Abstract:
We consider the problem of eliciting truthful responses to a survey question
when the respondents share a common prior that the survey planner is agnostic
about. The planner would therefore like to have a “universal” mechanism, which
would induce honest answers for all possible priors. If the planner also
requires a locality condition that ensures that the mechanism payoffs are
determined by the respondents'
posterior probabilities of the true state of nature, we prove that, under
additional smoothness and sensitivity conditions, the payoff in the
truth-telling equilibrium must be a logarithmic function of those posterior
probabilities. Moreover, the respondents are necessarily ranked according to
those probabilities. Finally, we discuss implementation issues.