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Online Allocation and Pricing with Economies of Scale

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Web and Internet Economics (WINE 2015)

Part of the book series: Lecture Notes in Computer Science ((LNISA,volume 9470))

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Abstract

Allocating multiple goods to customers in a way that maximizes some desired objective is a fundamental part of Algorithmic Mechanism Design. We consider here the problem of offline and online allocation of goods that have economies of scale, or decreasing marginal cost per item for the seller. In particular, we analyze the case where customers have unit-demand and arrive one at a time with valuations on items, sampled iid from some unknown underlying distribution over valuations. Our strategy operates by using an initial sample to learn enough about the distribution to determine how best to allocate to future customers, together with an analysis of structural properties of optimal solutions that allow for uniform convergence analysis. We show, for instance, if customers have \(\{0,1\}\) valuations over items, and the goal of the allocator is to give each customer an item he or she values, we can efficiently produce such an allocation with cost at most a constant factor greater than the minimum over such allocations in hindsight, so long as the marginal costs do not decrease too rapidly. We also give a bicriteria approximation to social welfare for the case of more general valuation functions when the allocator is budget constrained.

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Notes

  1. 1.

    When more that one subset is applicable, we assume we have the freedom to select any such set. Note that such policies are incentive-compatible.

  2. 2.

    If the marginal cost function is only non-increasing, we can have the same result, assuming we can select between the utility maximizing bundles.

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Acknowledgments

Avrim is supported in part by the National Science Foundation under grants CCF-1101215, CCF-1116892, and IIS-1065251. Yishay is supported in part by a grant from the Israel Science Foundation, a grant from the United States-Israel Binational Science Foundation (BSF), a grant by Israel Ministry of Science and Technology and the Israeli Centers of Research Excellence (I-CORE) program (Center No. 4/11). For part of this work, Liu was supported in part by NSF grant IIS-1065251 and a Google Core AI grant.

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Correspondence to Liu Yang .

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Blum, A., Mansour, Y., Yang, L. (2015). Online Allocation and Pricing with Economies of Scale. In: Markakis, E., Schäfer, G. (eds) Web and Internet Economics. WINE 2015. Lecture Notes in Computer Science(), vol 9470. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-48995-6_12

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-48995-6_12

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  • Publisher Name: Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg

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