The Price of Equity with Binary Valuations and Few Agent Types
In fair division problems, the notion of price of fairness measures the loss in welfare due to a fairness constraint. Prior work on the price of fairness has focused primarily on envy-freeness up to one good (EF1) as the fairness constraint, and on the utilitarian and egalitarian welfare measures. O...
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Zusammenfassung: | In fair division problems, the notion of price of fairness measures the loss
in welfare due to a fairness constraint. Prior work on the price of fairness
has focused primarily on envy-freeness up to one good (EF1) as the fairness
constraint, and on the utilitarian and egalitarian welfare measures. Our work
instead focuses on the price of equitability up to one good (EQ1) (which we
term price of equity) and considers the broad class of generalized $p$-mean
welfare measures (which includes utilitarian, egalitarian, and Nash welfare as
special cases). We derive fine-grained bounds on the price of equity in terms
of the number of agent types (i.e., the maximum number of agents with distinct
valuations), which allows us to identify scenarios where the existing bounds in
terms of the number of agents are overly pessimistic.
Our work focuses on the setting with binary additive valuations, and obtains
upper and lower bounds on the price of equity for $p$-mean welfare for all $p
\leqslant 1$. For any fixed $p$, our bounds are tight up to constant factors. A
useful insight of our work is to identify the structure of allocations that
underlie the upper (respectively, the lower) bounds simultaneously for all
$p$-mean welfare measures, thus providing a unified structural understanding of
price of fairness in this setting. This structural understanding, in fact,
extends to the more general class of binary submodular (or matroid rank)
valuations. We also show that, unlike binary additive valuations, for binary
submodular valuations the number of agent types does not provide bounds on the
price of equity. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2307.06726 |