Working Paper

Mechanical and Psychological Effects of Electoral Reform

Jon H. Fiva, Olle Folke
CESifo, Munich, 2011

CESifo Working Paper No. 3505

Duverger (1954) noted that changes in electoral systems will have two types of effects: mechanical effects, and reactions of political agents in anticipation of these, which he referred to as psychological effects. It is complicated to empirically separate the two effects since these occur simultaneously. In this paper we use a large set of counterfactual election outcomes to address this issue. Our application is based on a nationwide municipal electoral reform in Norway, which changed the seat allocation method from d’Hondt to modified Sainte-Lagüe. Even though this electoral reform is of a relatively small magnitude, we document substantial psychological effects.

CESifo Category
Public Choice
JEL Classification: C100, H700