Competitive equilibrium for almost all incomes: existence and fairness

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Abstract

Competitive equilibrium (CE) is a fundamental concept in market economics. Its efficiency and fairness properties make it particularly appealing as a rule for fair allocation of resources among agents with possibly different entitlements. However, when the resources are indivisible, a CE might not exist even when there is one resource and two agents with equal incomes. Recently, Babaioff and Nisan and Talgam-Cohen (2017–2019) have suggested to consider the entire space of possible incomes, and check whether there exists a CE for almost all income-vectors—all income-space except a subset of measure zero. They proved various existence and non-existence results, but left open the cases of four goods and three or four agents with monotonically-increasing preferences. This paper proves non-existence in both these cases, thus completing the characterization of CE existence for almost all incomes in the domain of monotonically increasing preferences. Additionally, the paper provides a complete characterization of CE existence in the domain of monotonically decreasing preferences, corresponding to allocation of chores. On the positive side, the paper proves that CE exists for almost all incomes when there are four goods and three agents with additive preferences. The proof uses a new tool for describing a CE, as a subgame-perfect equilibrium of a specific sequential game. The same tool also enables substantially simpler proofs to the cases already proved by Babaioff et al. Additionally, this paper proves several strong fairness properties that are satisfied by any CE allocation, illustrating its usefulness for fair allocation among agents with different entitlements.

Original languageEnglish
Article number26
JournalAutonomous Agents and Multi-Agent Systems
Volume34
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Apr 2020

Keywords

  • Competitive equilibrium
  • Fair division
  • Indivisible chores
  • Indivisible goods
  • Maximin share
  • Picking sequence
  • Subgame perfect equilibrium

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