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2010 Documento de Trabajo #267

Costly information acquisition. Better to toss a coin?

Citizens have little and uneven levels of political knowledge, consistently with the rational ignorance hypothesis. The paper presents a strategic model of common value elections with endogenous information acquisition accounting for these facts. It proves, that contrary to the most optimistic positions about direct democracy, majoritarian elections can fail to aggregate information, when voters have heterogeneous skills. Informational inefficiencies can be partially corrected by improving the skills of the electorate as the population increase or by limiting participation to most competent citizens. The first interpretation is consistent with Rousseau view that an educated citizenry is necessary for a well functioning democracy.The second interpretation provides rational foundations for an epistocratic form of government.

JEL Classification Numbers: C72, D72, D82.

Matteo Triossi


Keywords: Condorcet Jury Theorem., Costly Information Acquisition