Fake News, Voter Overconfidence, and the Quality of Democratic Choice

Author(s)
Melis Kartal, Jean-Robert Tyran
Abstract

This paper studies, theoretically and experimentally, the effects of overconfidence and fake news on information aggregation and the quality of democratic choice in a common interest setting. We theoretically show that overconfidence exacerbates the adverse effects of widespread misinformation (i.e., fake news). We study extensions that allow for partisan biases, targeted misinformation intended to move public opinion in a specific direction, and correlated news signals (due to media ownership concentration or censure). In our experiment, voters are exposed to correct news or misinformation depending on their cognitive ability. Absent overconfidence, more cognitively able subjects are predicted to vote while less able subjects are predicted to abstain, and information is predicted to aggregate well. We provide evidence that overconfidence induces misinformed subjects to vote excessively, thereby severely undermining information aggregation.

Organisation(s)
Vienna Center for Experimental Economics, Department of Economics
External organisation(s)
Wirtschaftsuniversität Wien (WU)
No. of pages
81
Publication date
06-2020
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
502057 Experimental economics, 502045 Behavioural economics, 502027 Political economy
Portal url
https://ucrisportal.univie.ac.at/en/publications/a29fa995-7e80-4133-9570-ae56fa168285