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Envy-free pricing

game-theory 2222 tokens 6 outbound links

Envy-free pricing

Agent envy means that some agent assigns a higher utility (a higher difference value-price) to a bundle allocated to another agent. Market envy means that some agent assigns a higher utility (a higher difference value-price) to any bundle. The no-envy conditions guarantee that the market is stable and that the buyers do not resent the seller. By definition, every market envy-free allocation is also agent envy-free, but not vice versa.

There always exists a market envy-free allocation (which is also agent envy-free): if the prices of all items are very high, and no item is sold (all buyers get an empty bundle), then there is no envy, since no agent would like to get any bundle for such high prices. However, such an allocation is very inefficient. The challenge in envy-free pricing is to find envy-free prices that also maximize one of the following objectives:

Envy-free pricing is related, but not identical, to other fair allocation problems: In [[envy-free-item-allocation]], monetary payments are not allowed. In the rental-harmony problem, monetary payments are allowed, and the agents are quasilinear, but all objects should be allocated (and each agent should get exactly one object).

Results A Walrasian equilibrium is a market-envy-free pricing with the additional requirement that all items with a positive price must be allocated (all unallocated items must have a zero price). It maximizes the social welfare.However, a Walrasian equilibrium might not exist (it is guaranteed to exist only when agents have gross substitute valuations). Moreover, even when it exists, the sellers' revenue might be low. Allowing the seller to discard some items might help the seller attain a higher revenue.

Maximizing the seller's revenue subject to market-envy-freeness Many authors studied the computational problem of finding a price-vector that maximizes the seller's revenue, subject to market-envy-freeness.

They also study the Tollbooth Pricing problem - a special case of single-minded pricing in which each item is an edge in a graph, and each wanted-items set is a path in this graph.

Relaxed notions of envy-freeness Chen and Rudra* consider a relaxation of Walrasian equilibrium, in which only the winners must be envy-free. The goal is to maximize the number of envy-free buyers. Alon, Mansour and Tennenholtz and Amanatidis, Fulla, Markakis and Sornat* consider a relaxation of market-envy-freeness, in which buyers are arranged in a social network, the prices should be similar only between nodes that are adjacent on the network, and the losers must not envy. Flammini, Mauro and Tonelly* consider a relaxation of market-envy-freeness in which each agent sees only the items of neighboring agents (on a given social network). Elbassioni, Fouz and Swamy* consider a relaxation of agent-envy-freeness, in which only the winners must not envy. They consider bundle-pricing. *Bérczi, Codazzi, Golak and Grigoriev''' explore the concept of dynamic pricing where prices can adapt to market conditions to maintain fairness among consumers, extending traditional notions of envy-freeness beyond static scenarios.

See also * Demand oracle - an oracle that is often used in algorithms for envy-free pricing.

References