TY - JOUR
T1 - Dividing the indivisible
T2 - Procedures for allocating cabinet ministries to political parties in a parliamentary system
AU - Brams, Steven J.
AU - Kaplan, Todd R.
PY - 2004/4
Y1 - 2004/4
N2 - Political parties in Northern Ireland recently used a divisor method of apportionment to choose, in sequence, ten cabinet ministries. If the parties have complete information about each other's preferences, we show that it may not be rational for them to act sincerely by choosing their most-preferred ministry that is available. One consequence of acting sophisticatedly is that the resulting allocation may not be Pareto-optimal, making all the parties worse off. Another is non-monotonicity - choosing earlier may hurt rather than help a party. We introduce a mechanism, combining sequential choices with a structured form of trading, that results in sincere choices for two parties that avoids these problems. Although there are difficulties in extending this mechanism to more than two parties, other approaches are explored, such as permitting parties to make consecutive choices not prescribed by an apportionment method. But certain problems, such as eliminating envy, remain.
AB - Political parties in Northern Ireland recently used a divisor method of apportionment to choose, in sequence, ten cabinet ministries. If the parties have complete information about each other's preferences, we show that it may not be rational for them to act sincerely by choosing their most-preferred ministry that is available. One consequence of acting sophisticatedly is that the resulting allocation may not be Pareto-optimal, making all the parties worse off. Another is non-monotonicity - choosing earlier may hurt rather than help a party. We introduce a mechanism, combining sequential choices with a structured form of trading, that results in sincere choices for two parties that avoids these problems. Although there are difficulties in extending this mechanism to more than two parties, other approaches are explored, such as permitting parties to make consecutive choices not prescribed by an apportionment method. But certain problems, such as eliminating envy, remain.
KW - Apportionment methods
KW - Cabinets
KW - Fairness
KW - Mechanism design
KW - Sequential allocation
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=1842783951&partnerID=8YFLogxK
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U2 - 10.1177/0951629804041118
DO - 10.1177/0951629804041118
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:1842783951
SN - 0951-6298
VL - 16
SP - 143
EP - 173
JO - Journal of Theoretical Politics
JF - Journal of Theoretical Politics
IS - 2
ER -