This paper presents a Downsian model of political competition in which parties have incomplete but richer information than voters on policy effects. Each party can observe a private signal of the policy effects, while voters cannot. In this setting, voters infer the policy effects from the party platforms. In this political game with private information, we show that there exist weak perfect Bayesian equilibria (WPBEs) at which the parties play different strategies, and thus, announce different platforms even when their signals coincide. This result is in contrast with the conclusion of the Median Voter Theorem in the classical Downsian model. Our equilibrium analysis suggests similarity between the set of WPBEs in this model and the set of...
This paper examines competition in a spatial model of two-candidate elections, where one candidate e...
In this paper we contribute to the study of how democracy works when politicians are better informed...
This paper examines competition in a spatial model of two-candidate elections, where one candidate e...
This paper presents a Downsian model of political competition in which parties have incomplete but r...
This paper presents a Downsian model of political competition in which parties have incomplete but r...
This paper presents a model of Downsian political competition in which voters are imperfectly inform...
This paper presents a model of Downsian political competition in which voters are imperfectly inform...
This paper formulates and analyzes a general model of elections in which candidates receive private ...
This paper formulates and analyzes a general model of elections in which candidates receive private ...
This paper formulates and analyzes a general model of elections in which candidates receive private ...
We consider a model of elections in which two office-motivated candidates receive private signals ab...
We consider a model of elections in which two office-motivated candidates receive private signals ab...
We study elections between two candidates who hold some private information valuable for the whole e...
We develop a game-theoretic model of two-candidate competition over a multidimensional policy space,...
We develop a game-theoretic model of two-candidate competition over a multidimensional policy space,...
This paper examines competition in a spatial model of two-candidate elections, where one candidate e...
In this paper we contribute to the study of how democracy works when politicians are better informed...
This paper examines competition in a spatial model of two-candidate elections, where one candidate e...
This paper presents a Downsian model of political competition in which parties have incomplete but r...
This paper presents a Downsian model of political competition in which parties have incomplete but r...
This paper presents a model of Downsian political competition in which voters are imperfectly inform...
This paper presents a model of Downsian political competition in which voters are imperfectly inform...
This paper formulates and analyzes a general model of elections in which candidates receive private ...
This paper formulates and analyzes a general model of elections in which candidates receive private ...
This paper formulates and analyzes a general model of elections in which candidates receive private ...
We consider a model of elections in which two office-motivated candidates receive private signals ab...
We consider a model of elections in which two office-motivated candidates receive private signals ab...
We study elections between two candidates who hold some private information valuable for the whole e...
We develop a game-theoretic model of two-candidate competition over a multidimensional policy space,...
We develop a game-theoretic model of two-candidate competition over a multidimensional policy space,...
This paper examines competition in a spatial model of two-candidate elections, where one candidate e...
In this paper we contribute to the study of how democracy works when politicians are better informed...
This paper examines competition in a spatial model of two-candidate elections, where one candidate e...