Strategy-proofness of social welfare functions: The use of the Kemeny distance between preference orderings (Q1196175): Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 10:34, 30 July 2024
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English | Strategy-proofness of social welfare functions: The use of the Kemeny distance between preference orderings |
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Strategy-proofness of social welfare functions: The use of the Kemeny distance between preference orderings (English)
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17 December 1992
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Let \(f\) be a social welfare function defined on the space of preferences of \(n\) voters. The distance between an individual's true preference and social preference is measured by the Kemeny distance. The main result is that if there are at least 4 alternatives and the number of voters is even, there exists no social welfare function which is nonimposed, strategyproof, and weakly independent. This result generalizes the theorem of Gibbard and Satterthwaite.
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manipulability
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social welfare function
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Kemeny distance
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