Informed voters and electoral outcomes: a natural experiment stemming from a fundamental information-technological shift

B-Tier
Journal: Public Choice
Year: 2021
Volume: 189
Issue: 1
Pages: 257-277

Authors (5)

Shane Sanders (not in RePEc) Joel Potter (not in RePEc) Justin Ehrlich (not in RePEc) Justin Perline (not in RePEc) Christopher Boudreaux (Florida Atlantic University)

Score contribution per author:

0.402 = (α=2.01 / 5 authors) × 1.0x B-tier

α: calibrated so average coauthorship-adjusted count equals average raw count

Abstract

Abstract Do informed electorates choose better candidates? While that question is straightforward, its answer often is elusive. Typically, candidate-quality information is neither salient nor subject to exogenous change. We identify a natural experiment within a non-political election setting that is transparent and features exogenous change in the candidate-quality information frontier. The setting is Major League Baseball’s (MLB) annual selection of two most valuable players, a challenging environment with an innately heterogeneous candidate set, and the exogenous change is the development of the pathbreaking, comprehensive player-value measure Wins Above Replacement (WAR) in 2004 and its subsequent calculation for all retrospective MLB player-seasons. WAR's development and rapid popularization informed voting from 2004 onward. Retrospective calculation allows us to draw back the curtain and evaluate how pre-2004 voters behaved with respect to revealed candidate quality. From negative binomial, fixed-effect regression models, we find robust evidence of significant, substantial, pivotal behavioral change on the part of voters since 2004.

Technical Details

RePEc Handle
repec:kap:pubcho:v:189:y:2021:i:1:d:10.1007_s11127-021-00884-z
Journal Field
Public
Author Count
5
Added to Database
2026-01-24