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Private polling in elections and voter welfare
Authors:Dan Bernhardt  John Duggan  Francesco Squintani  
Institution:aDepartment of Economics and Department of Finance, University of Illinois, 1206 S. Sixth Street, Champaign, IL 61820, USA;bDepartment of Political Science and Department of Economics, Wallis Institute of Political Economy, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY 14627, USA;cDepartment of Economics, University of Essex, Universitá degli Studi di Brescia, Wivenhoe Park, Colchester, Essex CO4 3SQ, United Kingdom
Abstract:We study elections in which two candidates poll voters about their preferred policies before taking policy positions. In the essentially unique equilibrium, candidates who receive moderate signals adopt more extreme platforms than their information suggests, but candidates with more extreme signals may moderate their platforms. Policy convergence does not maximize voters' welfare. Although candidates' platforms diverge in equilibrium, they do not do so as much as voters would like. We find that the electorate always prefers less correlation in candidate signals, and thus private over public polling. Some noise in the polling technology raises voters' welfare.
Keywords:Elections  Platform divergence  Spending caps  Political campaigns  Polling
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