Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
883820 Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization 2012 15 Pages PDF
Abstract

Standard theory assumes that voters’ preferences over actions (voting) are induced by their preferences over electoral outcomes (policies, candidates). But voters may also have non-consequentialist (NC) motivations: they may care about how they vote even if it does not affect the outcome. When the likelihood of being pivotal is small, NC motivations can dominate voting behavior. To examine the prevalence of NC motivations, we design an experiment that exogenously varies the probability of being pivotal yet holds constant other features of the decision environment. We find a significant effect, consistent with at least 12.5 percent of subjects being motivated by NC concerns.

► Standard theory assumes that voters’ preferences over actions (voting) are induced by their preferences over electoral outcomes (policies, candidates). ► However, voters may also have non-consequentialist (NC) motivations: they may care about how they vote even if it does not affect the outcome. ► When the likelihood of being pivotal is small, NC motivations can dominate voting behavior. ► We design an experiment that exogenously varies the probability of being pivotal yet holds constant other features of the decision environment. ► We find a significant effect, consistent with at least 12.5 percent of subjects being motivated by NC concerns.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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