Bounds on the revenue gap of linear posted pricing for selling a divisible item
Selling a perfectly divisible item to potential buyers is a fundamental task with apparent applications to pricing communication bandwidth and cloud computing services. Surprisingly, despite the rich literature on single-item auctions, revenue maximization when selling a divisible item is a much les...
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Zusammenfassung: | Selling a perfectly divisible item to potential buyers is a fundamental task
with apparent applications to pricing communication bandwidth and cloud
computing services. Surprisingly, despite the rich literature on single-item
auctions, revenue maximization when selling a divisible item is a much less
understood objective. We introduce a Bayesian setting, in which the potential
buyers have concave valuation functions (defined for each possible item
fraction) that are randomly chosen according to known probability
distributions. Extending the sequential posted pricing paradigm, we focus on
mechanisms that use linear pricing, charging a fixed price for the whole item
and proportional prices for fractions of it. Our goal is to understand the
power of such mechanisms by bounding the gap between the expected revenue that
can be achieved by the best among these mechanisms and the maximum expected
revenue that can be achieved by any mechanism assuming mild restrictions on the
behavior of the buyers. Under regularity assumptions for the probability
distributions, we show that this revenue gap depends only logarithmically on a
natural parameter characterizing the valuation functions and the number of
agents. Our results follow by bounding the objective value of a mathematical
program that maximizes the ex-ante relaxation of optimal revenue under linear
pricing revenue constraints. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2007.08246 |