Fair Allocation of Indivisible Goods: Improvement

Author:

Ghodsi Mohammad1,Hajiaghayi Mohammad Taghi2,Seddighin Masoud1ORCID,Seddighin Saeed2,Yami Hadi2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Computer Engineering, Sharif University of Technology, Tehran 11365-11155, Iran;

2. School of Computer Science, Institute for Research in Fundamental Sciences, Tehran 19538-3351, Iran;

Abstract

We study the problem of fair allocation for indivisible goods. We use the maximin share paradigm introduced by Budish [Budish E (2011) The combinatorial assignment problem: Approximate competitive equilibrium from equal incomes. J. Political Econom. 119(6):1061–1103.] as a measure of fairness. Kurokawa et al. [Kurokawa D, Procaccia AD, Wang J (2018) Fair enough: Guaranteeing approximate maximin shares. J. ACM 65(2):8.] were the first to investigate this fundamental problem in the additive setting. They showed that in delicately constructed examples, not everyone can obtain a utility of at least her maximin value. They mitigated this impossibility result with a beautiful observation: no matter how the utility functions are made, we always can allocate the items to the agents to guarantee each agent’s utility is at least 2/3 of her maximin value. They left open whether this bound can be improved. Our main contribution answers this question in the affirmative. We improve their approximation result to a 3/4 factor guarantee.

Publisher

Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS)

Subject

Management Science and Operations Research,Computer Science Applications,General Mathematics

Reference18 articles.

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2. Amanatidis G , Birmpas G , Christodoulou G , Markakis E (2017) Truthful allocation mechanisms without payments: Characterization and implications on fairness. Proc. 2017 ACM Conf. Econom. Comput. (Association for Computing Machinery, New York), 545–562.

3. Approximation Algorithms for Computing Maximin Share Allocations

4. Asadpour A , Saberi A (2007) An approximation algorithm for max-min fair allocation of indivisible goods. Proc. 39th Annual ACM Sympos. Theory Comput. (Association for Computing Machinery, New York), 114–121.

5. Aziz H , Rauchecker G , Schryen G , Walsh T (2017) Algorithms for max-min share fair allocation of indivisible chores. Proc. 31st AAAI Conf. Artificial Intelligence (AAAI Press, Palo Alto, CA), 335–341.

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