Modeling Oligarchs' Campaign Donations and Ideological Preferences with Simulated Agent-Based Spatial Elections
Authored by Pratim Sengupta, Mason Wright
Date Published: 2015
Sponsors:
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
ODD
Pseudocode
Model Code URLs:
https://www.comses.net/codebases/3990/releases/1.0.0/
Abstract
In this paper, we investigate the interactions among oligarchs, political parties, and voters using an agent-based modeling approach. We
introduce the OLIGO model, which is based on the spatial model of
democracy, where voters have positions in a policy space and vote for
the party that appears closest to them, and parties move in policy space
to seek more votes. We extend the existing literature on agent-based
models of political economy in the following manner: (1) by introducing
a new class of agents - oligarchs - that represent leaders of firms in a
common industry who lobby for beneficial subsidies through campaign
donations; and (2) by investigating the effects of ideological
preferences of the oligarchs on legislative action. We test hypotheses
from the literature in political economics on the behavior of oligarchs
and political parties as they interact, under conditions of imperfect
information and bounded rationality. Our key results indicate that (1)
oligarchs tend to donate less to political campaigns when the parties
are more resistant to changing their policies, or when voters are more
informed; and (2) if Oligarchs donate to parties based on a combination
of ideological and profit motivations, Oligarchs will tend to donate at
a lower equilibrium level, due to the influence of lost profits. We
validate these outcomes via comparisons to real world polling data on
changes in party support over time.
Tags
Competition
information
Politics