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Ideal
• Objective measuresMax Weber: Rational organization
labor grouped in factories; populations massed in cities;technical control; advertising; planned sociological research
• Nozick: Weber’s rationality reshaped the world• Gadamer: Weber sought to eliminate every aspect of a
worldview and all value judgments from science• Toulmin: rational, objective, quantitative preference
Objective Measures
• Objective preferred– can measure
• past profit, after tax• accurate preference input
• “Rational” decision makerAccounting: Jensen - Agency TheoryEconomics: Williamson - Transaction Cost Analysis
• Subjective– know conceptually, but can’t accurately measure
• response to advertising
MAU Group Value
Group members m=1 to N
Criteria i=1 to k
Alternatives j=1 to J
N
m
k
iijimjN sw
1 1
Value
Dependence
multiplicative group utility function
under preferential dependence
(Keeney & Raiffa, 1976, p. 531)
k
iijii s
1
11Value
Keeney & Raiffa [1976]
Group aggregation methods
• Supra decision maker– verifies assumptions– determines utility/value functions– assesses scaling constants– makes interpersonal comparisons of utility
“such questions are not easy”
• Participatory Group Decision– consensus would be needed– “Agreement on scaling constants would likely
be difficult to achieve”• Group might select the alternative they all agree is
best• If not, they may agree on alternatives that should be
eliminated• At least provides basis for seeking constructive
compromise
Keeney & Raiffa [1976]
MAU ApproachesBose, Davey & Olson, Omega, 1997
1. Determine group utility function1a. Edwards: model the final decision maker
2. Voting• Or sum of ranks, or equivalent
3. Reach consensus informally3a. Give decision maker justification
1. Group Utility Function
• Dyer & Miles, Operations Research [1976]– Space flight trajectory evaluation– Individual lottery comparison, aggregated multiple ways
• Golabi, et al., Management Science [1981]– DOE solar energy projects– Individual preference elicitation, mean ratings by attribute to aggregate
• Dyer & Lund, Interfaces [1982]– Petroleum product strategy selection– Individual elicitation through questionnaire, expert assignment of weights
• Thomas, et al., The Journal of Applied Behavioral Science [1989]– Computer system installation– NGT, individual scoring; upper management scored for group
• Reagan-Cirincione, et al., Interfaces [1991]– Insurance options– Task force scoring, weights assigned to each stakeholder
2. Voting (or sum of ranks)
• Lincoln & Rubin, IEEE Transactions SCM [1979]– Coal-fired plant strategy
– Interview individuals; aggregate by method of marks, majority rule
• Method of marks: best scenario 5, worst 1, rest by judgment
• Edwards & von Winterfeldt, Risk Analysis [1987]– German energy, Arizona water control
– Interview, obtained individual weights; rank sums to aggregate
3. Consensus Seeking
• Ulvila & Snider, Operations Research [1980]– Oil tanker safety negotiation– Interviews/questionnaires, used to sort alternatives for
discussion• Keeney, et al., Operations Research [1986]
– Electrical generation– Interviews with pairwise tradeoffs; one respondent’s results used
because all were similar
• Jones, et al., JORS [1990]– UK energy policy– Utilities assessed by individuals; basis for discussion &
negotiation
ACCURATE PREFERENCE INPUT
• incomplete information• uncertain measures
• uncertain preferences
• group participation
• risk• time pressure: Edwards - how can you calculate
expected utility in available time?• change competition complexity
Objective/Subjective
• OBJECTIVE: what is convenient to model– ideal - eliminate bias, arbitrary judgment– extreme: cost/benefit analysis spanning years of
measuring the unmeasurable
• SUBJECTIVE: what people do to cope– value is subjective after all anyway– value is what MAUT, MCDA seeks to measure
Public Rationality
• Bentham (Arrow, 1951): If we admit interpersonal comparisons of utility, we can order choices by function of utilities
• Hume (Nozick 1993): Group of individual preferences could be irrational
• Nozick [1993]: If a public decision, may need to bend to assure others
• Rosenau [1992]: Discussion in the public sphere depends on force– The stronger argument always carries the day
Group Rationality
• Buchanan & Tullock [1965]: only individuals can be rational, not groups– Individuals within groups likely to have different aims
– Individuals within groups unlikely to take into account full marginal costs
• Arrow [1974]: There cannot be a completely consistent meaning to collective rationality
YET: Since individual activities interact, joint decision will be superior to separate decisions
EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE
contrary to rational choice models
Braybrooke & Lindblom [1969]; Simon [1985] Payne, et al. [1993]
• Some problems never reach decision maker
• decision makers often have simple maps of real problems
• all alternatives not known, so decision makers do not have full, relevant information
• individual altruism
Tversky [1969]
• systematic & predictable economic intransitivities
Kahneman, Slovic & Tversky [1982]
• people use heuristics rather than follow rational model
Organizational Aspects
• Cyert & March [1959]– Decision making in organizations
• Multiple actors• Inconsistent preferences
J. G. March [1978]
Rational choice involves 2 guesses• future consequences of current actions• future preferencesIndividual preferences often appear fuzzy,
inconsistent, to change over timeInterpersonal comparisons by individual across time
similar to aggregating across individuals
We are left with the weak theorems of social welfare economics
Choices
• Arrow:– Voting
– Market mechanism
– Administrative discretion
– Rule of law preference endogenous
– Dictatorship
– Convention preference endogenous
• Levitan & March [1957]:– Elected representatives making bargains
Amatra Sen [1982]
• Aggregation rules– Utilitarian maximize weighted sum– Rawlsian maximize minimum
• Knight: greater tendency toward inequality under voting than under the market
Arrow’s Impossibility
• Voting leads to possibility of intransitivity (Nanson)
• If exclude the possibility of interpersonal comparison of utility, only imposed or dictatorial orderings would be satisfactory
• Black: under single-peaked preferences, majority decision leads to transitive result for odd number of voters– Median of first choice
Arrow’s Social Welfare Function Conditions
• Positive association of social and individual values– Respond positively to changes in individual preference
• Independence of irrelevant alternatives• Condition of citizen sovereignty
– Free to select one alternative over another
• Condition of nondictatorship– choice not based solely on the preferences of one
individual
• Summation of utilities– Based on ordinal, not cardinal, values
Arrow Conclusions
• Interpersonal comparison of utilities has no meaning – so Arrow assumes only ordinal
• Doctrine of voter sovereignty is incompatible with collective rationality
• Individuals have incentive to misrepresent their orderings in a group setting
• The market cannot be taken as a social welfare function since it cannot take into account altruism
Buchanan & Tullock
• Arrow requires all votes be pairwise, which leads to cyclical majority– Whole proof makes no sense if applied to voting
methods other than pairwise
• If allow logrolling, problem of cyclical majority vanishes– But logrolling is politics– Time sequence very important
• Arrow’s wording rules out all possible voting rules except unanimity if there is logrolling
Unanimity
• Arrow: not majority, but unanimity required• Buchanan & Tullock: The majority rule has been
elevated to the status which unanimity should occupy
• Buchanan & Tullock: the rule of unanimity is the only rule indicated by widely acceptable welfare criteria– only this rule will produce Pareto-optimal solutions– Inherent interdependence of individual choices makes
strategic behavior inevitable in politics
Consensus is not truth
• Habermas [1991]: The criteria of rationality completely lacking in a consensus created by sophisticated opinion-molding services under the aegis of sham public interest
• Feyerabend [1993]: Eisenstein in Potemkin knew that history needed to be improved in order to be exciting and meaningful
Rely on Experts?
• Durkheim [1898]: Political opinions should rest on expert opinion
• Dewey [Putnam 1992]: NO! Experts inevitably removed from common interests
PROCESS
• Dewey [1888]: it is not the majority vote, but the process that forms the majority that matters
• Arrow [1951]: Belief in democracy may be so strong that decisions arrived at democratically may be preferred to decisions reached other ways that are better for each individual
• Buchanan & Tullock [1965]: Group decisions result from individual decisions combined through specific rules