We experimentally investigate the Jackson-Moselle (2002) model where legislators bargain over policy proposals and the allocation of private goods. Key comparative static predictions of the model hold with the introduction of private goods including “strange bedfellow ” coalitions. Private goods help to secure legislative compromise and increase the likelihood of proposals passing, an outcome not predicted by the theory but a staple of the applied political economy literature. Coalition formation is better characterized by an “efficient equal split ” between coalition partners than the subgame perfect equilibrium prediction, which has implications for stable political party formation
Pre-electoral coalitions occur frequently in parliamentary democracies. They influence post election...
Political parties bargain over the allocation of cabinet portfolios when forming coalition governmen...
Predictions of electoral behavior in a multiparty setting should be a function of the voters' belief...
where legislators bargain over policy proposals and the allocation of private goods. Key comparative...
We experimentally investigate the Jackson and Moselle (2002) model where legislators bargain over po...
We examine a legislative voting game where decisions are to be made over both ideological and distri...
We study a game theoretic model of a parliamentary democracy under proportional representation where...
We propose a new model of legislative bargaining in which coalitions may have different values, refl...
Over the last two decades a large and important literature has emerged that uses game theoretic mode...
Most models of the formation of political coalitions use either Euclidean spaces or rely purely on g...
In democratic countries economic decisions are made through the political process. Electoral results...
We report the results of an experimental investigation of the Baron-Ferejohn (1989) model of legisla...
The paper analyses the process of coalition formation among political parties using game-theoretic c...
This paper examines the relationship between the concentration of political power in leg-islative ba...
Abstract. Three-player majority-rule bargaining games have begun to receive some atten-tion in the e...
Pre-electoral coalitions occur frequently in parliamentary democracies. They influence post election...
Political parties bargain over the allocation of cabinet portfolios when forming coalition governmen...
Predictions of electoral behavior in a multiparty setting should be a function of the voters' belief...
where legislators bargain over policy proposals and the allocation of private goods. Key comparative...
We experimentally investigate the Jackson and Moselle (2002) model where legislators bargain over po...
We examine a legislative voting game where decisions are to be made over both ideological and distri...
We study a game theoretic model of a parliamentary democracy under proportional representation where...
We propose a new model of legislative bargaining in which coalitions may have different values, refl...
Over the last two decades a large and important literature has emerged that uses game theoretic mode...
Most models of the formation of political coalitions use either Euclidean spaces or rely purely on g...
In democratic countries economic decisions are made through the political process. Electoral results...
We report the results of an experimental investigation of the Baron-Ferejohn (1989) model of legisla...
The paper analyses the process of coalition formation among political parties using game-theoretic c...
This paper examines the relationship between the concentration of political power in leg-islative ba...
Abstract. Three-player majority-rule bargaining games have begun to receive some atten-tion in the e...
Pre-electoral coalitions occur frequently in parliamentary democracies. They influence post election...
Political parties bargain over the allocation of cabinet portfolios when forming coalition governmen...
Predictions of electoral behavior in a multiparty setting should be a function of the voters' belief...