Experimental Evidence on Expressive Voting

Author(s)
Jean-Robert Tyran, Alexander K. Wagner
Abstract

Standard economic reasoning assumes that people vote instrumentally, i.e., that the sole motivation to vote is to influence the outcome of an election. In contrast, voting is expressive if voters derive utility from the very act of expressing support for one of the options by voting for it, and this utility is independent of whether the vote affects the outcome. This paper surveys experimental tests of expressive voting with a particular
focus on the low-cost theory of expressive voting. The evidence for the low-cost theory of expressive voting is mixed.

Organisation(s)
Department of Economics, Vienna Center for Experimental Economics
External organisation(s)
Centre for Economic and Policy Research, University of Copenhagen
No. of pages
23
Publication date
2016
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
502024 Public economy, 502045 Behavioural economics
Portal url
https://ucrisportal.univie.ac.at/en/publications/fd70038f-dd07-47ee-b1af-1c3ac30ea8b9