Article(electronic)May 1, 2008

Information Aggregation in Polls

In: American economic review, Volume 98, Issue 3, p. 864-896

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Abstract

We study information transmission via polling. A policymaker polls constituents, who differ in their information and ideology, to determine policy. Full revelation is an equilibrium in a poll with a small sample, but not with a large one. In large polls, full information aggregation can arise in an equilibrium where constituents endogenously sort themselves into centrists, who respond truthfully, and extremists, who do not. We find polling statistics that ignore strategic behavior yield biased estimators and mischaracterize the poll's margin of error. We construct estimators that account for strategic behavior. Finally, we compare polls and elections. (JEL C42, D83)

Languages

English

Publisher

American Economic Association

ISSN: 1944-7981

DOI

10.1257/aer.98.3.864

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