Game Theoretic Models and the Empirical Analysis of EU Policy Making: Strategic Interaction, Collective Decisions, and Statistical Inference
Dirk Junge ()
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Dirk Junge: University of Mannheim
Chapter Chapter 12 in Reform Processes and Policy Change, 2011, pp 247-265 from Springer
Abstract:
Abstract Game theoretic models of policy making have received much attention in political research and have strongly influenced our understanding of how political decisions and institutions work. These models often include complex arguments on the interaction of political actors and institutional rules that are difficult to test directly. Insights into the explanatory power of these arguments are therefore often limited. In this chapter I discuss whether the turn to stochastic game–theoretic modelling that has been advanced in the past decade can provide more comprehensive information on the explanatory power of policy making theories in empirical applications and key characteristics of the policy making process such as the impact of veto, amendment and agenda-setting rights. I develop a stochastic version of the Baron and Ferejohn/Banks and Duggan bargaining model that provides an extraordinarily parsimonious account of how these different rights interact and affect outcomes in legislative negotiations that has been very influential in legislative research. I then evaluate in a series of Monte-Carlo simulations to what extent this model can correctly identify whether these rights and interests work in the direction theoretically assumed by the model, respectively, in what respect they differ from the theoretical assumptions. The results show that the stochastical version of bargaining model gives us quite precise information to what extent the policy making theory fits the data in general and even what theoretical arguments are violated. However, if serious errors occur in the final stages of decision making, arguments on earlier stages are sometimes difficult to evaluate due to their dependence on later events in the strategic model which may sometimes limit the inferences that can be drawn.
Date: 2011
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:spr:stpchp:978-1-4419-5809-9_12
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DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4419-5809-9_12
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