This paper considers the implications of an important cognitive bias in information processing, confirmation bias, in a political agency setting. When voters have this bias and when only the politician’s actions are observable before the election, it decreases pandering by the incumbent, and can raise voter welfare as a consequence. This result is driven by the fact that the noise aspect of confirmation bias, which decreases pandering, dominates the bounded rationality aspect, which increases it. The results generalize in several directions, including to the case where the voter can also observe payoffs with some probability before the election. We identify conditions when confirmation bias strengthens the case for decision-making by an elected rather than an appointed official.
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20 February 2017
Research Article|
February 20 2017
Confirmation Bias and Electoral Accountability Available to Purchase
Ben Lockwood
Ben Lockwood
University of Warwick,
UK
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*I would like to thank Peter Buisseret, Chris Ellis, Gilat Levy, seminar participants at the universities of Oregon, Princeton and Warwick, and two referees and an editor for helpful comments. I also thank Omiros Kouvavas and Federico Trombetta for excellent research assistance.
Online ISSN: 1554-0634
Print ISSN: 1554-0626
© 2017 B. Lockwood
2017
B. Lockwood
Licensed re-use rights only
Quarterly Journal of Political Science (2017) 11 (4): 471–501.
Citation
Lockwood B (2017), "Confirmation Bias and Electoral Accountability". Quarterly Journal of Political Science, Vol. 11 No. 4 pp. 471–501, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/100.00016037
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