Psephology 101

A major virtue of being the largest democracy is that the amount of data – historical and otherwise – is immense. It provides ample fodder for psephology – the scientific analysis of elections, making India an interesting space for psephologists. In our previous post in State Craft, I illustrated how difficult it can be to accurately record primary data on how voters are likely to vote. In this post I will share how incredibly complex can be studying the historical data, and how variable its predictions.

Why is Psephology complex in India

  • Heterogeneous voter profiles: It is difficult (and foolhardy) to generalise voters, even within constituencies given multiple languages, cultures and socio-economic backgrounds. Increasingly we are acknowledging the individuality of niches or tribes, groups which can loosely be considered homogenous.
  • Multipolar nature of elections: As much as it may appear so prima facie through main stream media, elections are rarely ever binary in nature and issues. There are several factors at play and each “tribe” has their own expectations, quite frequently they maybe mutually exclusive.
  • Party alliances: Pre-poll and potential post-poll alliances are difficult to factor in. The former are relatively easier though, since the very primary basis for forming them is the sum of all parts being greater. Predicting the possibility of post-poll alliances is one thing, given the multiple permutations that are possible, their stability is another.
  • Star campaigners: Icons and faces of the campaigns can give the elections a polar nature but the extent to which they affect individual and group voter sentiments varies.

Furthermore, these variables compound their mutual effects.

Considering the above it isn’t a surprise that most psychologists’ predictions are usually off the mark, and the best that one can do is develop various scenarios. In Formula 1 racing, for instance, teams have software that can account for a variety of variables and possibilities and simulate how it can affect their driver, real time; and therefore what is the IDEAL course of action. If Driver’s Championship challenger – Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel is running Position 4 by lap 30 in the Singapore GP (which is this weekend) and McLaren’s Fernando Alonso who is 35 seconds behind him in P10, crashes at turn 11, should Sebastian come into the pits and get his tyres changed? There is only one right answer to this.

The first step of such a multivariate analysis is to identify the multiple variables. Identifying the factors that are truly relevant can be tricky and requires an extremely scientific approach, thoroughly stripped of subjective biases. Once inherently biased factors have been eliminated and you can test out factors – or independent variables – that you think matter. Such hypothesis testing can be meticulous and expensive, but highly rewarding. The second is define dependant variables – the precise outcome of the dependant variables that you want to study, which may or may not be very objective.

For instance, in UP elections of 2017, multiple independent variables were thought to be impactful – such as caste and religious equations, socio-economic backgrounds, geographies, whether constituents are beneficiaries of various state and central schemes, and so on. In actuality, according to some psephologists’ retrospective studies, state-driven schemes by and large were inconsequential, especially in comparison with central schemes. This is counterintuitive and could have been tested in a controlled environment, in case someone was looking for it. Its outcome, or the dependant variable could be a range of predispositions towards certain parties, which could manifest in the form of willingness to step out to vote, or to cast a vote for a certain party or influence others to do so. This is a check of the interdependencies of the dependant and independent variables and the degree thereof.

Naturally, this act of translating subjective aspects of human decision making into measurable is incredibly complicated, expensive and prone to errors. But the size of the voting populace offers a natural advantage – that error can be minimised over a large amount of samples. So it remains a function of money.

Previously on State Craft

Why election surveys don’t (always) work?

 

Hemant Gaule
Hemant is an education leader based in Mumbai, India, and is passionate about education, policy, and media. After graduating from the Indian Institute of Management -Ahmedabad, he has counselled several private, social, political & government initiatives. He was a Co-founder & Director of Citizens of Accountable Governance, a team that spearheaded the national election campaign of India’s current Prime Minister Mr. Narendra Modi in 2014. After that, he has Co-founded (and is Dean of) India’s only institute dedicated to education and research in public relations – School of Communications & Reputation. In 2019 he became the first Indian to be conferred as a Fellow Accredited Public Relations Practitioners by ASEAN PR Network. In 2022, he was named among 40 Young Turks of India by Reputation Today Magazine. He can be reached at @HemantGaule on Twitter.

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