Deciding on what to Decide

78 Pages Posted: 19 Jun 2017 Last revised: 7 Jun 2022

See all articles by Salvador Barberà

Salvador Barberà

Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona

Anke Gerber

Universität Hamburg

Date Written: February 6, 2021

Abstract

We study two-stage collective decision-making procedures involving a voting body. In a first stage, part of the voters are in charge of deciding what issues will be debated and which ones will not be discussed and remain unsettled. In the second stage, the whole set of voters decides on the positions to be adopted regarding the issues that are in the agenda. Using a protocol-free equilibrium concept introduced by Dutta et al. (2004), we study the tension between two forces that the agenda-setters must weigh. One is the desire to include in the agenda those issues on which they could get society to adopt their preferred positions. The other is their fear that including some favorable issues might induce other agenda setters to add further issues to the agenda, on which the social position might not be favorable to their interests. Our analysis concentrates on societies that use two salient classes of voting procedures: sequential rules and voting by quota. For these rules we show that essentially any set of issues can be obtained as an equilibrium agenda. We also discover that the power of the chair to manipulate sequential rules may go as far as to be able to avoid certain issues to get to the floor. Moreover, limited changes in the preferences of the agenda setters may result in dramatic changes in the size and composition of agendas.

Keywords: Issues, agendas, voting rules, equilibrium collections of continuation agendas

JEL Classification: D71, D72

Suggested Citation

Barberà Sàndez, Salvador and Gerber, Anke, Deciding on what to Decide (February 6, 2021). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2988283 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2988283

Salvador Barberà Sàndez

Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona ( email )

Edifici B - Campus Bellaterra
Barcelona, 08193
Spain

Anke Gerber (Contact Author)

Universität Hamburg ( email )

Faculty of Business, Economics and Social Sciences
Von-Melle-Park 5
Hamburg, 20146
Germany

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