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Published July 13, 2017 | Submitted
Report Open

Candidate entry and political polarization: An experimental study

Abstract

We report the results of a laboratory experiment based on a citizen‐candidate model with private information about ideal points. Inefficient political polarization is observed in all treatments; that is, citizens with extreme ideal points enter as candidates more often than moderate citizens. Second, less entry occurs, with even greater polarization, when voters have directional information about candidates' ideal points, using ideological party labels. Nonetheless, this directional information is welfare enhancing because the inefficiency from greater polarization is outweighed by lower total entry costs and better voter information. Third, entry rates are decreasing in group size and the entry cost. These findings are all implied by properties of the unique symmetric Bayesian equilibrium of the entry game. Quantitatively, we observe too little (too much) entry when the theoretical entry rates are high (low). This general pattern of observed biases in entry rates is implied by logit quantal response equilibrium.

Additional Information

We would like to thank participants at the Public Policy and Social & Economic Behavior conference, University of Cologne, the 1st Southwest Experimental and Behavioral Economics (SWEBE) conference, UC Irvine, and the North‐American ESA meeting in Tucson, and at seminars at Caltech and the Hertie School of Governance, Berlin for their helpful comments. We are also grateful for financial support from the CEC‐COFRS Award, Florida State University. Palfrey acknowledges support from NSF (SES‐1426560), the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation (SES‐1158), and a Russell Sage Foundation Visiting Scholar Fellowship (2014‐15).

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Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
January 13, 2024