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WHY DO ALL POLITICAL LEADERS MAKE BAD DECISIONS?

Learn why political leaders make irrational decisions, the role of rationality, when it's rational to be irrational, and common biases affecting decision-making. Gain insights into cognitive dissonance, overestimation, risk avoidance, and the impact of personality disorders on leadership.

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WHY DO ALL POLITICAL LEADERS MAKE BAD DECISIONS?

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  1. WHY DO ALL POLITICAL LEADERS MAKE BAD DECISIONS? WHY DO SOME TYPES OF POLITICAL LEADERS MAKE REALLY BAD DECISIONS?

  2. WHAT DO WE MEAN BY A “IRRATIONAL” POLITICAL DECISION? What makes a decision rational? For social scientists, rationaldoesn’t mean normatively good (i.e., for the people who are being governed) Nor is a rational decision necessarily one that is consistent with outside or universal ideas about what the best choices are Example: What would be a rational decision for a brutal dictator facing an uprising ala Egypt Rational decisions are choices that will constitute the most effective way to maximize a leader’s desired ends. How prevalent is the “rationality” assumption in the social sciences and business?

  3. WHAT MAKES A LEADER’S DECISION-MAKING RATIONAL? Leaders need to know and consider carefully what their goals are, and those goals need to be consistent with their real preferences If they have competing or conflicting goals, rational leaders should rank their preferences Rational decision-making weighs all viable options, their potential consequences Rational decision making involves careful and systematic thoughts about the probability of that each option will result in certain costs and benefits. Example: You are reasonably happy with your current job, but are wondering if you should move on. If you quit your current job, there is a 95% chance of finding another job; a 85 % chance you will like it as much, a 90% chance your spouse will find a job s/he likes, a 90% chance the schools will be as good for your children, a 90% chance you will make more money. Should you quit you job? … The joint probability of these various events is less than 60%.

  4. WHEN IS IT PERFECTLY RATIONAL TO BE IRRATIONAL? Bounded rationality includes saticficing: a decision-making strategy that attempts to meet criteria for adequacy, rather than to identify an optimal solution. It is perfectly rational to operate with less than full information when: When substitutes (aka “heuristic shortcuts”) for more information get you close (e.g. partisanship) When the stakes are low When getting more info has high costs What should we do if the stakes are high and we have to operate with less than full information? Acting against the worst case scenario assumptions may be fully rational even when you are poorly informed. Example: invading Iraq over WMDs

  5. WHERE IN MAKING DECISIONS DO ALMOST ALL LEADERS GO WRONG? Two major types of “biases”: Cognitive (mental short-cuts that go wrong) and motivated (psychological needs, fears, desires) Premature cognitive closure: Why do we go with the first decision that looks like it will work? Why is group-think so common? Why is it especially likely if a leader has proposed premature cognitive closure? The endowment principle: Why do we retrospectively think that close decisions were in fact obvious ones? (Do you want a coffee cup or a pen? Why did you pick the best school for yourself?) Why do we follow operational code and have so many issues with problem misclassification and the misspecification of options (what happens if things go wrong when a decision-maker was “thinking outside of the box”?) Misreading the past when it comes to probability in the future: If you flip three heads in a row, what is the probability that the next coin toss will be heads?

  6. WHERE DO ALMOST ALL LEADERS GO WRONG? Cognitive dissonance and the perseverance of beliefs in the face of new facts. Why do we keep believing things that we would know were wrong if we just stopped evaluate new evidence carefully? The fundamental attribution theorem. Why do we see decisions by our adversaries make as linked to their flawed character rather than being caused by situational factors (our use and ownership of WMDs as example vs. why Iran wants them). Why do we tend to overestimate our own ability? Why are we so open to the selective use of evidence and postivist reasoning? Why do we spend more time trying to prove our points and justify our decisions than trying to disprove them? Why are we risk adverse with respect to potential gains, but risk avoidant when potential losses are involved (investing as an example) We are inherently conservative. Why do we typically go with the status quo when we are unsure… even though the status quo may actually be the worst option? Example: Strict interpretation of the Constitution? Why do we engage in future discounting, especially when a problem or threat will slowly? Why do ignore things like the fact that eating poorly will kills us, global warming, the national debt, and the collapse of American hegemony?

  7. PERSONALITY DISORDERS AND LEADERSHIP Jerrold Post: The term personality connotes a systematic pattern of functioning that is consistent over a range of behaviors and over time. In the political personality profile, we attempt to characterize the core political personality, identifying the deeply ingrained patterns that are coherent and accordingly have powerful predictive implications. Just a reminder on some key areas of the political personality profile: What are the primary things that motivate a given leader? Why does s/he want power? What purpose does she see from the exercise of power? How does the leader’s mind work (Cognativestyle)? How well does s/he process information? How open is s/he to persuasion and new information? Does the leader calculate and react to risk well? What are the leader’s core beliefs and values? Is the world divided into good and evil? What are the key traits? Does s/he have a disorder

  8. NARCISSISTS IN POWER What is narcissism? It is a common major disorder among political leaders because it fits with popular images of an appropriate leader-follower relationship in many democratic and non-democratic settings Narcissists have a grandiose sense of self-importance, uniqueness, and achievement (the latter of which is usually overstated) They are motivated by the constant need for attention and especially admiration; they never satisfied with the status quo They lack empathy, blame those around them for failures, are ruthless to foes, expect special treatment, and adhere only to internal and malleable scruples Why are these leaders dangerous? Cognition problems: Group think and pools of narcissists, the endowment principle magnified, attribution errors, they inability to deal with mistakes, willing to accept short term gains that look good, but that are bad over the long haul (esp. if credit can be taken, but blame will be distributed) Are there times when having this kind of a leader is good? State building periods: These folks keep going, they take risks, and they will do anything for the glory of creating a new state

  9. OBSESSIVE COMPULSIVES IN POWER How do OC’s lead? Democracies frequently select these types of leaders They are Vulcans: Nuanced to a fault. They tend to see everything in shades of grey, and they tend to rely on procedures and rules to provide order around them They emphasize process over results in decision-making and insist on acquiring more information when they should act even They focus on data and what can be concretely known even when this kind of information is not available or necessarily accurate; they do not trust their intuition or emotions They will typically be overwhelmed by complex issues and then can end up letting poor readings of data take lead them astray. Once they have committed to a decision or process, they tend to stick to that decision no matter where it takes them. What’s wrong with these leaders? They can let small crises become serious ones by inaction and the inability to read threats for what they are. They procrastinate to a fault and others take advantage of this. They tend to strongly favor incremental responses and compromise even when these strategies make no sense.

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