Preference Elicitation For Participatory Budgeting
Benade, Gerdus (Carnegie Mellon University) | Nath, Swaprava (Carnegie Mellon University) | Procaccia, Ariel D. (Carnegie Mellon University) | Shah, Nisarg (Harvard University )
Participatory budgeting enables the allocation of public funds by collecting and aggregating individual preferences; it has already had a sizable real-world impact. But making the most of this new paradigm requires a rethinking of some of the basics of computational social choice, including the very way in which individuals express their preferences. We analytically compare four preference elicitation methods -- knapsack votes, rankings by value or value for money, and threshold approval votes -- through the lens of implicit utilitarian voting, and find that threshold approval votes are qualitatively superior. This conclusion is supported by experiments using data from real participatory budgeting elections.
Feb-14-2017
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