Event

Incentives and Efficiency in Constrained Allocation Mechanisms by David Ahn

Microeconomics Research Seminar Series, Spring Term 2023

  • Fri 3 Mar 23

    13:00 - 14:30

  • Colchester Campus

    5B.307

  • Event speaker

    David Ahn

  • Event type

    Lectures, talks and seminars
    Microeconomics Research Seminar Series

  • Event organiser

    Economics, Department of

Join David Ahn as they present their Microeconomic research on Incentives and Efficiency in Constrained Allocation Mechanisms

Incentives and Efficiency in Constrained Allocation Mechanisms by David Ahn

Join us for another event in the Microeconomics Research Seminar Series, Spring Term 2023.

David Ahn from Washington University in St Louis will present their research on Incentives and Efficiency in Constrained Allocation Mechanisms.

Abstract

We study private-good allocation mechanisms where an arbitrary constraint delimits the set of feasible joint allocations. This generality provides a unified perspective over several prominent examples that can be parameterized as constraints in this model, including house allocation, roommate assignment, and social choice. We first characterize the set of two-agent strategy proof and Pareto efficient mechanisms, showing that every mechanism is a “local dictatorship.” For more than two agents, we leverage this result to provide a new characterization of group strategy-proofness. In particular, an N-agent mechanism is group strategy-proof if and only if all its two-agent marginal mechanisms (defined by holding fixed all but two agents’ preferences) are individually strategy-proof and Pareto efficient. To illustrate their usefulness, we apply these results to the roommates problem to discover the novel finding that all group strategy-proof and Pareto efficient mechanisms are generalized serial dictatorships, a new class of mechanisms. Our results also yield a simple new proof of the Gibbard–Satterthwaite Theorem. 

This seminar will be held in the Economics Common Room on Friday 3 March 2023 at 1pm. This event is open to all levels of study and is also open to the public.

To register your place and gain access to the webinar, please contact the seminar organisers.

This event is part of the Microeconomics Research Seminar Series.