Home /  MMD Seminar: "Optimal Waitlist Policies in One-Sided Markets" & "Market Equilibria: The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly"

Seminar

MMD Seminar: "Optimal Waitlist Policies in One-Sided Markets" & "Market Equilibria: The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly" September 27, 2023 (01:30 PM PDT - 03:00 PM PDT)
Parent Program:
Location: SLMath: Eisenbud Auditorium, Online/Virtual
Speaker(s) Martin Bichler (TU München), Afshin Nikzad (University of Southern California)
Description No Description
Keywords and Mathematics Subject Classification (MSC)
Primary Mathematics Subject Classification No Primary AMS MSC
Secondary Mathematics Subject Classification No Secondary AMS MSC
Video

Optimal Allocation Via Waitlists- Simplicity through Information Design

Market Equilibrium with Indivisible Items- The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly An Introduction and an Outlook

Abstract/Media

"Optimal Allocation via Waitlists: Simplicity through Information Design" -  Afshin Nikzad

Abstract: We study nonmonetary markets where objects that arrive over time are allocated to unit-demand agents with private types,  such as in the allocation of public housing or deceased-donor organs. An agent’s value for an object is supermodular in her type and the object quality, and her payoff is her value minus her waiting cost. The social planner's objective is a weighted sum of allocative efficiency (i.e., the sum of values) and  welfare (i.e., the sum of payoffs). We identify  optimal mechanisms in the class of direct-revelation mechanisms. When the social planner can design the information disclosed to the agents about the objects, the optimal mechanism has a simple implementation:  a first-come first-served waitlist with deferrals.  

In this implementation, the object qualities are partitioned into intervals; only the interval containing the object quality is disclosed to agents. When the planner places a higher  weight on welfare,  optimal disclosure policies become coarser. 

 

"Market Equilibria: The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly" - Martin Bichler.

Abstract: The talk will discuss competitive equilibria on markets, when they exist, and how they can be computed. Computation plays a central role and provides limits to what we can expect to allocate via markets. The presentation will be of an introductory nature, and discuss existing literature and recent results.

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Optimal Allocation Via Waitlists- Simplicity through Information Design

Market Equilibrium with Indivisible Items- The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly An Introduction and an Outlook