Abstract. We investigate the implications of egalitarian equivalence (Pazner and Schmeidler [22]) together with queue efficiency and strategyproofness in the context of queueing problems. We completely characterize the class of mechanisms satisfying the three requirements. Though there is no mechanism in this class satisfying budget balance, feasible mechanisms exist. We also show that it is impossible to find a mechanism satisfying queue efficiency, egalitarian equivalence and a stronger notion of strategyproofness called weak group strategyproofness. In addition, we show that generically there is no mechanism satisfying two normative notions, egalitarian equivalence and no-envy, together
Catering to the incentives of people with limited rationality is a challenging research direction th...
Which strategy-proof nonbossy mechanisms exist in a model with a finite number of indivisible goods ...
Taking care of the incentives of people with limited rationality is a challenging research direction...
A set of agents with possibly different waiting costs have to receive the same service one after the...
Abstract Motivated by applications in many economic environments, Bochet et al. The key contributio...
We identify the complete class of transfer rules that guarantee strategyproofness of any non-increas...
We study the problem of allocating objects when monetary transfers are possible. We are interested i...
∗This paper was written during my visit to the University of Rochester. I am grateful to the Departm...
A set of agents with possibly different waiting costs have to receive the same service one after the...
Summary. Every agent reports his willingness to pay for one unit of a good. A mechanism allocates go...
© IAET We prove that group strategy-proofness and strategy-proofness are equivalent requirements on ...
We consider allocation mechanisms in economies with a single indivisible good and money. First, we s...
Motivated by applications in many economic environments, Bochet et al. [2] generalize the classic ra...
Many salient rules to allocate private goods are not only strategyproof, but also group strategy-pro...
We characterize the symmetrically balanced VCG rule in the queueing problem using the axioms of outc...
Catering to the incentives of people with limited rationality is a challenging research direction th...
Which strategy-proof nonbossy mechanisms exist in a model with a finite number of indivisible goods ...
Taking care of the incentives of people with limited rationality is a challenging research direction...
A set of agents with possibly different waiting costs have to receive the same service one after the...
Abstract Motivated by applications in many economic environments, Bochet et al. The key contributio...
We identify the complete class of transfer rules that guarantee strategyproofness of any non-increas...
We study the problem of allocating objects when monetary transfers are possible. We are interested i...
∗This paper was written during my visit to the University of Rochester. I am grateful to the Departm...
A set of agents with possibly different waiting costs have to receive the same service one after the...
Summary. Every agent reports his willingness to pay for one unit of a good. A mechanism allocates go...
© IAET We prove that group strategy-proofness and strategy-proofness are equivalent requirements on ...
We consider allocation mechanisms in economies with a single indivisible good and money. First, we s...
Motivated by applications in many economic environments, Bochet et al. [2] generalize the classic ra...
Many salient rules to allocate private goods are not only strategyproof, but also group strategy-pro...
We characterize the symmetrically balanced VCG rule in the queueing problem using the axioms of outc...
Catering to the incentives of people with limited rationality is a challenging research direction th...
Which strategy-proof nonbossy mechanisms exist in a model with a finite number of indivisible goods ...
Taking care of the incentives of people with limited rationality is a challenging research direction...