Webbnomenclature of the seminal paper of Shapley and Scarf [1974]) is a standard model of allocation of indivisible resources to agents without the use of monetary transfers. Real-world examples include assigning students to seats … WebbL. Shapley, H. Scarf Published 1 March 1974 Economics Journal of Mathematical Economics View via Publisher web.archive.org Save to Library Create Alert Cite Figures from this paper figure 3 figure I 1,299 …
A Market Design Approach to Job Rotation - SSRN
Webb1 mars 1994 · Strategy-proofness and the strict core in a market with indivisibilities. We show that, in markets with indivisibilities (typified by the Shapley-Scarf housing market), … WebbShapley and Scarf (1974) introduce the model of a housing market, which has been studied very extensively. It is a special case of our model, when agents have unit demands and are endowed with a single good. Their exis-tence proof relies on Scarf’s sufficient condition, but they note that a simpler credit card bpi requirements
Stableallocationsindiscreteeconomies arXiv:2202.04706v2 …
WebbIn a recent paper, Shapley and Scarf (1974) consider a market with indivisible goods as a game without side payments. They define the core of this market in the usual way, as the set of allocations which are not strongly dominated, and prove that it is always non-empty. WebbKey words: Shapley-Scarf Housing Market, strict core mechanism, individual rationality, Par- eto optimality and strategy-proofness 1 Introduction The main objective of this paper is to provide a noncooperative foundation of the strict core in a market with indivisibilities (typified by the Shapley-Scarf (1974) WebbUp to now we have followed the description of a classical Shapley-Scarf housing market model as introduced by Shapley and Scarf (1974). Now, in contrast with that model, we assume that each agent cares not only about the house he receives but also about the recipient of his own house. That is, preferences capture limited externalities that are credit card bill pay quorum