Efficient Black-Box Reductions for Separable Cost Sharing
Tobias Harks, Martin Hoefer, Anja Huber, Manuel Surek

TL;DR
This paper introduces black-box reductions that transform approximation algorithms for cost minimization into separable cost sharing protocols, ensuring stable equilibria in various combinatorial resource allocation games.
Contribution
It provides a general framework for designing separable cost sharing protocols via reductions to approximation algorithms, applicable to multiple combinatorial domains.
Findings
New protocols for matroid-based games
Protocols for single-source connection games without delays
Reductions for connection games on n-series-parallel graphs
Abstract
In cost sharing games with delays, a set of agents jointly allocates a finite subset of resources. Each resource has a fixed cost that has to be shared by the players, and each agent has a nonshareable player-specific delay for each resource. A prominent example is uncapacitated facility location (UFL), where facilities need to be opened (at a shareable cost) and clients want to connect to opened facilities. Each client pays a cost share and his non-shareable physical connection cost. Given any profile of subsets allocated by the agents, a separable cost sharing protocol determines cost shares that satisfy budget balance on every resource and separability over the resources. Moreover, a separable protocol guarantees existence of pure Nash equilibria in the induced strategic game for the agents. In this paper, we study separable cost sharing protocols in several general combinatorial…
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