The Competition for Partners in Matching Markets
We study the competition for partners in two-sided matching markets with heterogeneous agent preferences, with a focus on how the equilibrium outcomes depend on the connectivity in the market. We model random partially connected markets, with each agent having an average degree $d$ in a random (undi...
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Zusammenfassung: | We study the competition for partners in two-sided matching markets with
heterogeneous agent preferences, with a focus on how the equilibrium outcomes
depend on the connectivity in the market. We model random partially connected
markets, with each agent having an average degree $d$ in a random (undirected)
graph, and a uniformly random preference ranking over their neighbors in the
graph. We formally characterize stable matchings in large markets random with
small imbalance and find a threshold in the connectivity $d$ at $\log^2 n$
(where $n$ is the number of agents on one side of the market) which separates a
``weak competition'' regime, where agents on both sides of the market do
equally well, from a ``strong competition'' regime, where agents on the short
(long) side of the market enjoy a significant advantage (disadvantage).
Numerical simulations confirm and sharpen our theoretical predictions, and
demonstrate robustness to our assumptions. We leverage our characterizations in
two ways: First, we derive prescriptive insights into how to design the
connectivity of the market to trade off optimally between the average agent
welfare achieved and the number of agents who remain unmatched in the market.
For most market primitives, we find that the optimal connectivity should lie in
the weak competition regime or at the threshold between the regimes. Second,
our analysis uncovers a new conceptual principle governing whether the short
side enjoys a significant advantage in a given matching market, which can
moreover be applied as a diagnostic tool given only basic summary statistics
for the market. Counterfactual analyses using data on centralized high school
admissions in a major USA city show the practical value of both our design
insights and our diagnostic principle. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2006.14653 |