Microtargeting, voters' unawareness, and democracy

Author(s)
Wieland Müller, Freek van Gils, Jens Prüfer
Abstract

Recent technological developments have raised concerns about threats to democracy because of their potential to distort election outcomes: (a) data-driven voter research enabling political microtargeting and (b) growing news consumption via social media and news aggregators that obfuscate the origin of news items, leading to voters’ unawareness about a news sender’s identity. We provide a theoretical framework in which we can analyze the effects that microtargeting by political interest groups and unawareness have on election outcomes in comparison to “conventional” news reporting. We show which voter groups suffer from which technological development (a) or (b). While both microtargeting and unawareness have negative effects on voter welfare, we show that only unawareness can flip an election. Our model framework allows the theory-based discussion of policy proposals, such as to ban microtargeting or to require news platforms to signal the political orientation of a news item’s originator (JEL C72, D72, D82, D83).

Organisation(s)
Vienna Center for Experimental Economics, Department of Economics
External organisation(s)
Tilburg University
Journal
The Journal of Law, Economics, & Organization
Volume
41
Pages
634-653
No. of pages
21
ISSN
8756-6222
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1093/jleo/ewae002
Publication date
07-2025
Peer reviewed
Yes
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
502057 Experimental economics
Portal url
https://ucrisportal.univie.ac.at/en/publications/8b496abb-9967-412c-97ca-7f692117aa6e