Consider a conditional prediction market, e.g. "if my cool policy is implemented, then widget production will increase by at least 15%". To my understanding, markets like this are intended as a tool for finding and the market just gets unwound or undone or refunded if doesn't occur.
I can work through the math and see that refunding the market indeed makes the price reflect , but this exacerbates one of the biggest issues with prediction markets: no one wants to lock up of capital to extract of profit in a year, so no one will lock up of capital to extract of profit in a year and only if some extra event happens.
My question is: are there any interesting or viable alternative ways to run a counterfactual or conditional prediction market? Off the top of my head, I could imagine using markets for and to derive , which would still pay out something if didn't occur.
Not an alternative, but an add-on: subsidize the market. This does require someone who wants the info badly enough to pay the subsidy. Robin Hanson recently blogged about how one might focus subsidy on trades one is most interested in.