Social Shaping of Competitive Equilibriums for Resilient Multi-Agent Systems
Yijun Chen, Razibul Islam, Elizabeth Ratnam, Ian R. Petersen, and, Guodong Shi

TL;DR
This paper analyzes how decentralized multi-agent systems can achieve resilient and socially optimal resource allocations through pricing, proving the existence and equivalence of competitive and social welfare equilibria using duality theory, both statically and dynamically.
Contribution
It introduces a duality-based framework for establishing equilibrium existence and equivalence in multi-agent resource sharing, extending to dynamic systems with linear processes.
Findings
Existence of competitive and social welfare equilibria proven under convexity.
Equilibrium prices can be controlled to stay below specified thresholds.
Dynamic systems maintain equilibrium existence and equivalence over time.
Abstract
In this paper, we study multi-agent systems with decentralized resource allocations. Agents have local demand and resource supply, and are interconnected through a network designed to support sharing of the local resource; and the network has no external resource supply. It is known from classical welfare economics theory that by pricing the flow of resource, balance between the demand and supply is possible. Agents decide on the consumed resource, and perhaps further the traded resource as well, to maximize their payoffs considering both the utility of the consumption, and the income from the trading. When the network supply and demand are balanced, a competitive equilibrium is achieved if all agents maximize their individual payoffs, and a social welfare equilibrium is achieved if the total agent utilities are maximized. First, we consider multi-agent systems with static local…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEconomic theories and models · Economic Policies and Impacts · Climate Change Policy and Economics
