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14-02-2024

Constrained dictatorial rules are subject to variable-population paradoxes

Author: William Thomson

Published in: Theory and Decision

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Abstract

In the context of classical exchange economies, we study four ways in which agents can strategically take advantage of allocation rules by affecting who participates and on what terms (Thomson in Soc Choice Welf 42:289–311, 2014). (1) An agent transfers their endowment to someone else and withdraws. The two of them may end up controlling resources that allow them to simultaneously reach higher welfare levels than they otherwise would. (2) An agent invites someone in and let their guest use some of their (the host’s) endowment. The guest transfers back to them what they are assigned over their endowment. The host may benefit. (3) An agent withdraws with their endowment. As in (1), they and someone who stays may end up controlling resources that allow the two of them to simultaneously reach higher welfare levels than they otherwise would. (4) An agent pre-delivers to someone else the net trade that the rule would assign to that agent had the agent participated. The second agent withdraws. The first agent participates with a modified endowment. The first agent may benefit. We ask whether “the constrained priority rules”, defined by maximizing the welfare of a particular agent subject to each of the others finding their assignment at least as desirable as their endowment satisfy these various requirements. The answers are all negative. Because these types of rules are often better behaved than rules that attempt some fairness in distributing gains from trade, these results strengthen the negative conclusions reached in Thomson (2014), and they may provide the key to identifying circumstances in which rules exist that satisfy the axioms, or to proving general impossibility results.

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Appendix
Available only for authorised users
Footnotes
1
We use the notation \({\mathcal {R}}^N\) to designate the cross-product of |N| copies of \({\mathcal {R}}\) indexed by the members of N. The notation \({\mathbb {R}}^{\ell N}_+\) should be understood in a similar way, as the cross-product of |N| copies of \({\mathbb {R}}^\ell _+\) indexed by the members of N.
 
2
This means that all agents are indifferent between any two allocations that the rule may select.
 
3
A “punctual” requirement applies economy by economy. A “relational” requirement relates choices made for economies that are related in a certain way. The various requirements of immunity to manipulation studied are relational requirements. This terminology is taken from a classification of axioms in terms of format proposed by Thomson (2023a).
 
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Metadata
Title
Constrained dictatorial rules are subject to variable-population paradoxes
Author
William Thomson
Publication date
14-02-2024
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Theory and Decision
Print ISSN: 0040-5833
Electronic ISSN: 1573-7187
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11238-023-09975-3