Deterministic Budget-Feasible Clock Auctions
We revisit the well-studied problem of budget-feasible procurement, where a buyer with a strict budget constraint seeks to acquire services from a group of strategic providers (the sellers). During the last decade, several strategyproof budget-feasible procurement auctions have been proposed, aiming...
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Zusammenfassung: | We revisit the well-studied problem of budget-feasible procurement, where a
buyer with a strict budget constraint seeks to acquire services from a group of
strategic providers (the sellers). During the last decade, several
strategyproof budget-feasible procurement auctions have been proposed, aiming
to maximize the value of the buyer, while eliciting each seller's true cost for
providing their service. These solutions predominantly take the form of
randomized sealed-bid auctions: they ask the sellers to report their private
costs and then use randomization to determine which subset of services will be
procured and how much each of the chosen providers will be paid, ensuring that
the total payment does not exceed budget. Our main result in this paper is a
novel method for designing budget-feasible auctions, leading to solutions that
outperform the previously proposed auctions in multiple ways.
First, our solutions take the form of descending clock auctions, and thus
satisfy a list of properties, such as obvious strategyproofness, group
strategyproofness, transparency, and unconditional winner privacy; this makes
these auctions much more likely to be used in practice. Second, in contrast to
previous results that heavily depend on randomization, our auctions are
deterministic. As a result, we provide an affirmative answer to one of the main
open questions in this literature, asking whether a deterministic strategyproof
auction can achieve a constant approximation when the buyer's valuation
function is submodular over the set of services. In addition, we also provide
the first deterministic budget-feasible auction that matches the approximation
bound of the best-known randomized auction for the class of subadditive
valuations. Finally, using our method, we improve the best-known approximation
factor for monotone submodular valuations, which has been the focus of most of
the prior work. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2107.09239 |