Prediction Markets Can Work Without Money on the Line

I have made a living off prediction markets for 25 years; not as a gambler, but as a scientist and entrepreneur tapping into their uncanny ability to consolidate the informed guesses of a crowd.

Kalshi and Polymarket are handling billions of dollars of wagers during the World Cup. Yet I have watched the recent scandals around them — suspected insider trading on military operations, manipulated temperature readings and the threats to journalists — with particular dismay. Because the loudest defenders of these platforms have built their case on a false claim: Prediction markets only work because traders have real money on the line.

I know it is wrong, because more than 20 years ago, I ran an experiment disproving it.

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In 2003, the Pentagon’s Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency made a visionary attempt to use prediction markets for geopolitical forecasting. However, it created a huge controversy in Congress and was quickly killed. Its opponents decried the moral hazards of letting people wager money on national security issues — even saying it could aid terrorists. Its defenders argued that forecasting required real money to serve its predictive purpose. Among the latter was the noted economist Justin Wolfers, then at Stanford.

At the time, I ran a prediction market called NewsFutures, which used play money, offered free participation and gave out very modest cash prizes to the best performers. I challenged Wolfers on an online forum of The Washington Post: Was he ready to bet that predictions on markets that used real money were more accurate than my play-money version?