(In)efficiency and equitability of equilibrium outcomes in a family of bargaining games
Date
2022-11-21Source Title
International Journal of Game Theory
Print ISSN
0020-7276
Publisher
Springer
Pages
1 - 19
Language
English
Type
ArticleItem Usage Stats
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Abstract
We construct a parametric family of (modified) divide-the-dollar games: when there is excess demand, some portion of the dollar may disappear and the remaining portion is distributed in a bankruptcy problem. In two extremes, this game family captures the standard divide-the-dollar game of Nash (Econometrica 21:128–140, 1953) (when the whole dollar vanishes) and the game studied in Ashlagi et al. (Math Soc Sci 63:228–233, 2012) (when the whole dollar remains) as special cases. We first show that in all interior members of our game family, all Nash equilibria are inefficient under the proportional rule if there are ‘too many’ players in the game. Moreover, in any interior member of the game family, the inefficiency increases as the number of players increases, and the whole surplus vanishes as the number of players goes to infinity. On the other hand, we show that any bankruptcy rule that satisfies certain normatively appealing axioms induces a unique and efficient Nash equilibrium in which everyone demands and receives an equal share of the dollar. The constrained equal awards rule is one such rule.
Keywords
Bankruptcy problemBargaining
Constrained equal awards rule
Divide-the-dollar game
Efficiency
Equal division
Proportional rule