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Berkeley Program in Law & Economics
University of California, Berkeley

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Voting as a Rational Choice
Aaron Edlin, U.C. Berkeley School of Law and Department of Economics
Andrew Gelman, Columbia University
Noah Kaplan, University of Houston

Rationality and Society Copyright © 2007 Sage Publications. Vol. 19(3): 293–314.

Download the Paper (264 K, PDF file) - April 7, 2008 Tell a colleague about it.
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ABSTRACT:
For voters with ‘social’ preferences, the expected utility of voting is approximately independent of the size of the electorate, suggesting that rational voter turnouts can be substantial even in large elections. Less important elections are predicted to have lower turnout, but a feedback mechanism keeps turnout at a reasonable level under a wide range of conditions. The main contributions of this paper are: (1) to show how, for an individual with both selfish and social preferences, the social preferences will dominate and make it rational for a typical person to vote even in large elections; (2) to show that rational socially motivated voting has a feedback mechanism that stabilizes turnout at reasonable levels (e.g.,50% of the electorate); (3) to link the rational social-utility model of voter turnout with survey findings on socially motivated vote choice.

SUGGESTED CITATION:
Aaron Edlin, Andrew Gelman, and Noah Kaplan, "Voting as a Rational Choice" (April 7, 2008). Berkeley Program in Law & Economics, Working Paper Series. Paper 227.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/blewp/art227

 
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