Sunday Times

Poll too blunt a tool to answer Brexit question

- MARK BUCHANAN

DURING the next couple of months, the candidates to replace UK Prime Minister David Cameron will debate what to do now that voters have decided to leave the EU. They should keep in mind that doing exactly what the voters said might not be the wisest — or the most democratic — approach.

Direct democracy, in which voters decide specific issues en masse, is actually rather unusual. Typically, such decisions are left to elected officials, such as a president or legislatur­e, whom they provide with the time and resources required to make wellinform­ed choices.

And there may be a good reason that government has historical­ly developed this way: smaller groups make better decisions, particular­ly on complex issues.

As researcher­s from Berlin’s Max Planck Institute for Human Developmen­t note in a recent paper, the wisdom of crowds works well only on questions that individual­s can answer relatively easily.

Suppose you’re asking whether California’s population is larger than Britain’s (it’s not). If you get nine people to vote, they’ll probably get the right answer. If you get a million people to vote, they’ll almost certainly get it right. The power of the crowd washes away the possibilit­y of error.

But try a harder question: if you fold a piece of paper on itself 25 times, will the result be taller than the Empire State Building? Most people would say no, even though the actual thickness would be about 16km. Asking a larger group to vote would only increase the certainty of getting it wrong.

The Max Planck researcher­s show that smaller groups perform particular­ly well when questions come in an unpredicta­ble mix of easy and difficult. Generally, they suggest, the optimal group size for making good decisions is fairly small — often around 10 to 15, and typically fewer than 40.

No wonder decision-making bodies around the world work with small numbers. Think of juries, church councils, central bank boards or parliament­ary committees, which tend to have between five and 40 members.

Granted, this research might not apply directly to the UK referendum, which arguably didn’t have a right answer. Yet it certainly suggests that a referendum was a crude instrument for deciding such an important and difficult issue — especially given that the British public holds wildly

The optimal group size for making good decisions is fairly small

distorted views on, say, the number of immigrants in the country (estimated by the public at more than twice the actual level).

Voters clearly expressed their discontent on a number of issues, including immigratio­n and globalisat­ion. UK leaders can’t ignore this, but they should also question the naïve view that respecting democracy demands invoking Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty, triggering the formal process of taking the UK out of the EU.

There’s a good reason that voters gave them the power and resources to examine such choices carefully. In deciding how to respect the voters’ will, and whether this requires Britain to leave or stay, that is precisely what they should do. —

Ron Derby is away

 ?? Picture: REUTERS ?? BLUE IN THE FACE: A woman demonstrat­es against Britain’s decision to leave the EU, in London
Picture: REUTERS BLUE IN THE FACE: A woman demonstrat­es against Britain’s decision to leave the EU, in London

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