English

Efficient democratic decisions via nondeterministic proportional consensus

General Economics 2020-06-12 v1 Computer Science and Game Theory Multiagent Systems Economics

Abstract

Are there voting methods which (i) give everyone, including minorities, an equal share of effective power even if voters act strategically, (ii) promote consensus rather than polarization and inequality, and (iii) do not favour the status quo or rely too much on chance? We show the answer is yes by describing two nondeterministic voting methods, one based on automatic bargaining over lotteries, the other on conditional commitments to approve compromise options. Our theoretical analysis and agent-based simulation experiments suggest that with these, majorities cannot consistently suppress minorities as with deterministic methods, proponents of the status quo cannot block decisions as in consensus-based approaches, the resulting aggregate welfare is comparable to existing methods, and average randomness is lower than for other nondeterministic methods.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2006.06548,
  title  = {Efficient democratic decisions via nondeterministic proportional consensus},
  author = {Jobst Heitzig and Forest W. Simmons},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2006.06548},
  year   = {2020}
}

Comments

10 pages main text plus 61 pages supplement

R2 v1 2026-06-23T16:14:35.399Z