The problem of allocating a single indivisible object to one of several selfish agents is considered, where monetary payments are not allowed, and the object is not necessarily desirable to each agent. It is shown that ordinality and positive responsiveness together are necessary and sufficient conditions for strategyproofness, which implies that efficient social choice functions are not strategyproof. However, any Pareto-optimal, ordinal social choice function is strategyproof. A Gibbard-Satterthwaite-type impossibility result is established for nonbossy mechanisms. Thus, the best the planner can do without monetary transfers is to give the object to an agent who desires it, but whose valuation of the object may not be the highest among th...
There are some things that money cannot buy. For various reasons, moral or otherwise, society has se...
We consider the allocation of heterogeneous indivisible objects without using monetary transfers. Ea...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Dept. of Economics, 2009.A manager has to allocate tasks a...
The problem of allocating a single indivisible object to one of several selfish agents is considered...
We consider the assignment of heterogeneous and indivisible objects to agents without using monetary...
We consider the assignment of heterogeneous and indivisible objects to agents without using monetary...
We study the problem of allocating an indivisible object to one of several agents on the full prefer...
We consider the allocation problem of a single indivisible object to one of several agents under the...
The problem of allocating a single indivisible unit to one of several agents is considered, where mo...
A single object must be allocated to at most one of n agents. Money transfers are possible and prefe...
Which strategy-proof nonbossy mechanisms exist in a model with a finite number of indivisible goods ...
This paper studies welfare maximizing allocation of indivisible objects to ex-ante identical agents ...
Discussion paperOften an organization or government must allocate goods without collecting payment i...
Author's draft dated February 2010 issued as discussion paper by University of Exeter Business Schoo...
We consider the allocation of heterogeneous indivisible objects without using monetary transfers. Ea...
There are some things that money cannot buy. For various reasons, moral or otherwise, society has se...
We consider the allocation of heterogeneous indivisible objects without using monetary transfers. Ea...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Dept. of Economics, 2009.A manager has to allocate tasks a...
The problem of allocating a single indivisible object to one of several selfish agents is considered...
We consider the assignment of heterogeneous and indivisible objects to agents without using monetary...
We consider the assignment of heterogeneous and indivisible objects to agents without using monetary...
We study the problem of allocating an indivisible object to one of several agents on the full prefer...
We consider the allocation problem of a single indivisible object to one of several agents under the...
The problem of allocating a single indivisible unit to one of several agents is considered, where mo...
A single object must be allocated to at most one of n agents. Money transfers are possible and prefe...
Which strategy-proof nonbossy mechanisms exist in a model with a finite number of indivisible goods ...
This paper studies welfare maximizing allocation of indivisible objects to ex-ante identical agents ...
Discussion paperOften an organization or government must allocate goods without collecting payment i...
Author's draft dated February 2010 issued as discussion paper by University of Exeter Business Schoo...
We consider the allocation of heterogeneous indivisible objects without using monetary transfers. Ea...
There are some things that money cannot buy. For various reasons, moral or otherwise, society has se...
We consider the allocation of heterogeneous indivisible objects without using monetary transfers. Ea...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Dept. of Economics, 2009.A manager has to allocate tasks a...