Incentives in the probabilistic serial mechanism
The probabilistic serial mechanism (Bogomolnaia and Moulin, 2001 [9]) is ordinally efficient but not strategy-proof. We study incentives in the probabilistic serial mechanism for large assignment problems. We establish that for a fixed set of object types and an agent with a given expected utility function, if there are sufficiently many copies of each object type, then reporting ordinal preferences truthfully is a weakly dominant strategy for the agent (regardless of the number of other agents and their preferences). The non-manipulability and the ordinal efficiency of the probabilistic serial mechanism support its implementation instead of random serial dictatorship in large assignment problems.
Year of publication: |
2010
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Authors: | Kojima, Fuhito ; Manea, Mihai |
Published in: |
Journal of Economic Theory. - Elsevier, ISSN 0022-0531. - Vol. 145.2010, 1, p. 106-123
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Publisher: |
Elsevier |
Keywords: | Random assignment Probabilistic serial mechanism Ordinal efficiency Exact strategy-proofness in large markets Random serial dictatorship |
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