Governator vs. Hunter and Aggregator: A simulation of party competition with vote-seeking and office-seeking rules
Authored by Gijs Schumacher, Roni Lehrer
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0191649
Sponsors:
German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, DFG)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
ODD
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
The policy positions parties choose are central to both attracting
voters and forming coalition governments. How then should parties choose
positions to best represent voters? Laver and Sergenti show that in an
agent-based model with boundedly rational actors a decision rule
(Aggregator) that takes the mean policy position of its supporters is
the best rule to achieve high congruence between voter preferences and
party positions. But this result only pertains to representation by the
legislature, not representation by the government. To evaluate this we
add a coalition formation procedure with boundedly rational parties to
the Laver and Sergenti model of party competition. We also add two new
decision rules that are sensitive to government formation outcomes
rather than voter positions. We develop two simulations: a single-rule
one in which parties with the same rule compete and an evolutionary
simulation in which parties with different rules compete. In these
simulations we analyze party behavior under a large number of different
parameters that describe real-world variance in political parties'
motives and party system characteristics. Our most important conclusion
is that Aggregators also produce the best match between government
policy and voter preferences. Moreover, even though citizens often frown
upon politicians' interest in the prestige and rents that come with
winning political office (office pay-offs), we find that citizens
actually receive better representation by the government if politicians
are motivated by these office pay-offs in contrast to politicians with
ideological motivations (policy pay-offs). Finally, we show that while
more parties are linked to better political representation, how parties
choose policy positions affects political representation as well.
Overall, we conclude that to understand variation in the quality of
political representation scholars should look beyond electoral systems
and take into account variation in party behavior as well.
Tags
Agent-based models
Institutions
Satisfaction
Coalition-formation
Parliamentary democracies
Ideological congruence
Government formation
Political competition
Spatial theory
Policy shifts