Usually, when people—especially
pollsters—predict election outcomes wrong, they say something like
"No one could have guessed that the turnout would be so high in the
southwestern part of the state" and leave it at that. They don't get
fired, and they only occasionally even concede that they might have something
to apologize for. And maybe they don't. After all, they're in the business of entertaining
and informing, but perfect accuracy isn't required.
For a brief, shining moment last week, politics junkies had
lots of facts at their disposal, and it made them giddy. Judging by the
frequency with which polling data was released, Americans spent the entire
first week of November answering pollsters questions about their voting habits,
opinion on the issues, and preferences for the more handsome candidate. Oceans
of data poured forth from every television, every political blog, every newspaper.
With all that information, talking heads swelled. Already confident in their
predictive abilities, the presence of such a profusion of information sent
election season seers into a frenzy of confident explication and prediction.
Conversations about politics inevitably degenerated into poll
swapping—"Zogby says Allen is ahead." "Yes, but CNN's poll
favors Webb." And when things got really desperate (either on air or over
drinks) surprising fervent discussion of margins of error would flame into
existence.
Thorough all this chaos, I calmly cited online election
prediction markets. Standing zen-like above the fray in that chaotic week, I'd
casually drop a mention that "InTrade
has the likelihood of Republicans holding the Senate at 70 percent." I
delivered tiny, smug lectures on the superior ability of markets to aggregate
information, name-checking Hayek. I sat aloof, murmuring the old TradeSports
motto to myself "Put your money where your mind is."
This strategy has served me well in the past: In 2004,
InTrade traders correctly called all 50 states the weekend before the election.
The Iowa Electronic Market,
a highfaultin', academic futures market in the same vein, has frequently boasted
a lower margin of
error than polls since its creation in 1988.
But this time around, InTrade and its other electronic
market cousins didn't acquit themselves very impressively. Iowa Electronic
Markets had Republicans holding the Senate, with an all-Republican Congress
trading high for most of the history of this cycle's market, and an all
Democratic Congress trading very low—below 20 percent
probability for most of the market's history. And while markets devoted to
individual races in the Senate tended to be correct, the overall prediction
markets for the balance of power in the upper house miscalled the race. These
outcomes were still better than a
heck of a lot of pundits, but not good enough to justify my serene
pre-election confidence.
Weirdly, the McLaughlin Group, the fustiest of all the
talking head shows, had one of the
best records this cycle, with Eleanor Clift,
Lawrence O'Donnell, and John McLaughlin all predicting Democratic takeover of
the Senate and calling nearly all of the close races correctly. Still, that old
line about stopped clocks comes to mind.
Now my favorite moment of the political cycle is upon us:
Total ignorance. The whole ecosystem of pundits, pollsters, and
politics-obsessed bloggers has been floating in a lush primordial soup of
political data. But information-rich environments are not the natural habitats
of such creatures. As soon as the marathon election night coverage ends
("We are calling the Senate for the Democrats") the punditry returns
to a state of Eden-like ignorant bliss, unburdened by data.
And for now, I'll go back to my old strategy. After all,
markets still have a
better track record than pundits. Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) is trading at
just over 53 cents on the dollar at InTrade today as the prospective 2008
Republican nominee. After a lull during the congressional election when
investors were in wait-and-see mode, McCain's chances spiked up over 50
percent, as Allen contracts plummeted to less than one cent on the dollar.
And InTrade has Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-NY) on a steady
upward trajectory since early September. After virtually no trading in the
first week of November, she's up over the 50 percent mark for the Democratic
2008 nominee. So, McCain versus Hillary it is.
Fortunately, even if I'm wrong
this time around, I don't have to do more than offer a casual apology. I'll
know not to be quite so cocky, and all those stupid traders I had to apologize
for this time around have lost all their money, so they'll be sufficiently
chastened (and impoverished) when considering their bets for 2008.
Katherine Mangu-Ward is an
associate editor at Reason.
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