Vox Populi, Vox Dei? Tacit collusion in politics
Journal article, 2023

We study competition between political parties in repeated elections with probabilistic voting. This model entails multiple equilibria, and we focus on cases where political collusion occurs. When parties hold different opinions on some policy, they may take different policy positions that do not coincide with the median voter's preferred policy platform. In contrast, when parties have a mutual understanding on a particular policy, their policy positions may converge (on some dimension) but not to the median voter's preferred policy. That is to say, parties can tacitly collude with one another, despite political competition. Collusion may collapse, for instance, after the entry of a new political party. This model rationalizes patterns in survey data from Sweden, where politicians on different sides of the political spectrum take different positions on economic policy but similar positions on refugee intake—diverging from the average voter's position, but only until the entry of a populist party.

probabilistic voting

repeated elections

tacit collusion

electoral competition

partisan collusion

Author

Christian Johansson

Chalmers, Mathematical Sciences, Algebra and geometry

University of Gothenburg

Anders Kärnä

Örebro University

Research Institute of Industrial Economics

Jaakko Meriläinen

Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México (ITAM)

Economics and Politics

0954-1985 (ISSN) 1468-0343 (eISSN)

Vol. 35 3 752-772

Subject Categories

Sociology (excluding Social work, Social Psychology and Social Anthropology)

Public Administration Studies

Political Science (excluding Public Administration Studies and Globalization Studies)

DOI

10.1111/ecpo.12243

More information

Latest update

3/7/2024 9