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Details zum Buch

Detailangaben zum Buch - Redesigning Democracy


EAN (ISBN-13): 9783319534053
Erscheinungsjahr: 2017
Herausgeber: Springer-Verlag

Buch in der Datenbank seit 2017-05-15T14:24:14+02:00 (Berlin)
Detailseite zuletzt geändert am 2022-12-20T18:38:57+01:00 (Berlin)
ISBN/EAN: 9783319534053

ISBN - alternative Schreibweisen:
978-3-319-53405-3
Alternative Schreibweisen und verwandte Suchbegriffe:
Autor des Buches: gers, jean claude juncker, jean marc
Titel des Buches: redesign


Daten vom Verlag:

Autor/in: Hans Gersbach
Titel: Redesigning Democracy - More Ideas for Better Rules
Verlag: Springer; Springer International Publishing
248 Seiten
Erscheinungsjahr: 2017-04-07
Cham; CH
Sprache: Englisch
128,39 € (DE)
132,00 € (AT)
153,50 CHF (CH)
Available
XII, 248 p. 4 illus.

EA; E107; eBook; Nonbooks, PBS / Wirtschaft/Volkswirtschaft; Wohlfahrtsökonomie; Verstehen; Democracy; Contractual democracy; Economic design; Elections; Election scheme; Majority rules; Political contract; Incentive contracts; Public choice; Social choice; B; Social Choice and Welfare; Political Science; Public Economics; International Political Economy’; Quantitative Economics; Law and Economics; Economics and Finance; Politikwissenschaft und politische Theorie; Öffentlicher Dienst und öffentlicher Sektor; Internationale Beziehungen; Wirtschaftspolitik, politische Ökonomie; Wirtschaftstheorie und -philosophie; Wirtschaftswissenschaft; Recht; BB

Could democracy do better? This book presents a vision on optimal democracies and a set of new rules to help achieve them. The monograph follows on the author’s successful book “Designing Democracy” from 2005 and further develops its ideas.

While liberal democracies are the best systems of self-governance for societies, they rarely provoke great enthusiasm. Democracies have been known to fail in achieving efficient outcomes and fair distributions of wealth. Moreover, many citizens take the democratic system for granted, simply because they have yet to experience an alternative. This book argues that the potential offered by democracies has not yet been exhausted, and that optimal democracies are both the Utopia for societies and the aim that scientists should commit themselves to making a reality. Furthermore, the book suggests a number of insightful rules to improve the functioning of democracies.

Patrick Bolton, Columbia University, USA

  In a time of reeling democracies, it is urgent to explore how to improve on the electoral system for the benefit of society. Hans Gersbach has developed a most innovative and thought-provoking research agenda at the intersection of political theory, social choice and mechanism design. He uncovers the potentially positive effects of political contracts between candidates and society, of new rules for agenda setting and of mechanisms compensating the minorities.

Marc Fleurbaey, Princeton University, USA

“We all know what to do, we just don’t know how to get re-elected after we have done it.” This famous quip by Jean-Claude Juncker perfectly encapsulates the challenge this book takes on: how to redesign our democratic institutions to overcome political short-termism and make our democracies more efficient. Several radical but highly relevant proposals are explored, ranging from long-term incentive contracts for politicians, prediction markets over the outcomes of the next election that could be useful for incentive purposes, minority voting, initiative group constitutions, and so on. All these highly innovative proposals are rigorously grounded in standard economic analysis. I highly recommend this book to anyone concerned about the state of our democracies and looking for constructive reforms.

Part I: Contractual Democracy.- Retrospect.- Vote-share Contracts without Signaling of Competence.- Vote Thresholds with Signaling of Competence.- Information Markets, Elections and Threshold Contracts.- Limits of Contractual Democracy.- Part II: Rules for Decision-making and Agenda-setting.- Democratic Provision of Divisible Public Goods.- Minority Voting and Public Project Provision.- Initiative-group Constitutions.- Perspectives.

holds the Chair of Macroeconomics: Innovation and Policy at ETH Zurich. He is also a member of CER-ETH - Center of Economic Research at ETH Zurich and a CEPR Research Fellow in Public Policy and Industrial Organization. He is Chairman of the Academic Advisory Council at the Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy in Germany and a member of the Steering Committee of the Swiss Institute for Business Cycle Research (KOF) at ETH Zurich. He is an IZA and a CESifo Research Fellow. Hans Gersbach’s current research focuses on the design of new economic and politicialpolitical institutions for the well-being of society. It also includes macroeconomic policy design, innovation and growth, epidemic diseases and financial stability. He has published extensively in all of these fields.

Hans Gersbach

Could democracy do better? This book presents a vision on optimal democracies and a set of new rules to help achieve them. The monograph follows on the author’s successful book “Designing Democracy” from 2005 and further develops its ideas.

While liberal democracies are the best systems of self-governance for societies, they rarely provoke great enthusiasm. Democracies have been known to fail in achieving efficient outcomes and fair distributions of wealth. Moreover, many citizens take the democratic system for granted, simply because they have yet to experience an alternative. This book argues that the potential offered by democracies has not yet been exhausted, and that optimal democracies are both the Utopia for societies and the aim that scientists should commit themselves to making a reality. Furthermore, the book suggests a number of insightful rules to improve the functioning of democracies.

Patrick Bolton, Columbia University, USA

“We all know what to do, we just don’t know how to get re-elected after we have done it.” This famous quip by Jean-Claude Juncker perfectly encapsulates the challenge this book takes on: how to redesign our democratic institutions to overcome political short-termism and make our democracies more efficient. Several radical but highly relevant proposals are explored, ranging from long-term incentive contracts for politicians, prediction markets over the outcomes of the next election that could be useful for incentive purposes, minority voting, initiative group constitutions, and so on. All these highly innovative proposals are rigorously grounded in standard economic analysis. I highly recommend this book to anyone concerned about the state of our democracies and looking for constructive reforms.   In a time of reeling democracies, it is urgent to explore how to improve on the electoral system for the benefit of society. Hans Gersbach has developed a most innovative and thought-provoking research agenda at the intersection of political theory, social choice and mechanism design. He uncovers the potentially positive effects of political contracts between candidates and society, of new rules for agenda setting and of mechanisms compensating the minorities.
Proposes new rules for improving the functioning of democracies Shows how innovative collective decision rules and election schemes can optimize the democratic system Presents a vision for more societal acceptance and better trust in democratic structures Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras

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9783319851440 Redesigning Democracy (Gersbach, Hans)


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