Self-Selective Social Choice Functions


Autoria(s): Slinko, Arkadii; KORAY, Semih
Data(s)

04/02/2008

04/02/2008

01/11/2006

Resumo

It is not uncommon that a society facing a choice problem has also to choose the choice rule itself. In such situation voters’ preferences on alternatives induce preferences over the voting rules. Such a setting immediately gives rise to a natural question concerning consistency between these two levels of choice. If a choice rule employed to resolve the society’s original choice problem does not choose itself when it is also used in choosing the choice rule, then this phenomenon can be regarded as inconsistency of this choice rule as it rejects itself according to its own rationale. Koray (2000) proved that the only neutral, unanimous universally self-selective social choice functions are the dictatorial ones. Here we in troduce to our society a constitution, which rules out inefficient social choice rules. When inefficient social choice rules become unavailable for comparison, the property of self-selectivity becomes weaker and we show that some non-trivial self-selective social choice functions do exist. Under certain assumptions on the constitution we describe all of them.

Formato

253201 bytes

application/pdf

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/1866/2156

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

Université de Montréal, Département de sciences économiques

Relação

Cahier de recherche #2006-20

Palavras-Chave #social choice function #social choice correspondence #self-selectivity #resistance to cloning
Tipo

Article