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Redesigning Democracy - More Ideas for Better Rules (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2017)
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Redesigning Democracy - More Ideas for Better Rules (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2017)
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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. "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. 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
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