On the complexity of Pareto-optimal and envy-free lotteries
Ioannis Caragiannis, Kristoffer Arnsfelt Hansen, and Nidhi Rathi

TL;DR
This paper investigates the computational complexity of finding fair and efficient lotteries for dividing indivisible resources among agents, strengthening existing existence results and providing algorithms and hardness proofs.
Contribution
It proves the PPAD membership of the problem, offers a polynomial-time algorithm for fixed number of agents, and shows NP-hardness of welfare maximization.
Findings
Existence of ex-ante envy-free and Pareto-optimal lotteries is guaranteed.
The problem is in PPAD complexity class.
Maximizing social welfare is NP-hard.
Abstract
We study the classic problem of dividing a collection of indivisible resources in a fair and efficient manner among a set of agents having varied preferences. Pareto optimality is a standard notion of economic efficiency, which states that it should be impossible to find an allocation that improves some agent's utility without reducing any other's. On the other hand, a fundamental notion of fairness in resource allocation settings is that of envy-freeness, which renders an allocation to be fair if every agent (weakly) prefers her own bundle over that of any other agent's bundle. Unfortunately, an envy-free allocation may not exist if we wish to divide a collection of indivisible items. Introducing randomness is a typical way of circumventing the non-existence of solutions, and therefore, allocation lotteries, i.e., distributions over allocations have been explored while relaxing the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOptimization and Search Problems · Metaheuristic Optimization Algorithms Research · Evolutionary Algorithms and Applications
