231
v1v2 (latest)

Probing EFX via PMMS: (Non-)Existence Results in Discrete Fair Division

Main:17 Pages
4 Figures
Bibliography:6 Pages
2 Tables
Appendix:4 Pages
Abstract

We study the fair division of indivisible items and provide new insights into the EFX problem, which is widely regarded as the central open question in fair division, and the PMMS problem, a strictly stronger variant of EFX. Our first result constructs a three-agent instance with two monotone valuations and one additive valuation in which no PMMS allocation exists. Since EFX allocations are known to exist under these assumptions, this establishes a formal separation between EFX and PMMS.We prove existence of fair allocations for three important special cases. We show that EFX allocations exist for personalized bivalued valuations, where for each agent ii there exist values ai>bia_i > b_i such that agent ii assigns value vi({g}){ai,bi}v_i(\{g\}) \in \{a_i, b_i\} to each good gg. We establish an analogous existence result for PMMS allocations when aia_i is divisible by bib_i. We also prove that PMMS allocations exist for binary-valued MMS-feasible valuations, where each bundle SS has value vi(S){0,1}v_i(S) \in \{0, 1\}. Notably, this result holds even without assuming monotonicity of valuations and thus applies to the fair division of chores and mixed manna. Finally, we study a class of valuations called pair-demand valuations, which extend the well-studied unit-demand valuations to the case where each agent derives value from at most two items, and we show that PMMS allocations exist in this setting. Our proofs are constructive, and we provide polynomial-time algorithms for all three existence results.

View on arXiv
Comments on this paper