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Computer Science, Computer Science and Game Theory, cs.GT
Abstract:
Fair division of indivisible goods is a very well-studied problem. The goal
of this problem is to distribute $m$ goods to $n$ agents in a "fair" manner,
where every agent has a valuation for each subset of goods. We assume general
valuations.
Envy-freeness is the most extensively studied notion of fairness. However,
envy-free allocations do not always exist when goods are indivisible. The
notion of fairness we consider here is "envy-freeness up to any good" (EFX)
where no agent envies another agent after the removal of any single good from
the other agent's bundle. It is not known if such an allocation always exists
even when $n=3$.
We show there is always a partition of the set of goods into $n+1$ subsets
$(X_1,\ldots,X_n,P)$ where for $i \in [n]$, $X_i$ is the bundle allocated to
agent $i$ and the set $P$ is unallocated (or donated to charity) such that we
have$\colon$
1) envy-freeness up to any good,
2) no agent values $P$ higher than her own bundle, and
3) fewer than $n$ goods go to charity, i.e., $|P| < n$ (typically $m \gg n$).
Our proof is constructive. When agents have additive valuations and $\lvert P
\rvert$ is large (i.e., when $|P|$ is close to $n$), our allocation also has a
good maximin share (MMS) guarantee. Moreover, a minor variant of our algorithm
also shows the existence of an allocation which is $4/7$ groupwise maximin
share (GMMS): this is a notion of fairness stronger than MMS. This improves
upon the current best bound of $1/2$ known for an approximate GMMS allocation.