The disciplining role of repeated elections: some experimental evidence
Sugato Dasgupta
New Zealand Economic Papers, 2009, vol. 43, issue 2, 165-190
Abstract:
This paper reports on an experiment that studies the functioning of a political market. The formal model, on which the experiment is based, considers a situation wherein two candidates participate in a series of structurally identical elections. The model also incorporates and emphasizes an important informational asymmetry between voters and candidates: specifically, a candidate's diligence in office (i.e. the amount of effort expended) is unobserved by voters. How do subjects, voters and candidates, behave in the laboratory? My principal findings are twofold. First, given the institutional structure of repeated elections, voters have the ability to extract effort from candidates. However, candidates' effort level choices fall well short of the upper endpoint of the effort choice set. In other words, the electorate's ability to sanction candidates is not sufficient to eliminate the rents of office. Second, candidates' effort level choices are mostly consistent with incentives implicit in the elections set-up.
Keywords: elections; principal-agent; moral hazard; experiments (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2009
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (2)
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DOI: 10.1080/00779950903005515
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