Reliability and Responsibility: A Theory of Endogenous Commitment

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Reliability and Responsibility: A Theory of Endogenous Commitment

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Title: Reliability and Responsibility: A Theory of Endogenous Commitment


1
Reliability and Responsibility A Theory of
Endogenous Commitment
  • Matteo Triossi
  • Universidad Carlos III
  • December 2005

2
  • Do Electoral Campaigns convey relevant
    information to voters?

3
  • Most of the models of electoral
    competition assume that politicians are committed
    to their electoral announcements.
  • They do not explain why electors should be
    influenced by such promises.

4
  • The paper presents a model characterized by
  • Costless electoral campaign
  • Asymmetric information
  • Finitely repeated elections

5
  • which is able to account for
  • Informative electoral campaign
  • Endogenous Commitment
  • Control of elected politicians through a
    credible threat imposed to reelection

6
Related Literature
  • Alesina (1988) Finitely repeated elections,
  • complete information no informative campaigns
  • (backward induction)
  • Harrington (1992a) One election, asymmetric
  • information no informative campaign (candidates
  • maximize probability of election)

7
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8
  • In Harrington (1993) beliefs are not consistent.
  • Electors do not control politicians (each elected
  • candidate implements her favorite policy). Policy
  • preferences do not interact with reelection
  • pressure.
  • Here large (continuous) type space, consistent
  • beliefs. The interaction between reelection
    pressure and
  • policy preferences shapes implemented policies.

9
  • Electoral accountability and career concerns
    in
  • politics Barro (1973), Ferejohn (1986),
    Austen-
  • Smith and Banks (1989), Harrington (1993b),
  • Persson Roland and Tabellini (1997),
  • Dewatripoint, Jewett and Tirole (1999).

10
  • Informative (costly) Campaigning Banks (1990),
  • Baron (1994), Callander and Wilkie (2005), Prat
  • (2002) , Coase (2003)
  • Negative Campaigning Skaperdas and Grofman
  • (1995), Harrington and Hess (1996), Polborn and
  • Yi (2005)

11
The Model
  • Two Candidates L and R
  • ygt0 value of the office
  • kgt0 degree of policy implication
  • a candidates type aL? -D,0, aR ? 0,D, Dgt0
  • aLand aR are drawn from symmetric cdf FL and FR
  • s policy implemented by the incumbent

12
  • Candidates preferences
  • U(s,a)y-k(a-s)²
  • if elected
  • U 0 otherwise

13
  • Voters' preferences
  • V(s,a)-(a-s)²
  • a voters type a ? -D,D
  • s policy implemented by the elected politician
  • The median voter is drawn from the distribution
    G,
  • symmetric with respect to 0.

14
The electoral Game
  • Each candidate makes an electoral announcement
  • from her type space, mR and mL ,respectively.
  • 1st election each voter casts her vote for one
  • candidate.
  • The elected politician implements a policy from
    her
  • type space.

15
  • 2nd election each voter casts her vote for one
  • candidate.
  • The elected politician implements a policy from
    her
  • type space.

16
Campaign
1st election voting
Policy Implementation
2nd election voting
Policy Implementation
17
  • At the second election the opponent is
  • randomly drawn from her original
  • distribution.
  • At each election the median voter is
  • selected randomly from G.

18
  • Type a Candidates expected utility is
  • U(p1,p2,s,a)p1y-k(a-s)²p2dy
  • pi, probability of winning the i-th election
  • dgt0 factor discount

19
  • An electoral equilibrium is given by electoral
    announcements, policies, voting strategies and
    beliefs such that
  • Electoral announcements maximize candidates
    expected utility given beliefs and other agents
    strategies
  • (ii) 1st election voting strategies maximize
    electors expected utility in the term following
    the election given beliefs and other agents
    strategies.

20
  • 1st term policies maximize incumbents expected
    utility at the term following the 1st election
    given beliefs and other agents strategies.
  • (iv) 2nd election voting strategies maximize
    electors expected utility given beliefs in the
    term following the election given beliefs and
    other agents strategies and other agents
    strategies

21
  • (v) 2nd election policies maximize incumbents
  • utility
  • Beliefs are computed using Bayes rule whenever
  • possible.
  • We will consider symmetric equilibria
  • mR(a)mL(-a) and sR(a)sL(- a)

22
  • We look for a significant and intuitive family of
  • equilibria in which electoral campaign is
  • meaningful.
  • We devote the attention to equilibria in which
    more
  • centrist candidates are elected with higher
  • probabilities and implement more centrist
    policies.

23
Monotonic electoral equilibrium
  • Definition An electoral equilibrium is monotonic
    if
  • sR is weakly increasing in a and p1R and p2R are
    weakly decreasing in a
  • sL is weakly decreasing in a and p1L and p2L are
    weakly increasing in a

24
  • Proposition In all nonmonotonic equilibria the
    electoral campaign is meaningful.

25
MD1 Refinement
  • This refinement (Bernheim and Severinov (2003)
  • and Kartik (2005)) selects out of equilibrium
    beliefs
  • with respect to totally unexpected policies.
  • It adapts the D1 (Cho and Kreps) (1987))
  • refinement to the monotonic setup.

26
  • plR(s) and phR(s) are defined such that a
  • R politician implementing the totally
  • unexpected policy s should expect to be
  • elected with probability within plR(s),phR(s).
  • plL(s) and phL(s) are defined such that a
  • R politician implementing the totally
  • unexpected policy s should expect to be
  • elected with probability within plL(s),phL(s).

27
  • Then it selects the individual that most have
  • to gain from implementing policy s.
  • Let p be the probability D is elected against
  • an opponent randomly drawn from FL (or FR) and
  • let p be the probability 0 is elected against an
  • opponent randomly drawn from FL (or FR).
  • In the D1 refinement
  • plR(s),phR(s) plL(s),phL(s) p,p

28
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29
  • Definition An electoral equilibrium survives the
    monotonic D1 (MD1) criterion if
  • Is monotonic
  • (R) If policy s is implemented with 0 probability
    in the first mandate and type aR does not benefit
    from implementing policy s and being elected with
    probability p in plR(s),phR(s) then to a is
    assigned 0 probability
  • (L) If policy s is implemented with 0
    probability in the first mandate and type al does
    not benefit from implementing policy s and being
    elected with probability p in plL(s),phL(s)
    then to a is assigned 0 probability

30
Equilibrium characterization and existence
  • Proposition There exists no fully separating
  • equilibrium in campaign, nor in policy.
  • A proportion of the candidates is ambiguous

31
  • Proposition There exists no equilibrium in which
    m(?)? and s(?)? for all ??(?1, ?2), for some
    ?1lt?2
  • Citizens control politicians imposing a credible
    threat to reelection which forces the incumbent
    to fulfill her electoral promise (endogenous
    commitment)

32
  • All MD1 equilibria are characterized by a cut-off
  • type
  • Proposition For each MD1 equilibrium
  • there exists a(k) ? (0,D such that
  • sR(a)0 on 0,a(k)
  • (2) If a(k)ltD then sR(a) is separating on
  • (a(k) ,D and sR(D)D.
  • Analogous condition holds for candidate L
  • There are four kinds of equilibria

33
k k0 babbling equilibria
sR
mR
Campaign
Policy
a
a
D
D
34
k0 lt k campaign is irrelevant, extremists
separate in policy
sR
mR
Campaign
Policy
D
D
a
a
D
D
a1(k)
35
k1 ltk centrists and extremists make different
campaigns, extremists separate in policy
sR
mR
Campaign
Policy
D
D
a
a
D
D
a2(k)
a2(k)
36
k2 lt k centrists pool, extremists
differentiate both in campaign and in policy
sR
mR
Campaign
Policy
D
D
a
a
D
D
a3(k)
a3(k)
37
  • Theorem An MD1 equilibrium exists for all kgt0.
  • There exist k0 ltk1 lt k2 and cutoff
  • types a1(k),a2(k),a3(k) such that all MD1
  • equilibria are of the following form
  • k k0 m(a)m(0) and s(a)0 for all a?0,D.
    If k gt k0 such an equilibrium is not MD1
  • k0 k, there exists an equilibrium such that
    m(a)m(0) for all for all a ? 0,D, s(a)0 a ?
    0,a2(k), s(a) is separating on (a(k),D.

38
  • k1k there exists a equilibrium in which
    m(a)m(0) for all a ? 0,a2(k) and m(a)m' for a
    ? a2(k),D. s(a)0 for a ? 0,a2(k) and s(a) is
    separating on (a2(k),D
  • k2k there exists an equilibrium in which
    m(a)m(0) for all a ? 0,a3(k) and m(a)a for
    a ? a3(k),D. s(a)0 for a ? 0,a3(k) and s(a)
    is separating on (a3(k),D

39
  • Corollary a1(k),a2(k),a3(k) are strictly
    decreasing
  • functions of k and limk?8ai(k)0 for i1,2,3.
  • Equilibria (2) and (3) converge to each other
  • as k?8.
  • Equilibrium (4) is fully separating both
  • campaign and in policy as k?8.

40
Comments
  • Similar results can obtained by introducing
  • electoral deception as an idiosyncratic shock on
  • electors.

41
  • Electoral campaign can convey relevant
  • information to electors, but there is always is
  • unavoidable portion of ambiguous politicians
  • Lying has an endogenous costs to lose electoral
  • support
  • Imitation can be unbearable for extremists
  • .
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