-forward ones pertain to
multiple-criterion decision making.
Kokoelmat
- Rinnakkaistallenteet [19207]