Testing an Informational Theory of Legislation: Evidence from the U.S. House of Representatives

A. Ambrus, H. You, László Sándor
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Abstract

Using data on roll calls from the U.S. House of Representatives, this paper finds empirical support for informational theories of legislative decision-making. Consistent with the theoretical prediction, the bias of the committee a bill gets assigned to is strongly positively associated with the bias of its sponsor, and unbiased sponsors in expectation get assigned to roughly unbiased committees. Moreover, we find a negative relationship between the sponsor's absolute bias and the probability that the legislation is processed by closed rule. Despite these empirical regularities, there is a large variation in the data, suggesting that considerations other than informational efficiency are also important in committee appointments and procedural rule selection. As far as we know, our paper is the first one that provides quantitative empirical support for a theory of cheap talk versus delegation, in any setting.
检验立法信息理论:来自美国众议院的证据
本文利用美国众议院的点名数据,为立法决策的信息理论提供了实证支持。与理论预测一致的是,法案被分配到的委员会的偏见与其发起人的偏见呈强正相关,而预期中无偏见的发起人被分配到大致无偏见的委员会。此外,我们发现发起人的绝对偏见与立法被封闭规则处理的概率之间存在负相关关系。尽管存在这些经验规律,但数据存在很大差异,这表明在委员会任命和程序规则选择中,除信息效率之外的考虑因素也很重要。据我们所知,我们的论文是第一篇在任何情况下为廉价言论与授权理论提供定量实证支持的论文。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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