Title: Institutional Design, Policies, and Democracy I
1Institutional Design, Policies, and Democracy (I)
2Updates reminders
- Exams graded returned by next week
- Comments brief general
- Class discussions lectures are fair game for
exam! - Remember weekly contributions (3 10)
- Picture (1)
- Today next week(s) institutional design
(electoral systems, presidentialism, federalism) - Institutions Nov. 21 28 ( December 6?)
3Measures of development well-being
- Human Development Index
- Gender Empowerment Index
- GNP aid to LDCs (Sachs)
- Subjective well-being (Inglehart)
- Post-materialism (Inglehart)
- Transparency International Corruption Index
- Economist Intelligence Unit quality of life index
4Economists quality of life index
- Material well-being (GDP/capita)
- Health (life expectancy)
- Political stability security (Economist)
- Family life (divorce rate)
- Community life (either high church attendance or
high labor union membership) - Climate geography (latitude)
- Job security (unemployment rate)
- Political freedom (Freedom House)
- Gender equality (M/F earnings)
5- Human Development Index (UNDP 2006)
- Gender Empowerment Index (UNDP 2006)
- GNP aid to LDCs (Sachs, Table 2)
- Subjective well-being (Inglehart 1997, Figure
2.3) - Post-materialism (Inglehart 1997, Figure 3.6 ).
- Transparency International Corruption Index
(2007) - Economist Intelligence Unit quality of life
rankings (2005)
6Institutional Design Democracy
- Institutions ? two kinds of effects
- policy-making
- (democracy?)
- Policy-making consensual vs. majoritarian
(representation vs. efficiency Lijphart 1999) - Institutions
- electoral system (PR vs. majority)
- regime type (presidential vs. parliamentary)
- (federalism vs. unitary systems)
7Electoral systems
- How votes are translated into seats
- Votes
- Electoral system
- Seats
8Choosing the electoral system
- Two goals
- (i) Proportionality accurate/fair
representation - (ii) Efficiency choosing a government (a
government that can govern) - (Reilly encouraging cooperation - yet another
goal)
9Tradeoffs
- Ideally, we would like to have the cake and eat
it, too maximize both representation and
efficiency - Hard to achieve in practice one tends to come at
the expense of the other - Prioritize and choose accordingly
10Two types of electoral formulas
- (i) favor proportionality?
- ? Choose proportional representation
- (ii) favor efficiency/governability?
- ? Choose a majoritarian system
11Majority/plurality systems
- District magnitude M 1
- Formula
- plurality/FPTP (India)
- majority-runoff (France, French ex-colonies)
- alternative vote (Australia, Papua New Guinea
pre-1975 post-2002)
12How do majoritarian system work?
- - M (district magnitude) 1
- - Winner-takes-all
- Plurality (first-past-the-post) more votes
than any other candidate - Majority-runoff
- gt 501 of the total vote
- - otherwise, runoff between two top vote-getters
13Alternative Vote (a.k.a. Preferential or Instant
Runoff Vote)
- Australia (legislative), Ireland Sri Lanka
(presidential) - M 1
- Voters rank candidates 1st choice, 2nd, 3rd
- If no candidate has more than 50 of first
preferences, candidate with least of votes is
eliminated - His/her second preferences counted, and
redistributed - And so on, until we have a winner (more than 50
of the vote) - Instant Runoff Voting (5)
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vwqblOq8BmgM
14Quasi-example Romania 1996
- 3 candidates Iliescu, Constantinescu, Roman
- Iliescu 40, Constantinescu 36, Roman 24
- Roman eliminated his second choices counted
- Say, 2/3 for Constantinescu (66.6, or 16 of
total vote), and 1/3 for Iliescu (33.3, 8 of
total) - New count Constantinescu 52, Iliescu 48
- Constantinescu wins
15Rules do matter
- Outcomes can be different e.g., the 1996 or the
2004 election - 1996 Iliescu won a plurality (1st round), but
Constantinescu won the runoff - Had rules been different (plurality elections,
instead of majority-runoff), Iliescu would have
won - Same in 2004 Nastase won the first round,
Basescu won the election (runoff) - Reilly equally important, behavior (strategies
and appeals) also change as institutions change
16Reilly Centripetalism
- Classical model of electoral competition
- Theory of centripetalism
- Ways of thinking about electoral systems ? types
of electoral systems
17Reilly theory of centripetalism
- Democracy in divided societies
- The politics of outbidding
- Extremist rhetoric and policies more
rewarding than moderation
18Classical model of electoral competition
(economic conflicts)
19Incentives for moderation
- Most voters centrists (moderate) position
- Single-member district, first-past-the-post
(plurality) elections (SMDP or FPTP) - Two-party competition, with moderate
candidates/parties vying for the center - This logic does not apply for ethnic or
cultural/religious conflicts positions tend to
be either/or, rather than a matter of degree
20Institutionalist claim
- Changing political institutions
- Change in political behavior
- The design of political institutions is paramount
in conflict management
21Creating inter-group accommodation
- One promising path give political parties and
candidates incentives to cooperate across ethnic
lines - Electoral institutions (legislative executive
elections) - Electoral sequences (in federal systems)
22Papua New Guinea
- Extraordinarily fragmented (culturally)
- No common history of statehood
- Hundreds of often mutually antipathetic groups
- 4 million people, 840 distinct languages (1/4 of
the languages spoken in the whole world)
23PNG a natural experiment
- Effects of various electoral systems
- Alternative Vote (1964, 1968, 1972)
- Gains independence in 1975 switch to plurality
(FPTP) - Effects of AV vs. FPTP?
- Votes For Cash - Papua New Guinea (17)
- lthttp//www.youtube.com/watch?vhw3rc4Q9aowgt
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28Other (potential) problems w FPTP?
- Malapportionment
- Gerrymandering
- Picking the wrong winner? (New Zealand 1978
1981, USA 2000?)
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30Gerrymandering
- County (judet) with 300,000 voters.
- Assume it elects three representatives in Single
Member Districts - Two parties running, A B
- Party A 102,000 voters
- Party B 198,000 voters
- Control over drawing the constituencies is as
important as electoral support
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36Conclusion?
- Same (overall) partisan support (5R, 4D),
different results - R draws the districts 2R, 1D
- D draws the districts 1R, 2D
37Electoral design in Chile
- 1988 referendum bad good news for Pinochet
- ? lost referendum (56 to 44)
- ? electoral system choice
- ? referendum ? valuable info
- Electoral support fairly evenly spread (44
across districts) - Best choice?
- Majority? Suicidal choice
- Multi-member district PR? A bit better (55 to 45)
38Is there a better choice?
- Yes, there is
- PR in districts with a magnitude of two
- Chile quasi two-party system (L vs. R)
- You need only 33.4 to be guaranteed one seat
39Evaluating electoral systems German vs.
French
- How?
- (i) Comparing democratic performance of countries
using each system - (ii) Full democracies what systems do they
use (distribution)?
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41Post-Communist electoral systems
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43TRS in Ukraine country-specific problems
- Regional ethnolinguistic fragmentation
- Electoral law
- 50 turnout rule
- 50 vote in favor
- Legislation favoring independents over partisan
candidates
44General problems? (Birch, 2003)
- TRS destabilizing factor
- ? inhibits democratic development
- ? encourage use of non-electoral means of
exercising power - Why? It fragments the party system
- ? district-specific strategic incentives
- ? diminishes uncertainty ? less inter-party
cooperation
45Proportional representation
- Multi-member districts
- votes seats
- Maximizing proportionality large districts and
minimum/no threshold - Reduce proportionality
- Low district magnitude (Chile)
- OR high threshold (10 in Turkey)
46Mixed Member Proportional(German system)
- Billy Ballot explains MMP system
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vKSiAUZoDvks