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Shapley-Scarf Housing Markets : Respecting Improvement, Integer Programming, and Kidney Exchange

Biró, Péter, Klijn, F ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7255-6954, Klimentova, X ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1085-0810 and Viana, A ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5932-5203 (2024) Shapley-Scarf Housing Markets : Respecting Improvement, Integer Programming, and Kidney Exchange. Mathematics of Operations Research . DOI 10.1287/moor.2022.0092

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1287/moor.2022.0092


Abstract

In a housing market of Shapley and Scarf, each agent is endowed with one indivisible object and has preferences over all objects. An allocation of the objects is in the (strong) core if there exists no (weakly) blocking coalition. We show that, for strict preferences, the unique strong core allocation “respects improvement”—if an agent’s object becomes more desirable for some other agents, then the agent’s allotment in the unique strong core allocation weakly improves. We extend this result to weak preferences for both the strong core (conditional on nonemptiness) and the set of competitive allocations (using probabilistic allocations and stochastic dominance). There are no counterparts of the latter two results in the two-sided matching literature. We provide examples to show how our results break down when there is a bound on the length of exchange cycles. Respecting improvements is an important property for applications of the housing markets model, such as kidney exchange: it incentivizes each patient to bring the best possible set of donors to the market. We conduct computer simulations using markets that resemble the pools of kidney exchange programs. We compare the game-theoretical solutions with current techniques (maximum size and maximum weight allocations) in terms of violations of the respecting improvement property. We find that game-theoretical solutions fare much better at respecting improvements even when exchange cycles are bounded, and they do so at a low efficiency cost. As a stepping stone for our simulations, we provide novel integer programming formulations for computing core, competitive, and strong core allocations.

Item Type:Article
Uncontrolled Keywords:CORE; Integer programming; Housing market; Kidney Exchange Programs; respecting improvement; competitive allocations;
Divisions:Institute of Operations and Decision Sciences
Subjects:Decision making
Computer science
DOI:10.1287/moor.2022.0092
ID Code:10235
Deposited By: MTMT SWORD
Deposited On:25 Jul 2024 11:29
Last Modified:25 Jul 2024 11:29

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