On the likelihood of Condorcet's profiles
Consider a group of individuals who have to collectively choose an outcome from a finite set of feasible alternatives. A scoring or positional rule is an aggregation procedure where each voter awards a given number of points, wj, to the alternative she ranks in jth position in her preference ordering; The outcome chosen is then the alternative that receives the highest number of points. A Condorcet or majority winner is a candidate who obtains more votes than her opponents in any pairwise comparison. Condorcet [4] showed that all positional rules fail to satisfy the majority criterion. Furthermore, he supplied a famous example where all the positional rules select simultaneously the same winner while the majority rule picks another one. Let P* be the probability of such events in three-candidate elections. We apply the techniques of Merlin et al. [17] to evaluate P* for a large population under the Impartial Culture condition. With these assumptions, such a paradox occurs in 1.808% of the cases.
Year of publication: |
2002-01-21
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Authors: | Valognes, Fabrice ; Merlin, Vincent ; Tataru, Monica |
Published in: |
Social Choice and Welfare. - Springer. - Vol. 19.2002, 1, p. 193-206
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Publisher: |
Springer |
Saved in:
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