Dynamic Matching in School Choice: Efficient Seat Reassignment After Late Cancellations

Author:

Feigenbaum Itai1,Kanoria Yash2ORCID,Lo Irene3ORCID,Sethuraman Jay4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Lehman College and the Graduate Center, City University of New York, Bronx, New York 10468;

2. Decision, Risk, and Operations Division, Columbia Business School, New York, New York 10027;

3. Department of Management Science and Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305;

4. Department of Industrial Engineering and Operations Research, Columbia University, New York, New York 10027

Abstract

In the school choice market, where scarce public school seats are assigned to students, a key operational issue is how to reassign seats that are vacated after an initial round of centralized assignment. Practical solutions to the reassignment problem must be simple to implement, truthful, and efficient while also alleviating costly student movement between schools. We propose and axiomatically justify a class of reassignment mechanisms, the permuted lottery deferred acceptance (PLDA) mechanisms. Our mechanisms generalize the commonly used deferred acceptance (DA) school choice mechanism to a two-round setting and retain its desirable incentive and efficiency properties. School choice systems typically run DA with a lottery number assigned to each student to break ties in school priorities. We show that under natural conditions on demand, the second-round tie-breaking lottery can be correlated arbitrarily with that of the first round without affecting allocative welfare and that reversing the lottery order between rounds minimizes reassignment among all PLDA mechanisms. Empirical investigations based on data from New York City high school admissions support our theoretical findings. This paper was accepted by Gad Allon, operations management.

Publisher

Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS)

Subject

Management Science and Operations Research,Strategy and Management

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