The School of Athens

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Wednesday 23 November 2011

What odds some perspective?

Colleagues and scholars from coast to coast, across Bass Strait and all the ships at sea.

Dateline: Australia, Federal Politics 2011.

In the last month there's been a definite shift in the collective mindset of the political world.

Unimaginable as it might be to many, the ALP is now being given just the remotest smidgen of a possibility that it could actually win the next federal election.

It seems, according to the political world, that the chance of the ALP winning the next election is now no longer less than the chance of the Earth being struck imminently by another 10 kilometre sized asteroid (the size of the one that crashed into the Earth 65 million years ago at Chicxulub in the Yucatan Peninsular and wiped out the dinosaurs) but rather the ALP's chance of winning the next election is now about equal to the chance of the Earth being struck imminently by another 30 metre sized asteroid (the size of the one that exploded over Tunguska in Siberia in 1908 and obliterated the surrounding forest for 2000 square km).







But how can this be?  So many words have been written and spoken declaring that the ALP was not only finished federally but "everywhere" for a generation, that to now suggest otherwise would be - dare it be said - a backflip!

The truth is, and has always been, that the ALP has had a much better chance of winning the next federal election than "Buckley's and none" or even the remotest smidgen of a possibility.

Despite all the absurd commentary (and absurd was the kindest word I could locate in my Thesaurus - the others were: batty, crazy, flaky, loony, nutty, ludicrous, preposterous, screwy and wacky) about the Coalition being "certain to win" and Abbott an "unbackable favourite", the betting markets have never priced the Coalition at higher than a 75 per chance of winning (and thus the ALP at lower than a 25 per cent chance) which in betting terms, was at odds of 3/1 ON (excluding the bookmakers' betting margin).  Which meant if the election were held 4 times, the Coalition would win 3 times and the ALP once.

Recently there's been a change in the betting probabilities with ALP's odds of winning the election having shortened to 9/4, increasing its estimated chance of winning from 25 per cent to 31 per cent, and the Coalition's estimated chance of winning correspondingly decreasing from 75 per cent to 69 per cent.  

Odds of 9/4 AGAINST for the ALP (and thus 9/4 ON for the Coalition) means if the election were held 13 times the Coalition would win 9 times and the ALP 4 times.

While currently the Coalition (a 69 per cent chance) is still more than twice as likely to win the election as the ALP (a 31 per cent chance), it is not a 100 per cent chance and never was, or ever could be.

In any contest, every participant has a chance of winning, and in a 'two horse' scenario this is especially so.

In this year's U.S. Women's Tennis Open final, Samantha Stosur was priced at only a 19 per cent chance of defeating Serena Williams who was priced at an 81 per cent chance, which meant Stosur had a 1 in 5 chance of winning, yet she went on to win the tournament.


In this year's Rugby World Cup, the Irish Rugby Team was priced at only a 17 per cent chance of defeating the Australian Wallabies who were priced at an 83 per cent chance, which meant the Irish team had a 1 in 6 chance of winning, yet still won.


Again in the Rugby World Cup, the Tongan Rugby Team was priced at only a 6 per cent chance of defeating the French Rugby Team who were priced at a 94 per cent chance, which meant the Tongan team had a 1 in 16 chance of winning, yet still won.


The 1 in 5 chance for Stosur, the 1 in 6 chance for the Irish and the 1 in 16 chance for the Tongans, were all real chances, they weren't simply meaningless numbers on a page.

So too the previous 1 in 4 chance and now 4 in 13 chance for the ALP.

Unlike the myriad of hallucinations that pervade the collective consciousness of the political world, which - via a process that appears part apothecary part alchemy - mysteriously becomes accepted as an indisputable premonition of the outcome of a future event; the betting markets are worth taking seriously as they are the best reflection of the potential election outcome because the prices, and thus the probabilities, are determined not only by a wide range of opinions which absorb all available information (public and private) but, most importantly, by the weight of money and the forces of supply and demand, which results in an equilibrium of the relative probability of each party winning and therefore best approximates the true chance.

The political world would be best served if it concentrated on matters of true substance, such as policy issues, and left the mystical visions, soothsaying and fortune-telling to Zoltan, Esmeralda and their crystal balls.  




So what has occurred to cause this change of view?

While it might be 'the mood' or 'the tone' or 'the body language' or even 'the vibe', it is most likely 'the polls'.

Since my last summary of the polls in August (one year on from the election) we have seen the ALP's position improve.

Aggregating and weighting the polling data from Newspoll, Nielsen, Essential, Galaxy and Morgan (phone poll) over the last four months illustrates this (see the table below).

In August the ALP was suffering a swing of 6.9 per cent which, if replicated at an election, would see them lose about 30 seats in the House of Representatives (assuming a uniform swing).

Since then we can see that the ALP's position has slowly improved with November's polls indicating the ALP is now suffering a 4.5 per cent swing which, if replicated at an election, would see them lose about 18 seats in the House of Representatives (assuming a uniform swing). 


 ALP
L-NP
GRNS
OTHS
Two Party Preferred
Election 2010
 38.0
43.6
11.8
  6.6
ALP  50.1   L-NP  49.9
Polling August 2011
 29.8
48.6
11.7
  9.9
ALP  43.2   L-NP  56.8
Polling September 2011
 28.9
48.8
11.6
10.7
ALP  42.6   L-NP  57.4
Polling October 2011
 30.8
48.0
11.8
  9.4
ALP  44.1   L-NP  55.9
Polling November 2011
 32.7
46.2
10.9
10.2
ALP  45.6   L-NP  54.4

One of three things will now occur:

1. The difference between the two parties in the polls will widen 

2. The difference between the two parties in the polls will remain the same 

3. The difference between the two parties in the polls will continue to narrow

If either of the first two scenarios occurs and is repeated in the election, then the Coalition will win easily.

If the third scenario occurs, then it will be a question of how much the difference between the two parties narrows by the time of the election.  

If the ALP gains and holds a solid lead, then it will win the election comfortably.

If the election is 'tight' (when the two parties' two party preferred votes are each between 49 and 51 per cent) then, according to history, the chance of the government being returned is very high.

Since preferential voting was first used in the 1919 Federal Election there have been thirty-six elections.  Twelve of those elections have been 'tight'.

In every one of those twelve 'tight' elections, the government of the day was returned.  In six of those 'tight' elections, the government attracted less than 50 per cent of the two party preferred vote.

Oppositions have never just 'fallen over the line'.


Year
Govt TPP %
Election result
1998
49.0
Govt returned
1954
49.5
Govt returned
1961
49.5
Govt returned
1940
49.7
 Govt returned*
1969
49.8
Govt returned
1990
49.9
Govt returned
2010
50.1
 Govt returned*
1980
50.4
Govt returned
1937
50.6
Govt returned
1951
50.8
Govt returned
1987
50.8
Govt returned
2001
51.0
Govt returned
*(In 1940 and 2010, the incumbent formed a minority government)


On only eight occasions since the 1919 Federal Election has the government been defeated, and in each of those cases it was an emphatic victory for the opposition.  

The lowest two party preferred vote achieved by an opposition to defeat a government was 51.3 per cent by the Menzies Coalition Opposition in 1949, yet this was no tight victory.  The Coalition won the equivalent of 61 per cent of the seats in the House of Representatives, which in today's Parliament translates to about 92 seats.

The other seven changes of government were similarly clear victories for the opposition.


Year
Opp’n TPP %
Election result
1949
51.3
Govt defeated
1929
51.9
Govt defeated
1972
52.7
Govt defeated
2007
52.7
Govt defeated
1983
53.2
Govt defeated
1996
53.6
Govt defeated
1975
55.7
Govt defeated
1931
58.1
Govt defeated

Conclusion

As it is has been all year, the Liberal-National Coalition is well placed according to the polls.  Not as well placed as a few months ago but well placed nonetheless.

However, well placed two years out from an election does not equate with well placed two days out from an election, yet so much of the mindset of the political world has been framed as if we are only two days out from an election - hence the belief that the ALP has 'no chance' of winning the next federal election.

In the last month this view has altered slightly from 'no chance' to 'next to no chance', largely as a result of an improvement in the polls. 

The betting markets, by contrast, have never viewed the potential election outcome in such absolute terms.  

While currently considering the Coalition to be the favourite, the markets - unencumbered by the baggage that weighs down the political world - are able to maintain a perspective and so have always seen the next federal election as very much a contest, not least because if the election is 'tight' then the ALP (as the incumbent) has history on its side.

But even in circumstances where the chance of a victory for one of the contestants is low, every chance is real and can be realised, as Sam Stosur and the Irish and Tongan Rugby Teams can testify. 

Why the political world adopts the persona of clairvoyants to make definitive statements about future events is a mystery, especially when there is an excellent guide as to the probabilities of the outcome of a future event already provided in the betting markets.

Perhaps for an answer to that, it would be worth consulting Zoltan and Esmerelda.

Brunelleschian regards,













Note: Accurate measures of the two party preferred votes were collated by the Australian Electoral Commission from the 1983 election.  The figures prior to those years are the estimates of scholars, which have been published by the following sources: 1919-1934 Roy Morgan Research, 1937-1958 Malcolm Mackerras via Peter Brent, 1961-1980 Parliamentary Library.

1 comment:

  1. To throw a little perspective on the basic premise of 'betting markets'.
    I am probably the biggest punter on politics in Australia.
    I have backed Labor to win the next Federal election.
    I am currently banned by bookmakers to continue to bet. It does not take much $ to influence a price. If one punter (me) was not currently procluded the price of Labor would be considerably shorter. How does this effect the theory?
    As an aside knowledgeable old timers state Ajax was 'dead'!

    ReplyDelete

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