This is an applied study about the stability of collective decision-making in fiscal matters and the features of individual preferences which are sufficient to reach a social ordering. It is based on data about citizens' preferences collected through a budget game played by a sample of voters in Turin, a large Italian city. By simulating a series of individual choices, a social ordering of the municipal budget items is arrived at. The role played by restricted (i.e., single-peaked, single-caved, etc.) preferences to avoid cycles in choice simulations is then assessed. Copyright 1994 by Kluwer Academic Publishers
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Article provided by Springer in its journal Public Choice.
Volume (Year): 78 (1994) Issue (Month): 3-4 (March) Pages: 205-18 Download reference. The following formats are available: HTML,
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