Idea in Brief

The Problem

Although people tend to think of the American political system as a public institution based on high-minded principles, it’s not. Politics behaves according to the same kinds of incentives and forces that shape competition in any private industry.

Winners and Losers

Our elections and our legislative systems are drowning in unhealthy competition: The entrenched duopoly—the Republicans and the Democrats—wins, and the public interest loses.

The Solution

We can have healthy competition in politics—results, innovation, and accountability—by redesigning how we vote to connect acting in the public interest with getting reelected. We call it free-market politics.

Amid the unprecedented partisanship and gridlock in Washington, DC, Congress appears locked in a permanent battle, incapable of delivering results. It seems to many Americans—and to the rest of the world—that our political system is so irrational and dysfunctional that it’s beyond repair.

A version of this article appeared in the July–August 2020 issue of Harvard Business Review.