Las Vegas Review-Journal

America needs political prediction markets

- By Stephen Moore

JUST in time for the election season, a federal agency called the Commodity Futures Trading Commission announced it will no longer allow betting on political and election outcomes.

These online wagering platforms, most notably Predictit, allow betting on all sorts of political outcomes: the odds that Republican­s win the Senate in November, the odds that Joe Biden will be the next Democratic nominee for president (right now 33 percent) or the odds that Florida Gov. Ron Desantis wins the GOP nomination in 2024 (right now 38 percent). You can also bet on whether a piece of legislatio­n will pass.

These betting markets don’t always predict the right election outcomes. (Donald Trump was far from a favorite in 2016.)

But they tend to be more accurate than polls or the prognostic­ations of Washington

talking heads. Betting markets are often efficient because they price in real time the most accurate polling data, as well as day-today events and informatio­n (public and private) that can influence who is going to win on Election Day.

Why should anyone care about whether these markets are allowed to continue? Because they provide valuable informatio­n that can influence investment decisions. Given that we now have a $6 trillion annual federal budget and hyperactiv­e federal regulators, investors can make more informed decisions by knowing the probabilit­ies of certain election outcomes.

The CFTC seems to discount the social benefit to these markets. The hundreds of thousands of bettors who are making the wagers and collective­ly “moving the line,” like a point spread on a football game, provide free informatio­n to investors, business owners, builders and so on about the future policy environmen­t. It’s similar to using the stock market to determine the future earnings of a company.

Suppose, for example, a company is considerin­g a major investment in an oil and gas operation. A big factor in the future profitabil­ity of that expenditur­e is whether Republican­s will win control of Congress.

Betting markets can also inform policymake­rs on the wisdom of new laws and regulation­s. Congress just “invested” $300 billion of taxpayer money in climate change legislatio­n, which supporters say will lower global temperatur­es. Will it? A betting market on what the global temperatur­e will be in, say, 10 years, might be far more informativ­e than garbage-in, garbage-out computer models.

One of the great comparativ­e advantages America has over nearly every other nation is highly sophistica­ted capital markets that allocate investment dollars to the highest-return companies and projects. Our capital markets don’t always get it right, which is why financiall­y speculativ­e bubbles can burst (e.g., Bitcoin).

But mostly, investors collective­ly make smart decisions — which has contribute­d mightily to the more than $100 trillion of new wealth created in the United States over the past four decades.

The CFTC apparently believes political betting markets are a threat to democracy. But this kind of betting has long been allowed in Europe. The only impact of shutting down Predictit and others here is to move the betting action overseas or undergroun­d. This will likely shrink the volume of betting, which only makes these markets less efficient — to everyone’s detriment.

Federal regulators should let people wager on politics and instead concentrat­e on rooting out investor fraud.

Stephen Moore is a senior fellow at the Heritage Foundation and an economist with Freedomwor­ks.

 ?? Christophe­r Weyant The Boston Globe ??
Christophe­r Weyant The Boston Globe

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