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EXCURSIONS IN MODERN MATHEMATICS SIXTH EDITION Peter Tannenbaum 1
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CHAPTER 2 WEIGHTED VOTING SYSTEMS The Power Game 2
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Weighted Voting Systems Outline/learning Objectives 3 Represent a weighted voting system using a mathematical model. Use the Banzhaf and Shapley-Shubik indices to calculate the distribution of power in a weighted voting system.
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WEIGHTED VOTING SYSTEMS 2.1 Weighted Voting Systems 4
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Weighted Voting Systems 5 Weighted Voting Systems are any voting arrangement in which the voters are not necessarily equal in terms of the number of votes they control. A motion is a vote with only 2 choices. (usually “yes” and “no”)
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Weighted Voting Systems 6 The Players are the voters in a weighted voting system. Characterized by a “P” with a subscript. P 1, P 2, P 3, … P N
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Weighted Voting Systems 7 The Weights are the number of votes controlled by each player. Characterized by a “w” with a subscript which denotes the player number. Adding the weights gives the total number of votes in the system. w 1 is the number of votes for P 1 V = w 1 + w 2 + w 3 + … w N
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Weighted Voting Systems 8 The Quota is the minimum number of votes needed to pass the motion. Characterized by a “q” and is usually greater than 50% and less than the total number of votes. V >= q > V/2
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Weighted Voting Systems 9 A weighted voted system takes the form: Weights are ordered highest to lowest. [q: w 1, w 2, w 3, … w N ] w 1 > w 2 > w 3 > … > w N
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Weighted Voting Systems 10 Quota is two-thirds of the total number of votes. [14: 8, 7, 3, 2] Quota is too low (anarchy). [10: 8, 7, 3, 2] Quota is too high (gridlock). [21: 8, 7, 3, 2] One Partner – One Vote (unanimous). [19: 8, 7, 3, 2][4: 1, 1, 1, 1]
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Weighted Voting Systems 11 A Dictator is a player who’s weight is bigger than or equal to the quota. P 1 has enough weight (votes) to carry a motion single handedly. [11: 12, 5, 4]
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Weighted Voting Systems 12 A Dummy is a player who has no power. There is never a time when a dummy makes a difference in the outcome. [30: 10, 10, 10, 9]
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Weighted Voting Systems 13 Veto Power occurs if a motion cannot pass unless a specific player votes in favor of the motion. [12: 9, 5, 4, 2] w < q and V – w < q
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Weighted Voting Systems [ 7: 5, 3, 2 ] [ 4: 3, 2, 2 ] [ 37: 8, 6, 5, 3, 3, 3, 2, 2, 1, 1, 1, 1 ] 14
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Weighted Voting Systems [ 15: 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 ] [ 5: 1, 1, 1, 1, 1 ] [ 12: 13, 2, 7, 1, 1 ] 15
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WEIGHTED VOTING SYSTEMS 2.2 The Banzhaf Power Index 16
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The Banzhaf Power Index 17 The Banzhaf Power Index is method to determine the probability of changing the outcome of a vote when power is not equally divided. [101: 99, 98, 3] Requires two players to pass a motion.
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The Banzhaf Power Index 18 A Coalition is any set of players that join forces and vote the same way. [10: 8, 7, 3, 1] {P 1, P 2 } W = w 1 + w 2 W = 7 + 8 To determine the number of coalitions: 2 N - 1
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The Banzhaf Power Index 19 A grand coalition is a coalition consisting of all players. [101: 99, 96, 3] {P 1, P 2, P 3 } Some coalitions have enough to win and some don’t. We call the former a winning coalition and the later a losing coalition. [101: 99, 96, 3]{P 1, P 2 } W = 195 {P 2, P 3 } W = 99
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The Banzhaf Power Index 20 A critical player is a player who is required in a coalition to win. [101: 99, 98, 3] W – w < q
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The Banzhaf Power Index 21 Banzhaf: “A player’s power should be measured by how often the player is a critical player.” Each player is a critical player 2 times out of 6.
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The Banzhaf Power Distribution 22 Computing a Banzhaf Power Distribution Step 1. Make a list of all possible winning coalitions.
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The Banzhaf Power Distribution 23 Computing a Banzhaf Power Distribution Step 2. Within each winning coalition determine which are the critical players. (To determine if a given player is critical or not in a given winning coalition, we subtract the player’s weight from the total number of votes in the coalition- if the difference drops below the quota q, then that player is critical. Otherwise, that player is not critical.
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The Banzhaf Power Distribution 24 Computing a Banzhaf Power Distribution Step 3.Count the number of times that P 1 is critical. Call this number B 1 Repeat for each of the other players to find B 2, B 3, … B N
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The Banzhaf Power Distribution 25 Computing a Banzhaf Power Distribution Step 4. Find the total number of times all players are critical. This total is given by T = B 1 + B 2 + B 3 + … B N
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The Banzhaf Power Distribution 26 Computing a Banzhaf Power Distribution Step 5. Find the ratio 1 = B 1 / T This gives the Banzhaf power index of P 1. Repeat for each of the other players to find 2, 3, …, N. The complete list of ’s gives the Banzhaf power distribution of the weighted voting system.
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The Banzhaf Power Index 27 β 1 is the Banzhaf power index for the specific player P 1. The complete list of β s is the Banzhaf power distribution. β 1 =40% is the Banzhaf power index for P 1. β 1 =40%; β 2 =25%; β 3 =20%; β 4 =15% is the Banzhaf power distribution.
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Weighted Voting Systems [ 7: 5, 3, 2, 1 ] 28 2 N - 1
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Weighted Voting Systems [ 4: 3, 2, 2 ] 29 2 N - 1
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WEIGHTED VOTING SYSTEMS 2.3 Applications of Banzhaf Power 30
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Applications 31 Applications of Banzhaf Power The Nassau County Board of Supervisors John Banzhaf first introduced the concept The United Nations Security Council Classic example of a weighted voting system The European Union (EU) Relative Weight vs Banzhaf Power Index
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WEIGHTED VOTING SYSTEMS 2.4 The Shapley-Shubik Power Index 32
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The Shapley-Shubik Power Index 33 The Shapley-Shubik Power Index is an alternative way to computing voting power. In situations like political alliances, the order that the players join is important. When a motion is considered, the player that joins the coalition and allows it to reach quota can be considered most essential.
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The Shapley-Shubik Power Index 34 Sequential coalitions are coalitions where the order of the players matter. [14: 10, 3, 2, 1] etc.
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The Shapley-Shubik Power Index 35 The number of possible sequential coalitions is N factorial. N! = N x (N-1) x…x 3 x 2 x 1 [14: 10, 3, 2, 1] N = # of players N = 4 N! = 4 x 3 x 2 x 1 = 24 T = N!
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The Shapley-Shubik Power Index 36 The pivotal player is the player who, in turn, causes the coalition to pass a motion. [14: 10, 3, 2, 1] 3, 10, 2, 1 If you consider all players voting “no” and then start switching the votes in order to “yes”. 3 + 10 + 2 = 15
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The Shapley-Shubik Power Index 37 Three-Player Sequential Coalitions
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The Shapley-Shubik Power Index 38 Shapley-Shubik Pivotal Player The player that contributes the votes that turn what was a losing coalition into a winning coalition.
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The Shapley-Shubik Power Index 39 Computing a Shapley-Shubik Power Distribution Step 1. Make a list of all possible sequential coalitions of the N players. Let T be the number of such coalitions. [14: 10, 3, 2, 1] etc. T = N! = 4 x 3 x 2 x 1 = 24
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The Shapley-Shubik Power Index 40 Computing a Shapley-Shubik Power Distribution Step 2. In each sequential coalition determine the pivotal player. [14: 10, 3, 2, 1] etc.
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The Shapley-Shubik Power Index 41 Computing a Shapley-Shubik Power Distribution Step 3.Count the number of times that P 1 is pivotal. Call this number SS 1. Repeat for each of the other players to find SS 2, SS 3, … SS N. [14: 10, 3, 2, 1] SS 1 = 11 SS 2 = 9 SS 3 = 2 SS 4 = 2
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The Shapley-Shubik Power Index 42 Computing a Shapley-Shubik Power Distribution Step 4. Find the ratio 1 = SS 1 /T. This gives the Shapley Shubik power index of P 1. Repeat for the other players to find 2, 3, …, N. The complete list of ’s gives the Shapley-Shubik power distribution of the weighted voting system. 1 = SS 1 /T = 11/24 = 45.8% 2 = SS 2 /T = 9/24 = 37.5% 3 = SS 3 /T = 2/24 = 8.3% 4 = SS 4 /T = 2/24 = 8.3%
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Example- [4: 3, 2, 1] 43
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The Shapley-Shubik Power Index 44 Applications of Shapley-Shubik Power The Electoral College There are 51! Sequential coalitions The United Nations Security Council Enormous difference between permanent and nonpermanent members The European Union (EU) Relative Weight vs Shapley-Shubik Power Index
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Summary 45 The notion of power as it applies to weighted voting systems How mathematical methods allow us to measure the power of an individual or group by means of an index. We looked at two different kinds of power indexes: Banzhaf and Shapley- Shubik
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