Fair Shares: Feasibility, Domination and Incentives
Moshe Babaioff, Uriel Feige

TL;DR
This paper studies fair allocation of indivisible goods without monetary transfers, introducing feasible and self-maximizing shares, and provides polynomial-time algorithms for near-optimal guarantees.
Contribution
It systematically analyzes feasible shares, introduces the concept of self-maximizing shares, and develops polynomial-time algorithms for near-optimal fair allocations.
Findings
Feasible shares are dominated by self-maximizing feasible shares.
No universally dominating feasible share exists for additive valuations.
Provides polynomial-time algorithms for near-optimal fair allocations.
Abstract
We consider fair allocation of a set of indivisible goods to equally-entitled agents, with no monetary transfers. Every agent has a valuation from some given class of valuation functions. A share is a function that maps a pair to a value, with the interpretation that if an allocation of to agents fails to give agent a bundle of value at least equal to , this serves as evidence that the allocation is not fair towards . For such an interpretation to make sense, we would like the share to be feasible, meaning that for any valuations in the class, there is an allocation that gives every agent at least her share. The maximin share was a natural candidate for a feasible share for additive valuations. However, Kurokawa, Procaccia and Wang [2018] show that it is not feasible. We initiate a systematic study of the family of feasible…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAuction Theory and Applications · Economic theories and models · Game Theory and Voting Systems
