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Electoral Competition amongst Citizen-candidates and Downsian Politicians

Research output: Working paper

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Electoral Competition amongst Citizen-candidates and Downsian Politicians. / Dziubinski, Marcin; Roy, Jaideep.
Lancaster University: The Department of Economics, 2008. (Economics Working Paper Series).

Research output: Working paper

Harvard

Dziubinski, M & Roy, J 2008 'Electoral Competition amongst Citizen-candidates and Downsian Politicians' Economics Working Paper Series, The Department of Economics, Lancaster University.

APA

Dziubinski, M., & Roy, J. (2008). Electoral Competition amongst Citizen-candidates and Downsian Politicians. (Economics Working Paper Series). The Department of Economics.

Vancouver

Dziubinski M, Roy J. Electoral Competition amongst Citizen-candidates and Downsian Politicians. Lancaster University: The Department of Economics. 2008. (Economics Working Paper Series).

Author

Dziubinski, Marcin ; Roy, Jaideep. / Electoral Competition amongst Citizen-candidates and Downsian Politicians. Lancaster University : The Department of Economics, 2008. (Economics Working Paper Series).

Bibtex

@techreport{e20a021502aa4fb7bbe377e8a16ca88d,
title = "Electoral Competition amongst Citizen-candidates and Downsian Politicians",
abstract = "In this paper we study a model of political competition where citizens vote sincerely and candidates may be either citizens or Downsian politicians. The model extends the citizen-candidate model proposed by Osborne and Slivinski [1996] by including Downsian politicians similar to those studied by Osborne [1993]. We give necessary and sufficient conditions for existence, together with complete characterisation, of one party and two party Nash equilibria in our model. An important feature, in view of the Duverger's Law, of the two-party equilibrium is that these equilibria cannot have any Downsian contestant. Moreover, we compare our model with that studied by Osborne and Slivinski [1996], showing that in both cases there exist po- litical configurations that can appear in one of the models only. We show also that in our settings it is possible to have Nash equilibria with Downsian candidates, without requiring to have very restrictive constraints on the dis- tribution function. We also argue that as the number of parties in equilibrium increases, the `likelihood' of an ideology driven citizen-candidate winning the elections and running the government falls. Finally we argue that in any equilibrium extremist parties proposing their policies uniquely are typically ideology-driven as well.",
keywords = "Citizen-candidates, Downsian Politicians, Plurality Rule.JEL classification: C70, D70, D72",
author = "Marcin Dziubinski and Jaideep Roy",
year = "2008",
language = "English",
series = "Economics Working Paper Series",
publisher = "The Department of Economics",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "The Department of Economics",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Electoral Competition amongst Citizen-candidates and Downsian Politicians

AU - Dziubinski, Marcin

AU - Roy, Jaideep

PY - 2008

Y1 - 2008

N2 - In this paper we study a model of political competition where citizens vote sincerely and candidates may be either citizens or Downsian politicians. The model extends the citizen-candidate model proposed by Osborne and Slivinski [1996] by including Downsian politicians similar to those studied by Osborne [1993]. We give necessary and sufficient conditions for existence, together with complete characterisation, of one party and two party Nash equilibria in our model. An important feature, in view of the Duverger's Law, of the two-party equilibrium is that these equilibria cannot have any Downsian contestant. Moreover, we compare our model with that studied by Osborne and Slivinski [1996], showing that in both cases there exist po- litical configurations that can appear in one of the models only. We show also that in our settings it is possible to have Nash equilibria with Downsian candidates, without requiring to have very restrictive constraints on the dis- tribution function. We also argue that as the number of parties in equilibrium increases, the `likelihood' of an ideology driven citizen-candidate winning the elections and running the government falls. Finally we argue that in any equilibrium extremist parties proposing their policies uniquely are typically ideology-driven as well.

AB - In this paper we study a model of political competition where citizens vote sincerely and candidates may be either citizens or Downsian politicians. The model extends the citizen-candidate model proposed by Osborne and Slivinski [1996] by including Downsian politicians similar to those studied by Osborne [1993]. We give necessary and sufficient conditions for existence, together with complete characterisation, of one party and two party Nash equilibria in our model. An important feature, in view of the Duverger's Law, of the two-party equilibrium is that these equilibria cannot have any Downsian contestant. Moreover, we compare our model with that studied by Osborne and Slivinski [1996], showing that in both cases there exist po- litical configurations that can appear in one of the models only. We show also that in our settings it is possible to have Nash equilibria with Downsian candidates, without requiring to have very restrictive constraints on the dis- tribution function. We also argue that as the number of parties in equilibrium increases, the `likelihood' of an ideology driven citizen-candidate winning the elections and running the government falls. Finally we argue that in any equilibrium extremist parties proposing their policies uniquely are typically ideology-driven as well.

KW - Citizen-candidates

KW - Downsian Politicians

KW - Plurality Rule.JEL classification: C70

KW - D70

KW - D72

M3 - Working paper

T3 - Economics Working Paper Series

BT - Electoral Competition amongst Citizen-candidates and Downsian Politicians

PB - The Department of Economics

CY - Lancaster University

ER -