English

A Quantitative Arrow Theorem

Probability 2009-10-05 v4 Combinatorics

Abstract

Arrow's Impossibility Theorem states that any constitution which satisfies Independence of Irrelevant Alternatives (IIA) and Unanimity and is not a Dictator has to be non-transitive. In this paper we study quantitative versions of Arrow theorem. Consider nn voters who vote independently at random, each following the uniform distribution over the 6 rankings of 3 alternatives. Arrow's theorem implies that any constitution which satisfies IIA and Unanimity and is not a dictator has a probability of at least 6n6^{-n} for a non-transitive outcome. When nn is large, 6n6^{-n} is a very small probability, and the question arises if for large number of voters it is possible to avoid paradoxes with probability close to 1. Here we give a negative answer to this question by proving that for every \eps>0\eps > 0, there exists a δ=δ(\eps)>0\delta = \delta(\eps) > 0, which depends on \eps\eps only, such that for all nn, and all constitutions on 3 alternatives, if the constitution satisfies: The IIA condition. For every pair of alternatives a,ba,b, the probability that the constitution ranks aa above bb is at least \eps\eps. For every voter ii, the probability that the social choice function agrees with a dictatorship on ii at most 1\eps1-\eps. Then the probability of a non-transitive outcome is at least δ\delta.

Cite

@article{arxiv.0903.2574,
  title  = {A Quantitative Arrow Theorem},
  author = {Elchanan Mossel},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0903.2574},
  year   = {2009}
}

Comments

Added a proof of inverse polynomial paradox probability for functions that are inverse polynomially close to dictators

R2 v1 2026-06-21T12:40:40.350Z