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Constrained equal awards

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Constrained equal awards

Formal definition There is a certain amount of money to divide, denoted by <math>E</math> (=Estate or Endowment). There are n claimants. Each claimant i has a claim denoted by <math>c_i</math>. Usually, <math>\sum_{i=1}^n c_i > E</math>, that is, the estate is insufficient to satisfy all the claims.

The CEA rule says that each claimant i should receive <math>\min(c_i, r)</math>, where r is a constant chosen such that <math>\sum_{i=1}^n \min(c_i,r) = E</math>. The rule can also be described algorithmically as follows:

Examples Examples with two claimants:

Examples with three claimants:

Usage In the Jewish law, if several creditors have claims to the same bankrupt debtor, all of which have the same precedence (e.g. all loans have the same date), then the debtor's assets are divided according to CEA.

Characterizations The CEA rule has several characterizations. It is the only rule satisfying the following sets of axioms:

Game-theoretic analysis ### Rule-proposal game Chun describes the following game.

The process converges. Moreover, it has a unique nash-equilibrium, in which the payoffs are equal to the ones prescribed by CEA. describes the following sequential-game.

Sonn proves that, when the discount factor approaches 1, the limit of payoff vectors of this game converges to CEA payoff.

Dual rule The [[constrained-equal-losses]] (CEL) rule is the dual of the CEA rule, that is: for each problem <math>(c,E)</math>, we have <math>CEL(c,E) = c - CEA(c, \sum c - E)</math>.

References