Delegated Search Approximates Efficient Search
Jon Kleinberg, Robert Kleinberg

TL;DR
This paper investigates the efficiency loss when principals delegate search tasks to agents with differing interests, introducing mechanisms with universal bounds on solution quality loss and connecting delegation to prophet inequalities.
Contribution
It develops a general methodology to bound efficiency loss in delegation, proposing simple threshold mechanisms that achieve universal bounds on solution quality.
Findings
Mechanisms with threshold structures can achieve universal bounds.
Delegation efficiency loss can be quantitatively bounded.
Connection established between delegation and prophet inequalities.
Abstract
There are many settings in which a principal performs a task by delegating it to an agent, who searches over possible solutions and proposes one to the principal. This describes many aspects of the workflow within organizations, as well as many of the activities undertaken by regulatory bodies, who often obtain relevant information from the parties being regulated through a process of delegation. A fundamental tension underlying delegation is the fact that the agent's interests will typically differ -- potentially significantly -- from the interests of the principal, and as a result the agent may propose solutions based on their own incentives that are inefficient for the principal. A basic problem, therefore, is to design mechanisms by which the principal can constrain the set of proposals they are willing to accept from the agent, to ensure a certain level of quality for the principal…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAuction Theory and Applications · Optimization and Search Problems · Game Theory and Applications
