CA2204069A1 - Computer-based method for the fair division of property - Google Patents
Computer-based method for the fair division of propertyInfo
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- CA2204069A1 CA2204069A1 CA002204069A CA2204069A CA2204069A1 CA 2204069 A1 CA2204069 A1 CA 2204069A1 CA 002204069 A CA002204069 A CA 002204069A CA 2204069 A CA2204069 A CA 2204069A CA 2204069 A1 CA2204069 A1 CA 2204069A1
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- G06—COMPUTING; CALCULATING OR COUNTING
- G06Q—INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY [ICT] SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR ADMINISTRATIVE, COMMERCIAL, FINANCIAL, MANAGERIAL OR SUPERVISORY PURPOSES; SYSTEMS OR METHODS SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR ADMINISTRATIVE, COMMERCIAL, FINANCIAL, MANAGERIAL OR SUPERVISORY PURPOSES, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
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- G—PHYSICS
- G06—COMPUTING; CALCULATING OR COUNTING
- G06Q—INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY [ICT] SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR ADMINISTRATIVE, COMMERCIAL, FINANCIAL, MANAGERIAL OR SUPERVISORY PURPOSES; SYSTEMS OR METHODS SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR ADMINISTRATIVE, COMMERCIAL, FINANCIAL, MANAGERIAL OR SUPERVISORY PURPOSES, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- G06Q40/00—Finance; Insurance; Tax strategies; Processing of corporate or income taxes
- G06Q40/04—Trading; Exchange, e.g. stocks, commodities, derivatives or currency exchange
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Abstract
Two methods, "Adjusted Winner (AW)" and "Proportional Allocation (PA)," are provided for the fair division of a collection of items, which could be either real goods or issues in a dispute, between two claimants (parties). The methods can be implemented as a digital computer software program. In both methods, the parties are each given 100 points and then bid on each item using their points. Under the AW method, which is applicable to indivisible items, each party is initially allocated those goods, or wins on those issues, for which it bids the higher number of points. Then the goods or issues are reassigned, or resolved differently, to achieve equality of points based on the quotients of the parties' bids. Under PA, each good or issue is divided according to a ratio based on both parties' bids for that good or issue.
Description
Oc..~u.~K-BASED METHOD FOR T~E FAIR DIVISION OF PROPERTY
Field Of The Invention The present invention relates to computer-based methods, implemented by p~o~. -' software on a digital computer, to divide goods fairly among a set of claimants.
Sa~-vu"d Of The Invention The general problem of dividing property rationally and fairly among two, or more, claimants has been the subject of folklore, biblical stories, and history. A variety of p~vvedu~ s has been extensively written upon by ec~ i~ts, political scientists, mathematicians, and others.
The best-known, and most widely practiced, ~LVV~dUL~ for two persons is that one divides and the other chooses. For example, to divide a cake, Mary will cut the cake into two pieces, and John will then select which piece he wants, i.e., "divide-and-choose."
Applications of divide-and-choose span about five millennia, from biblical accounts of Abraham and Lot using this yLvv~duL~ to divide land to the recent Law of the Sea Treaty that reserves parcels of seabed for future mining operations by developing countries (developed countries do the "dividing"). The qualities that make this two-person ~,ocedu-e seem both workable and fair have been explicitly set forth by the inventors and others. They include the following:
1. The pLuceduLe is u~ y~ually simple, with little reliance on any outside arbitrator or referee. Satisfaction with a fair-division scheme relies, in part, on a feeling that the ~rocess (i.e., the step-by-step -= ~nicc leading to the allocation) is fair, as well as the Droduct (i.e., the actual allocation).
Field Of The Invention The present invention relates to computer-based methods, implemented by p~o~. -' software on a digital computer, to divide goods fairly among a set of claimants.
Sa~-vu"d Of The Invention The general problem of dividing property rationally and fairly among two, or more, claimants has been the subject of folklore, biblical stories, and history. A variety of p~vvedu~ s has been extensively written upon by ec~ i~ts, political scientists, mathematicians, and others.
The best-known, and most widely practiced, ~LVV~dUL~ for two persons is that one divides and the other chooses. For example, to divide a cake, Mary will cut the cake into two pieces, and John will then select which piece he wants, i.e., "divide-and-choose."
Applications of divide-and-choose span about five millennia, from biblical accounts of Abraham and Lot using this yLvv~duL~ to divide land to the recent Law of the Sea Treaty that reserves parcels of seabed for future mining operations by developing countries (developed countries do the "dividing"). The qualities that make this two-person ~,ocedu-e seem both workable and fair have been explicitly set forth by the inventors and others. They include the following:
1. The pLuceduLe is u~ y~ually simple, with little reliance on any outside arbitrator or referee. Satisfaction with a fair-division scheme relies, in part, on a feeling that the ~rocess (i.e., the step-by-step -= ~nicc leading to the allocation) is fair, as well as the Droduct (i.e., the actual allocation).
2. The procedure is envy-free. That is, neither of the two parties will envy the other in the sense of wishing he or she had the other's share. For two people, this is equivalent to saying that each party thinks he receives at least half the total value in his or her own eyes.
Divide-and-choose, however, also has its drawbacks:
1. It is limited to two people. The mathematical problem of extending this ~,ouedu,~ to a constructive one that is envy-free and works for any number of parties was open for over lO
years. It was recently solved by the present inventors; see Brams and Taylor, "An Envy-Free Cake-Division Protocol," American Mathematical Monthly. Vol. #1, No. 1, January 1995, pp. 9-18.
2. The resulting allocation need not be efficient. That is, there may be some other allocation that is strictly better for both parties.
Divide-and-choose, however, also has its drawbacks:
1. It is limited to two people. The mathematical problem of extending this ~,ouedu,~ to a constructive one that is envy-free and works for any number of parties was open for over lO
years. It was recently solved by the present inventors; see Brams and Taylor, "An Envy-Free Cake-Division Protocol," American Mathematical Monthly. Vol. #1, No. 1, January 1995, pp. 9-18.
2. The resulting allocation need not be efficient. That is, there may be some other allocation that is strictly better for both parties.
3. Although divide-and-choose prevents envy for what the other party receives, the resulting allocation need not be equitable. That is, one party may feel that he received only 60%
of the value while knowing that the other party feels that she received 90% of the value. Thus, while neither will envy the other in the sense of wishing to trade, the former will envy the latter's "happiness" (90% bringing more happiness than 60%).
With regard to drawback 1 ~the limitation to two people), the ~-ocedu-~ considered, prior to this invention, to be the best for obtaining a fair division of a collection of goods (items), when each good is itself non-divisible (indivisible), is called "Knaster's procedura of sealed bids" or "Xnaster's pLvceduLe."
Each of the parties (players) submits sealed bids for each item, for example, to an impartial mediator who administers the p.ocedule. The party who submits the highest bid is awarded the item. However, after the auction is over, some of the money bid for items is divided up among the parties. The ~L OCedU1 e requires that each party has money.
The Knaster pL~cedu~e is illustrated in Table 1 below.
There are three parties (8Ob, Carol, and Ted) and 4 items A,B,C,D
listed in Table 1, for example, a boat, a car, a house lot, and a painting. The amount listed in Table 1 for each party . CA 02204069 1997-04-30 and each item is the amount that that party has bid, in a sealed bid, for that item.
Table 1 Party Bob Carol Ted Valuation Item A S10,000 54,000 S7,000 Item B 2,000 1,000 4,000 Item C 500 1,500 2,000 Item D 800 2,000 1,000 Total valuation 13,300 8,500 14,000 Items received A D B,C
Value received 10,000 2,000 6,000 Initial fair share g,433 2,833 4,667 Difference (initial excess/deficit) 5,567 -833 1,333 Share of surplus 2,022 2,022 2,022 Adjusted fair share6,455 4,855 6,689 Final settlementA - 3,545 D + 2,855 B,C + 689 Each party has bid a different amount (valuation) for each item, and the total of each party's bids is the total valuation.
Each party gets the item for which he, or she, was high bidder;
their winning bid is considered the valuation of that item. The "initial fair share" is the party's total valuation divided by the number of parties. For example, Bob's total valuation is $13,300; because there are 3 parties his initial fair share is $4,433. The difference between his value for the item (A) he receives (S10,000) and his initial fair share is $5,567.
-These differences for all parties are summed algebraically:
$5,567 - $833 + $1,333 = $6,067, which is called the surplus.
Each party is assigned one-third of the surplus, i.e., $2,022, which is added to its initial fair share, i.e., Bob's $4,433 +
$2,022 = S6,455, which is his "adjusted fair share." This, in turn, is added (or subtracted) from the valuation of the item he, or she, received, i.e., Bob received item A valued at $10,000, and his adjusted fair share is $6,455 so he has a "final excess"
of $10,000 - 56,455 = S3,545- Bob contributes, in money, this excess to the other parties, with Carol receiving $2,855 and Ted Knaster's p.uce~u-e does guarantee envy-freeness in two-person situations but not if there are three or more parties.
However, the Knaster pL~dU~e requires that the parties have the cash to pay for a final settl ~rt. In many situations, including divorces, one or more parties do not have, and cannot borrow, sufficient money to implement the Knaster p~oceduLe.
Summary Of The Invention In accordance with the present invention, there is provided two computer-based methods for the fair division of goods, one of the methods being more applicable when many of the goods might be indivisible.
These methods may be accepted by potential users, such as parties to a divorce-pL~e,~y settlement, because the methods are readily understood and appear to be fair. Their results are proportional (each party obtains an equal share), they are envy-free (each party prefers his portion to anyone else's), and one is reasonably efficient.
The first method is called the Adjusted Winner (AW) method.
A list is made of the goods (items) to be divided between two parties, with each party given "100 points." These points indicate the value each party places on the it-ms and need not correspond to money. In fact, the parties need not have, or distribute, any money. Each of the parties, e.g., Bob and Carol, decides on how many points to bid for each item. The bids are sealed and can be administered by a mediator or other third person.
Bob initially is assigned all the items (goods) on which his bid is higher than Carol's bid. Next items (goods) are transferred to achieve "equitability," that is, until the point totals of the two parties are equal. The decision on which goods to transfer depends on the ratio of the bids, not on the point differences (point spread) between bids.
The method is carried out using a software program implemented on a digital computer. The detailed mathematical proofs and arguments for its envy-freeness, equitability and efficiency are set forth in a book by ~rams & Taylor, Fair Division: From Cake Cutting To Dispute Resolution, Cambridge ~niv. Press, 1996, in~ r~ted by reference herein.
-. CA 02204069 1997-04-30 One apparent problem with AW is that one or both of the parties may lie about the true value to them of various items in an attempt to manipulate their bids, based upon what they think the other party will bid. Generally, such manipulation by one party will not be s~lcc~csful -- and may even backfire -- unless one party knows exactly how many points the other will bid for each item. Cu..se~ ly, such attempts at exploitation are unlikely even to be tried.
The second method, called Proportional Allocation (PA), is less desirable than AW because it is not efficient. However, it is less subject to manipulation, at least in theory. Thus, a party that thinks another party is not making bids honestly may elect to use PA, which comes closer to inducing all the parties to be truthful, especially if there is the suspicion that advance information on one's bids has been obtained by the other party.
Under PA, as under AW, a list is made of all items. ~ach party is given 100 points and makes a sealed bid for each of the items which he, or she, wants. However, PA is only applicable to goods that are divisible, such as a record collection in which there are no single items of great value. On oCc~cion~
indivisible goods can be treated as divisible if, for example, an agreement is arrived at prior to the division.
Under PA, the portion of each item awarded each party is based on his or her bid, _ _-ed to the bids of others. For example, if Bob bids 6 for the record collection and Carol bids 5, the collection is divided so that Bob receives 6/11 and Carol 5/11.
Brief Description Of The Drawings The inventor's presently known best mode of practicing the invention is explained below in the detailed description, which should be taken in conjunction with the a~ - ying drawings.
In the drawings:
Figure 1 is a software program flow chart of the Adjusted winner (AW) method; and Figure 2 is a software program flow chart of the Proportional Allocation (PA) method.
Detailed Description Of The Invention I. Introduction The present invention presents two computer-based methods, called "Adjusted Winner" (AW) and "Proportional Allocation" (PA) for the fair division of goods between two parties (claimants).
The methods will first be explained; then the application of the two methods to situations, involving divorce and estate settlement, will be illustrated in the examples.
The methods are to be carried out using a software program that is executed on a digital computer having a memory, such as a hard disk, and a display, such as a monitor or printer. The software program is illustrated in the flow diagrams of Figures 1 and 2. The methods are preferably ,_cu,ded on a floppy disk, which is sold along with a manual. The disk may, for example, be run on a PC (Personal Computer) using a Microsoft Windows 95 tTM) operating system.
Both the AW and PA methods are applicable to goods which are divisible, e.g., "fungible" in legal terminology. An example of a divisible good would be bags of different grains, e.g., in a farm estate settlement. Parties could simply divide each of the bags equally, i.e., each party gets 50S. This division, however, provides less satisfactory results than either AW or PA if the parties value the different bags differently, e.g., one likes one bag more than the other whereas the other has the opposite preferences.
The case of trying to divide a collection of indivisible goods appears to be a more difficult problem. one cannot cut many goods into pieces and keep their value. In many real-life situations, the goods are not divisible and there is no apparent way to divide them fairly among two or more parties. The AW
method is generally applicable to goods which are non-divisible as well as those that are divisible. It requires only that one of the goods, which will not be known in advance, be divisible, or possibly that some money change hands at the end.
Under Aw, the two parties explicitly indicate how much they value each of the different goods by distributing 100 points across the goods. This information, which may or may not be made public (known to each other) after the bids are made, becomes the basis for making a fair division of the goods.
Valuations in cake division, by contrast, are implicit.
They are reflected in how the parties divide a cake into pieces, which ones they judge to be acceptable, and so on. But they are never required to say explicitly how much they value the different parts of the cake.
Requiring that parties assign points to different goods raises the question of whether they will have an incentive to be honest in Annolln~i ng their valuations. Preferences are usually private information, and one cannot expect people honestly to reveal them unless it is in their interest to do so.
Adjusted Winner (AW) produces a settlement that is efficient, envy-free, and equitable with respect to the bargainers' announced preferences. However, because AW provides only some induc t for the bargainers to be truthful in announcing their preferences, it may produce settlements that only appear to satisfy these criteria because complete truthfulness is not always advantageous.
For this reason, the second fair-division method, Proportional Allocation (PA), could provide a ~default~
settlement should either party object to the settlement under AW.
~hat is, PA could be implemented if either party, feeling that it was exploited under Aw because of AW's vulnerability to false announcements, requests PA. For reasons to be d;~c~c-ed later, however, this safeguard will hardly ever be necessary.
Like AW, PA is envy-free and equitable; unlike AW, it is e~L~ -ly robust against false a.l..u~sc- ~~~s in most situations, thereby ;n~--r;ng the bargainers to be truthful. However, the settlement it yields is not efficient. Nevertheless, it is substantially better for both parties than the naive fair-division ~Lu~-edu.e of splitting every good 50-50 (if this is even possible).
II. The Adjusted winner (AW) Method AW allocates k goods as follows. Let xl, ... xk be ~ob's An"o~nred points for goods 1, ~-- k, and let Yl, ~-- Yk be Carol's A~n~u~c~d points. Let X be the sum of the points of all goods that 80b A""nun~De that he values more than Carol does.
Let Y be the sum of the values of the goods that Carol A""U~ P5 she values more than Bob does. Assume X ~ Y. Next, assign the goods so that Bob initially gets all the goods whereby xi ~ Yi, and Carol gets the others. Now list the goods in an order Gl, G2, etc., so that the following hold:
1 ~ob, based on his Annnl~ values goods Gl, ...., Gr at least as much as Carol does (i.e., xi ~ Yi for 1 ~ i ~ r), where r c k.
2 Carol, based on her Anno~-- ~, values goods Gr+1,..., Gk more than ~ob does (i.e., Yi> xi for r 1 ~ i ' k).
3 xl/yl' Xr/yr Thus, Bob is initially given all goods 1 through r that he values at least as much as Carol, and Carol is given all goods r + 1 through k that she values strictly more than Bob.
Because xi ~ Yi for 1 ~ i ~ r, the ratios in (3) are all at least 1. Hence, all the goods for which xi = Yi come at the beginning of the list. Bob -- who, because X ~ Y, enjoys a advantage (if either party does~ after the winner-take-all assignment of goods -- is helped additionally by being Ac~ign~d all goods that the players value equally, based on their a~ s.
The next step involves transferring from Bob to Carol as much of Gl as is needed to achieve equitability -- that is, until the point totals of the two players are equal. If equitability is not achieved, even with all of Gl transferred from Bob to Carol, we next transfer G2, G3, etc. (in that order) from Bob to Carol. It is the order given by (3), starting with the smallest ratio, that ensures efficiency.
~cu~pl~ 1 Suppose there are three goods for which Bob and Carol announce the following point assignments (the larger of the two assignments is underscored):
Gl G2 G3 Total sob's announced values _ 67 27 lOo Carol's Annollnced values 5 34 61 lOo Initially, Gl and G2 are assigned to Bob, giving him 73 of his points, and G3 is assigned to Carol, giving her 61 of her points.
Hence, goods must be transferred from Bob to Carol to create equitability.
Notice that x1/y1 = 6/5 = 1.2 and x2/y2 = 67/34 = 1-97, so the smallest ratio of the players' valuations is for G1. Even transferring all of G1 from Bob to Carol, however, still leaves Bob with an advantage (67 of his points to 66 of hers).
Let x denote the fraction of G2 that will be retained by Bob, with the rest transferred from him to Carol. We choose x so that the resulting point totals are equal for Bob tleft side of the equation) and Carol (right side of the equation):
67 x = 5 + 34(1 - x) + 61 which yields x = 100/101 = 0.99. C- ~ey~ tly, Bob ends up with 99 percent of G2 for a total of 66.3 of his points, whereas Carol ends up with all of G1 and G3 and 1 percent of G2 for the same total of 66.3 of her points. This is the "equitability adjustment", which equalizes the number of points both players possess.
AW ~uduces an allocation of the goods, based on the announced values, that is:
(1) efficient: any allocation that is strictly better for one player is strictly worse for the other;
(2) equitable; Bob's announced valuation of his allocation is the same as Carol's a~..-uu..-ed valuation of her allocation;
(3) envy-free: neither player would trade his or her allocation for that of the other.
~Y ~pl- 2 Table 2. Point allocations of Bob and Carol for an estate Item Bob Carol 1 Boat 14 6 2 Motor 14 6 3 Piano 2 17 4 Computer 1 17 5 Rifle 4 4 6 Tools 2 6 7 Tractor 21 2 8 Truck _ 8 9 Moped 14 17 10 Moped 14 17 Total 100 100 In applying AW to the division of an estate, AW begins by temporarily assigning each item to whoever puts the most points on it (underscored in Table 2). Thus, Bob initially gets the boat, motor, tractor, and truck, which gives him goods valued at a total of 63 points. Carol receives the piano, computer, tools, and both mopeds, which gives her goods valued at a total of 74 points. Both value the rifle at 4 points so it is awarded initially to Carol under the rules of AW, raising her total to 78. The rifle, however, is the first item transferred from Carol to Bob, which still leaves Carol with an advantage of 74 points to 63 + 4 = 67 points for Bob.
To prepare for the next transfer of items from Carol to Bob, we list the items Carol has in order of increasing quotients of Carol's points to Bob's:
one moped: 17/14 = 1.2 one moped: 17/14 = 1.2 piano : 17/2 = 8.5 computer : 17/1 = 17.0 If we transfer one moped to Bob, his new total will be 67 + 14 = 81 points, and Carol's will be 74 - 17 = 57 points, indicating we have gone too far. Hence, we must calculate what fraction of the moped Carol must transfer to Bob in order for us to arrive at an equitable allocation, which will be efficient and envy-free as well.
Let x denote the fraction of the moped that will be retained by Carol. Then in order to equalize the point totals, thereby creating equitability, one must have 57 + 17x = 67 + 14(1 - x), which yields x = Z4/31 = 0.774. Thus, ~ob and Carol each receive 70.2 of his or her points -- a 40 pe~cel.t increment over half the estate.
Practically speaking, how does one transfer 77.4 percent of a moped from Carol to Bob? Perhaps they could reach an a~L
whereby Carol uses it about nine months out of the year and Bob uses it the L- inin~ three months. Perhaps not. A better solution might be that Bob ~..,..,..,.~Pc what he considers to be a fair price for his 22.6 percent of the moped -- say, $226. Carol then chooses between buying Bob out at his price or selling her 77.4 percent share of the moped to Bob for 0.774/.226 = 3.4 times the price he A.".'"""'~d.
III. The Effect Of Lies Of A Party Envy-freeness and equitability both address the question of whether one party believes he or she did at least as well as the other party. The difference is that envy-freeness involves an internal comparison, based on a player's own valuation, which is captured by the following question:
Ar- you at luast a~ w-ll off with your alloc_tion ~ you would b- with your ~ 's allocation and, h-nc-, would not d~ir~ to trado with your ~, .t?
Equitability, on the other hand, involves a more ~u..~veL~ial external or interpersonal comparison, which is ~a~u~ed by the following question:
Is your A - ~ v lu-ttc of what you r-G-iv-d ~qu-l to your .~ 9 A ~ v-luation of what he or sh-r--ceived?
In other words, did you receive, according to your point assignment, exactly what your u~u~unt received according to his or her point assignment?
Equitability, however, need not directly involve the comparison of one player's valuation of his share with the other party's valuation of her share. If there is a fraction x of all the goods being allocated (e.g., 2~3 of each good), and each party is indifferent between receiving this fractional allocation and the allocation that he or she actually received, then the parties' allocations are equitable.
What is called "envy-freeness" and "equitability" are only "apparent envy-freeness" and "apparent equitability" if the parties are not truthful. When they are truthful -- xi - ai and Yi = bi for all i, where ai and bi are the true values of Bob and Carol, respectively, for good i -- each party assuredly receives at least 50 points (based on his or her own valuation), and the surplus above 50 points is the same for each (i.e., his or her "more" is the same as his or her u~one..t's "more").
The equitability adju,i ~ that gives each party 66.3 of his or her points in Example 1 may be interpreted as providing each party with nearly 2/3 of what he or she perceives to be the total value, or utility, of all three goods. This equalization of the player's utilities assumes that points (or utilities) are additive and linear. Linearity here means that the party~s marginal utilities are constant -- instead of ~iminjshing as one obtains more of something -- so, for example, 2x percent of Gi is twice as good as x percent. Additivity here means that the value of two or more goods to a player is equal to the sum of their points.
Neither assumption is nerPcs~rily a good reflection of a party's preferences on certain issues. Thus, goods may not be "separable" because of complementarities -- that is, oht~inin~
one good may affect the value one obtains from others.
Perhaps the main drawback of AW is the extent to which it fails to induce the players to be truthful about their valuations -- and thereby fails to lead to an envy-free, equitable, and efficient outcome, based on these true valuations. This is easy to illustrate, even in the case of two goods. Suppose ~30b values the goods equally, and Carol knows that he will truthfully onnre his 50-S0 valuation. Suppose Carol's true valuation is 70-30. What should she ann~--nre? Ac5l-~ing that Announ ~s must be integers, the answer is 51-49.
The result of this ~nnru-- -nt will be an initial allocation of all of G1 to Carol (which she values at 70), and all of G2 to Bob (which he values at 50). Then there will be a transfer of only a trivial fraction (1/101) of Gl to Bob, since it appears that Carol's initial advantage is on}y 51 of her points to 50 of ~ob's points. Thereby Carol will end up with a y~l)e~uus 70 - 0.7 = 69.3 points (according to her true valuations), but Bob will realize only 50 + 0.5 = 50.5 points (according to his true valuations).
Bob can turn the tables on Carol if he knows her values of 70-30 and that she will An~ nce these. If Bob Announ~es 69-31, there will be a transfer of 39/139 of Gl from Carol to Bob, giving him a total of 50 + 14.0 = 64.0 points and her only 70 -19.6 = 50.4 points, based on their true valuations.
Thereby one party (with complete information) can exploit another party (without such information). On the other hand, if both players were truthful in their a-...ou-._ ~r-s, there would be a transfer of 1/6 of Gl from Carol (70-30) to Bob (50-50), giving each player 58.3 points.
This is not as large a drawback as might first appear, because generally one party does not have complete information about the other party's valuations ~bids). If the list of point allocations of each party is initially sealed, and opened simultaneously, then one party can only guess about the other party's valuations (point allocation bids on each item). Even in a divorce situation, where, for example, the wife thinks she can guess more or less correctly her husband's bids, she may not have sufficient confidence in her guesses to try to be manipulative, because being off by only one point could hurt her badly in the final allocation.
IV. The Proportional-Allocation (PA) Method Proportional Allocation (PA) comes closer to in~ucing the players to be truthful. Consider again our earlier example of exploitation with AW wherein Bob (50-50) a...,ounced his true valuation, and Carol (70-30) -- knowing Bob's allocation --optimally l~-y~ ed by Annnl-nr;ng 51-49. Thereby, Carol obtained 69.3 points, compared with the 58.3 points that truthfulness would have given her (a 17.2 percent increase).
Under PA the optimal reay~nse of Carol is to be nearl truthful, announcing 71-29 instead of 70-30. Her benefit from this slight distortion of the truth is only in the third decimal place, gaining her 52.087 points compared to 5Z.083 points (less than a 0.01 percent increase). Both parties do worse, when truthful, under PA (52.1 points~ than under AW (58.3 points), so PA is not efficient.
PA can be used as a default option to AW, which -- under the so-called ~_ ~inod y~ocedu~ -- either party can invoke if he or she feels exploited. Although PA does not give an efficient allocation, like AW it is equitable and envy-free. It also comes remarkably close to indl-r;ng truthfulness, at least in situations where no single good is of either negligible or of overriding value to either party.
PA, as its name implies, allocates goods proportionally. As before, assume that Bob Ann~--ncae values of xl, ..., Xk, and Carol Innnl-nr~c values of Y1, ~--, Yk for goods G1, ..., Gk.
Assume that for each i, either xi = 0 or Yi = ~ Then Bob is allocated the fraction of xi/(xi + Yi) of Gi, and Carol the fracti~n Yi/(Xi + Yi) E~mpl- 3 Consider our earlier example of three goods, for which Bob and Carol Anno~nre the following point ACci, - ~s:
Gl G2 G3 Total sOb~s Ann~n~d values 6 67 27 100 Carol's Anno~ values 5 34 61 100 Table 3. Optimal L~_L,---,c~c of Bob to Carol's An~ c~ valuations under PA
True valuation ~ ed valuation of Carol of Bob 19.32 17.98 16.67 15.96 16.61 20 29.32 30 29.67 29.13 29.00 30 33.39 37.98 39.67 40 39.90 40 41.00 44.04 46.67 49.13 49.90 50 50.10 50.87 53.33 55.96 59.00 60 60.10 60 60.33 62.02 66.61 70 71.00 70.87 70.33 70 70.68 83.39 84.04 83.33 82.02 80.68 80 Bob is awarded 6/11 of Gl, 67/101 of G2, and 27/88 of G3, giving him a total of 55.9 of his points. Likewise, Carol also receives a total of 55.9 of her points (recall that AW awarded both parties 66.3 points when they were truthful, or 18.6 percent more than PA gives in this example).
~ owever, PA requires that all the goods be divisible tfungible), or that a prior agreement be obtained as to what a division of the goods may mean. Thus, a vacation house can be "divided," by a~,-~ L of the parties, before they start the PA
method, by usage according to weeks. For example, a 1/lOth portion is about 5 weeks usage.
The naive p,ùceduLe of splitting every good 50-50 gives each party exactly 50 points, so it is equitable and envy-free. Yet not only is this allocation less efficient than AW (66.3 points for each party in the earlier example), but it is also less efficient than PA (55.9 points for each party).
Used alone, AW has a major advantage over the ~ inetl pLoceduLe (in which PA may be used): goods can be indivisible, except on the one good on which an equitability adju~i ~ must be made, because a party wins or loses completely on each.
Although the parties may need to spell out beforehand what each side obtains when it wins or loses under AW, if the items to be divided are issues rather than goods, only on the issue on which an equitability adjustment must be made will a finer breakdown be necessary. And on that issue (or good), it might be possible for one party to make a payment to the other in lieu of dividing this item.
There is no allocation pLu~eduLe that can guarantee the three properties of efficiency, envy-freeness and equitability when there are more than two parties. The fact that AW
guarantees all three in the two-person case is encuu.~ing, despite its theoretical (but probably not practical) vulnerability to manipulation.
Modifications can be made in the above-described '- i- ts within the scope of the claims. For example, the division may be of chores (unpleasant work assir~ ~), of adverse pollution effects, or other "bads" instead of "goods." However, the term "goods," as used in the claims, includes such division of negative effects. Another modification would be to allow for entitlements, as stated, for example in a will, whereby one party would be entitled to receive proportionally more of the goods it desires than the other party.
The term "goods", as used in the claims, inC~ c issues as well as physical items.
of the value while knowing that the other party feels that she received 90% of the value. Thus, while neither will envy the other in the sense of wishing to trade, the former will envy the latter's "happiness" (90% bringing more happiness than 60%).
With regard to drawback 1 ~the limitation to two people), the ~-ocedu-~ considered, prior to this invention, to be the best for obtaining a fair division of a collection of goods (items), when each good is itself non-divisible (indivisible), is called "Knaster's procedura of sealed bids" or "Xnaster's pLvceduLe."
Each of the parties (players) submits sealed bids for each item, for example, to an impartial mediator who administers the p.ocedule. The party who submits the highest bid is awarded the item. However, after the auction is over, some of the money bid for items is divided up among the parties. The ~L OCedU1 e requires that each party has money.
The Knaster pL~cedu~e is illustrated in Table 1 below.
There are three parties (8Ob, Carol, and Ted) and 4 items A,B,C,D
listed in Table 1, for example, a boat, a car, a house lot, and a painting. The amount listed in Table 1 for each party . CA 02204069 1997-04-30 and each item is the amount that that party has bid, in a sealed bid, for that item.
Table 1 Party Bob Carol Ted Valuation Item A S10,000 54,000 S7,000 Item B 2,000 1,000 4,000 Item C 500 1,500 2,000 Item D 800 2,000 1,000 Total valuation 13,300 8,500 14,000 Items received A D B,C
Value received 10,000 2,000 6,000 Initial fair share g,433 2,833 4,667 Difference (initial excess/deficit) 5,567 -833 1,333 Share of surplus 2,022 2,022 2,022 Adjusted fair share6,455 4,855 6,689 Final settlementA - 3,545 D + 2,855 B,C + 689 Each party has bid a different amount (valuation) for each item, and the total of each party's bids is the total valuation.
Each party gets the item for which he, or she, was high bidder;
their winning bid is considered the valuation of that item. The "initial fair share" is the party's total valuation divided by the number of parties. For example, Bob's total valuation is $13,300; because there are 3 parties his initial fair share is $4,433. The difference between his value for the item (A) he receives (S10,000) and his initial fair share is $5,567.
-These differences for all parties are summed algebraically:
$5,567 - $833 + $1,333 = $6,067, which is called the surplus.
Each party is assigned one-third of the surplus, i.e., $2,022, which is added to its initial fair share, i.e., Bob's $4,433 +
$2,022 = S6,455, which is his "adjusted fair share." This, in turn, is added (or subtracted) from the valuation of the item he, or she, received, i.e., Bob received item A valued at $10,000, and his adjusted fair share is $6,455 so he has a "final excess"
of $10,000 - 56,455 = S3,545- Bob contributes, in money, this excess to the other parties, with Carol receiving $2,855 and Ted Knaster's p.uce~u-e does guarantee envy-freeness in two-person situations but not if there are three or more parties.
However, the Knaster pL~dU~e requires that the parties have the cash to pay for a final settl ~rt. In many situations, including divorces, one or more parties do not have, and cannot borrow, sufficient money to implement the Knaster p~oceduLe.
Summary Of The Invention In accordance with the present invention, there is provided two computer-based methods for the fair division of goods, one of the methods being more applicable when many of the goods might be indivisible.
These methods may be accepted by potential users, such as parties to a divorce-pL~e,~y settlement, because the methods are readily understood and appear to be fair. Their results are proportional (each party obtains an equal share), they are envy-free (each party prefers his portion to anyone else's), and one is reasonably efficient.
The first method is called the Adjusted Winner (AW) method.
A list is made of the goods (items) to be divided between two parties, with each party given "100 points." These points indicate the value each party places on the it-ms and need not correspond to money. In fact, the parties need not have, or distribute, any money. Each of the parties, e.g., Bob and Carol, decides on how many points to bid for each item. The bids are sealed and can be administered by a mediator or other third person.
Bob initially is assigned all the items (goods) on which his bid is higher than Carol's bid. Next items (goods) are transferred to achieve "equitability," that is, until the point totals of the two parties are equal. The decision on which goods to transfer depends on the ratio of the bids, not on the point differences (point spread) between bids.
The method is carried out using a software program implemented on a digital computer. The detailed mathematical proofs and arguments for its envy-freeness, equitability and efficiency are set forth in a book by ~rams & Taylor, Fair Division: From Cake Cutting To Dispute Resolution, Cambridge ~niv. Press, 1996, in~ r~ted by reference herein.
-. CA 02204069 1997-04-30 One apparent problem with AW is that one or both of the parties may lie about the true value to them of various items in an attempt to manipulate their bids, based upon what they think the other party will bid. Generally, such manipulation by one party will not be s~lcc~csful -- and may even backfire -- unless one party knows exactly how many points the other will bid for each item. Cu..se~ ly, such attempts at exploitation are unlikely even to be tried.
The second method, called Proportional Allocation (PA), is less desirable than AW because it is not efficient. However, it is less subject to manipulation, at least in theory. Thus, a party that thinks another party is not making bids honestly may elect to use PA, which comes closer to inducing all the parties to be truthful, especially if there is the suspicion that advance information on one's bids has been obtained by the other party.
Under PA, as under AW, a list is made of all items. ~ach party is given 100 points and makes a sealed bid for each of the items which he, or she, wants. However, PA is only applicable to goods that are divisible, such as a record collection in which there are no single items of great value. On oCc~cion~
indivisible goods can be treated as divisible if, for example, an agreement is arrived at prior to the division.
Under PA, the portion of each item awarded each party is based on his or her bid, _ _-ed to the bids of others. For example, if Bob bids 6 for the record collection and Carol bids 5, the collection is divided so that Bob receives 6/11 and Carol 5/11.
Brief Description Of The Drawings The inventor's presently known best mode of practicing the invention is explained below in the detailed description, which should be taken in conjunction with the a~ - ying drawings.
In the drawings:
Figure 1 is a software program flow chart of the Adjusted winner (AW) method; and Figure 2 is a software program flow chart of the Proportional Allocation (PA) method.
Detailed Description Of The Invention I. Introduction The present invention presents two computer-based methods, called "Adjusted Winner" (AW) and "Proportional Allocation" (PA) for the fair division of goods between two parties (claimants).
The methods will first be explained; then the application of the two methods to situations, involving divorce and estate settlement, will be illustrated in the examples.
The methods are to be carried out using a software program that is executed on a digital computer having a memory, such as a hard disk, and a display, such as a monitor or printer. The software program is illustrated in the flow diagrams of Figures 1 and 2. The methods are preferably ,_cu,ded on a floppy disk, which is sold along with a manual. The disk may, for example, be run on a PC (Personal Computer) using a Microsoft Windows 95 tTM) operating system.
Both the AW and PA methods are applicable to goods which are divisible, e.g., "fungible" in legal terminology. An example of a divisible good would be bags of different grains, e.g., in a farm estate settlement. Parties could simply divide each of the bags equally, i.e., each party gets 50S. This division, however, provides less satisfactory results than either AW or PA if the parties value the different bags differently, e.g., one likes one bag more than the other whereas the other has the opposite preferences.
The case of trying to divide a collection of indivisible goods appears to be a more difficult problem. one cannot cut many goods into pieces and keep their value. In many real-life situations, the goods are not divisible and there is no apparent way to divide them fairly among two or more parties. The AW
method is generally applicable to goods which are non-divisible as well as those that are divisible. It requires only that one of the goods, which will not be known in advance, be divisible, or possibly that some money change hands at the end.
Under Aw, the two parties explicitly indicate how much they value each of the different goods by distributing 100 points across the goods. This information, which may or may not be made public (known to each other) after the bids are made, becomes the basis for making a fair division of the goods.
Valuations in cake division, by contrast, are implicit.
They are reflected in how the parties divide a cake into pieces, which ones they judge to be acceptable, and so on. But they are never required to say explicitly how much they value the different parts of the cake.
Requiring that parties assign points to different goods raises the question of whether they will have an incentive to be honest in Annolln~i ng their valuations. Preferences are usually private information, and one cannot expect people honestly to reveal them unless it is in their interest to do so.
Adjusted Winner (AW) produces a settlement that is efficient, envy-free, and equitable with respect to the bargainers' announced preferences. However, because AW provides only some induc t for the bargainers to be truthful in announcing their preferences, it may produce settlements that only appear to satisfy these criteria because complete truthfulness is not always advantageous.
For this reason, the second fair-division method, Proportional Allocation (PA), could provide a ~default~
settlement should either party object to the settlement under AW.
~hat is, PA could be implemented if either party, feeling that it was exploited under Aw because of AW's vulnerability to false announcements, requests PA. For reasons to be d;~c~c-ed later, however, this safeguard will hardly ever be necessary.
Like AW, PA is envy-free and equitable; unlike AW, it is e~L~ -ly robust against false a.l..u~sc- ~~~s in most situations, thereby ;n~--r;ng the bargainers to be truthful. However, the settlement it yields is not efficient. Nevertheless, it is substantially better for both parties than the naive fair-division ~Lu~-edu.e of splitting every good 50-50 (if this is even possible).
II. The Adjusted winner (AW) Method AW allocates k goods as follows. Let xl, ... xk be ~ob's An"o~nred points for goods 1, ~-- k, and let Yl, ~-- Yk be Carol's A~n~u~c~d points. Let X be the sum of the points of all goods that 80b A""nun~De that he values more than Carol does.
Let Y be the sum of the values of the goods that Carol A""U~ P5 she values more than Bob does. Assume X ~ Y. Next, assign the goods so that Bob initially gets all the goods whereby xi ~ Yi, and Carol gets the others. Now list the goods in an order Gl, G2, etc., so that the following hold:
1 ~ob, based on his Annnl~ values goods Gl, ...., Gr at least as much as Carol does (i.e., xi ~ Yi for 1 ~ i ~ r), where r c k.
2 Carol, based on her Anno~-- ~, values goods Gr+1,..., Gk more than ~ob does (i.e., Yi> xi for r 1 ~ i ' k).
3 xl/yl' Xr/yr Thus, Bob is initially given all goods 1 through r that he values at least as much as Carol, and Carol is given all goods r + 1 through k that she values strictly more than Bob.
Because xi ~ Yi for 1 ~ i ~ r, the ratios in (3) are all at least 1. Hence, all the goods for which xi = Yi come at the beginning of the list. Bob -- who, because X ~ Y, enjoys a advantage (if either party does~ after the winner-take-all assignment of goods -- is helped additionally by being Ac~ign~d all goods that the players value equally, based on their a~ s.
The next step involves transferring from Bob to Carol as much of Gl as is needed to achieve equitability -- that is, until the point totals of the two players are equal. If equitability is not achieved, even with all of Gl transferred from Bob to Carol, we next transfer G2, G3, etc. (in that order) from Bob to Carol. It is the order given by (3), starting with the smallest ratio, that ensures efficiency.
~cu~pl~ 1 Suppose there are three goods for which Bob and Carol announce the following point assignments (the larger of the two assignments is underscored):
Gl G2 G3 Total sob's announced values _ 67 27 lOo Carol's Annollnced values 5 34 61 lOo Initially, Gl and G2 are assigned to Bob, giving him 73 of his points, and G3 is assigned to Carol, giving her 61 of her points.
Hence, goods must be transferred from Bob to Carol to create equitability.
Notice that x1/y1 = 6/5 = 1.2 and x2/y2 = 67/34 = 1-97, so the smallest ratio of the players' valuations is for G1. Even transferring all of G1 from Bob to Carol, however, still leaves Bob with an advantage (67 of his points to 66 of hers).
Let x denote the fraction of G2 that will be retained by Bob, with the rest transferred from him to Carol. We choose x so that the resulting point totals are equal for Bob tleft side of the equation) and Carol (right side of the equation):
67 x = 5 + 34(1 - x) + 61 which yields x = 100/101 = 0.99. C- ~ey~ tly, Bob ends up with 99 percent of G2 for a total of 66.3 of his points, whereas Carol ends up with all of G1 and G3 and 1 percent of G2 for the same total of 66.3 of her points. This is the "equitability adjustment", which equalizes the number of points both players possess.
AW ~uduces an allocation of the goods, based on the announced values, that is:
(1) efficient: any allocation that is strictly better for one player is strictly worse for the other;
(2) equitable; Bob's announced valuation of his allocation is the same as Carol's a~..-uu..-ed valuation of her allocation;
(3) envy-free: neither player would trade his or her allocation for that of the other.
~Y ~pl- 2 Table 2. Point allocations of Bob and Carol for an estate Item Bob Carol 1 Boat 14 6 2 Motor 14 6 3 Piano 2 17 4 Computer 1 17 5 Rifle 4 4 6 Tools 2 6 7 Tractor 21 2 8 Truck _ 8 9 Moped 14 17 10 Moped 14 17 Total 100 100 In applying AW to the division of an estate, AW begins by temporarily assigning each item to whoever puts the most points on it (underscored in Table 2). Thus, Bob initially gets the boat, motor, tractor, and truck, which gives him goods valued at a total of 63 points. Carol receives the piano, computer, tools, and both mopeds, which gives her goods valued at a total of 74 points. Both value the rifle at 4 points so it is awarded initially to Carol under the rules of AW, raising her total to 78. The rifle, however, is the first item transferred from Carol to Bob, which still leaves Carol with an advantage of 74 points to 63 + 4 = 67 points for Bob.
To prepare for the next transfer of items from Carol to Bob, we list the items Carol has in order of increasing quotients of Carol's points to Bob's:
one moped: 17/14 = 1.2 one moped: 17/14 = 1.2 piano : 17/2 = 8.5 computer : 17/1 = 17.0 If we transfer one moped to Bob, his new total will be 67 + 14 = 81 points, and Carol's will be 74 - 17 = 57 points, indicating we have gone too far. Hence, we must calculate what fraction of the moped Carol must transfer to Bob in order for us to arrive at an equitable allocation, which will be efficient and envy-free as well.
Let x denote the fraction of the moped that will be retained by Carol. Then in order to equalize the point totals, thereby creating equitability, one must have 57 + 17x = 67 + 14(1 - x), which yields x = Z4/31 = 0.774. Thus, ~ob and Carol each receive 70.2 of his or her points -- a 40 pe~cel.t increment over half the estate.
Practically speaking, how does one transfer 77.4 percent of a moped from Carol to Bob? Perhaps they could reach an a~L
whereby Carol uses it about nine months out of the year and Bob uses it the L- inin~ three months. Perhaps not. A better solution might be that Bob ~..,..,..,.~Pc what he considers to be a fair price for his 22.6 percent of the moped -- say, $226. Carol then chooses between buying Bob out at his price or selling her 77.4 percent share of the moped to Bob for 0.774/.226 = 3.4 times the price he A.".'"""'~d.
III. The Effect Of Lies Of A Party Envy-freeness and equitability both address the question of whether one party believes he or she did at least as well as the other party. The difference is that envy-freeness involves an internal comparison, based on a player's own valuation, which is captured by the following question:
Ar- you at luast a~ w-ll off with your alloc_tion ~ you would b- with your ~ 's allocation and, h-nc-, would not d~ir~ to trado with your ~, .t?
Equitability, on the other hand, involves a more ~u..~veL~ial external or interpersonal comparison, which is ~a~u~ed by the following question:
Is your A - ~ v lu-ttc of what you r-G-iv-d ~qu-l to your .~ 9 A ~ v-luation of what he or sh-r--ceived?
In other words, did you receive, according to your point assignment, exactly what your u~u~unt received according to his or her point assignment?
Equitability, however, need not directly involve the comparison of one player's valuation of his share with the other party's valuation of her share. If there is a fraction x of all the goods being allocated (e.g., 2~3 of each good), and each party is indifferent between receiving this fractional allocation and the allocation that he or she actually received, then the parties' allocations are equitable.
What is called "envy-freeness" and "equitability" are only "apparent envy-freeness" and "apparent equitability" if the parties are not truthful. When they are truthful -- xi - ai and Yi = bi for all i, where ai and bi are the true values of Bob and Carol, respectively, for good i -- each party assuredly receives at least 50 points (based on his or her own valuation), and the surplus above 50 points is the same for each (i.e., his or her "more" is the same as his or her u~one..t's "more").
The equitability adju,i ~ that gives each party 66.3 of his or her points in Example 1 may be interpreted as providing each party with nearly 2/3 of what he or she perceives to be the total value, or utility, of all three goods. This equalization of the player's utilities assumes that points (or utilities) are additive and linear. Linearity here means that the party~s marginal utilities are constant -- instead of ~iminjshing as one obtains more of something -- so, for example, 2x percent of Gi is twice as good as x percent. Additivity here means that the value of two or more goods to a player is equal to the sum of their points.
Neither assumption is nerPcs~rily a good reflection of a party's preferences on certain issues. Thus, goods may not be "separable" because of complementarities -- that is, oht~inin~
one good may affect the value one obtains from others.
Perhaps the main drawback of AW is the extent to which it fails to induce the players to be truthful about their valuations -- and thereby fails to lead to an envy-free, equitable, and efficient outcome, based on these true valuations. This is easy to illustrate, even in the case of two goods. Suppose ~30b values the goods equally, and Carol knows that he will truthfully onnre his 50-S0 valuation. Suppose Carol's true valuation is 70-30. What should she ann~--nre? Ac5l-~ing that Announ ~s must be integers, the answer is 51-49.
The result of this ~nnru-- -nt will be an initial allocation of all of G1 to Carol (which she values at 70), and all of G2 to Bob (which he values at 50). Then there will be a transfer of only a trivial fraction (1/101) of Gl to Bob, since it appears that Carol's initial advantage is on}y 51 of her points to 50 of ~ob's points. Thereby Carol will end up with a y~l)e~uus 70 - 0.7 = 69.3 points (according to her true valuations), but Bob will realize only 50 + 0.5 = 50.5 points (according to his true valuations).
Bob can turn the tables on Carol if he knows her values of 70-30 and that she will An~ nce these. If Bob Announ~es 69-31, there will be a transfer of 39/139 of Gl from Carol to Bob, giving him a total of 50 + 14.0 = 64.0 points and her only 70 -19.6 = 50.4 points, based on their true valuations.
Thereby one party (with complete information) can exploit another party (without such information). On the other hand, if both players were truthful in their a-...ou-._ ~r-s, there would be a transfer of 1/6 of Gl from Carol (70-30) to Bob (50-50), giving each player 58.3 points.
This is not as large a drawback as might first appear, because generally one party does not have complete information about the other party's valuations ~bids). If the list of point allocations of each party is initially sealed, and opened simultaneously, then one party can only guess about the other party's valuations (point allocation bids on each item). Even in a divorce situation, where, for example, the wife thinks she can guess more or less correctly her husband's bids, she may not have sufficient confidence in her guesses to try to be manipulative, because being off by only one point could hurt her badly in the final allocation.
IV. The Proportional-Allocation (PA) Method Proportional Allocation (PA) comes closer to in~ucing the players to be truthful. Consider again our earlier example of exploitation with AW wherein Bob (50-50) a...,ounced his true valuation, and Carol (70-30) -- knowing Bob's allocation --optimally l~-y~ ed by Annnl-nr;ng 51-49. Thereby, Carol obtained 69.3 points, compared with the 58.3 points that truthfulness would have given her (a 17.2 percent increase).
Under PA the optimal reay~nse of Carol is to be nearl truthful, announcing 71-29 instead of 70-30. Her benefit from this slight distortion of the truth is only in the third decimal place, gaining her 52.087 points compared to 5Z.083 points (less than a 0.01 percent increase). Both parties do worse, when truthful, under PA (52.1 points~ than under AW (58.3 points), so PA is not efficient.
PA can be used as a default option to AW, which -- under the so-called ~_ ~inod y~ocedu~ -- either party can invoke if he or she feels exploited. Although PA does not give an efficient allocation, like AW it is equitable and envy-free. It also comes remarkably close to indl-r;ng truthfulness, at least in situations where no single good is of either negligible or of overriding value to either party.
PA, as its name implies, allocates goods proportionally. As before, assume that Bob Ann~--ncae values of xl, ..., Xk, and Carol Innnl-nr~c values of Y1, ~--, Yk for goods G1, ..., Gk.
Assume that for each i, either xi = 0 or Yi = ~ Then Bob is allocated the fraction of xi/(xi + Yi) of Gi, and Carol the fracti~n Yi/(Xi + Yi) E~mpl- 3 Consider our earlier example of three goods, for which Bob and Carol Anno~nre the following point ACci, - ~s:
Gl G2 G3 Total sOb~s Ann~n~d values 6 67 27 100 Carol's Anno~ values 5 34 61 100 Table 3. Optimal L~_L,---,c~c of Bob to Carol's An~ c~ valuations under PA
True valuation ~ ed valuation of Carol of Bob 19.32 17.98 16.67 15.96 16.61 20 29.32 30 29.67 29.13 29.00 30 33.39 37.98 39.67 40 39.90 40 41.00 44.04 46.67 49.13 49.90 50 50.10 50.87 53.33 55.96 59.00 60 60.10 60 60.33 62.02 66.61 70 71.00 70.87 70.33 70 70.68 83.39 84.04 83.33 82.02 80.68 80 Bob is awarded 6/11 of Gl, 67/101 of G2, and 27/88 of G3, giving him a total of 55.9 of his points. Likewise, Carol also receives a total of 55.9 of her points (recall that AW awarded both parties 66.3 points when they were truthful, or 18.6 percent more than PA gives in this example).
~ owever, PA requires that all the goods be divisible tfungible), or that a prior agreement be obtained as to what a division of the goods may mean. Thus, a vacation house can be "divided," by a~,-~ L of the parties, before they start the PA
method, by usage according to weeks. For example, a 1/lOth portion is about 5 weeks usage.
The naive p,ùceduLe of splitting every good 50-50 gives each party exactly 50 points, so it is equitable and envy-free. Yet not only is this allocation less efficient than AW (66.3 points for each party in the earlier example), but it is also less efficient than PA (55.9 points for each party).
Used alone, AW has a major advantage over the ~ inetl pLoceduLe (in which PA may be used): goods can be indivisible, except on the one good on which an equitability adju~i ~ must be made, because a party wins or loses completely on each.
Although the parties may need to spell out beforehand what each side obtains when it wins or loses under AW, if the items to be divided are issues rather than goods, only on the issue on which an equitability adjustment must be made will a finer breakdown be necessary. And on that issue (or good), it might be possible for one party to make a payment to the other in lieu of dividing this item.
There is no allocation pLu~eduLe that can guarantee the three properties of efficiency, envy-freeness and equitability when there are more than two parties. The fact that AW
guarantees all three in the two-person case is encuu.~ing, despite its theoretical (but probably not practical) vulnerability to manipulation.
Modifications can be made in the above-described '- i- ts within the scope of the claims. For example, the division may be of chores (unpleasant work assir~ ~), of adverse pollution effects, or other "bads" instead of "goods." However, the term "goods," as used in the claims, includes such division of negative effects. Another modification would be to allow for entitlements, as stated, for example in a will, whereby one party would be entitled to receive proportionally more of the goods it desires than the other party.
The term "goods", as used in the claims, inC~ c issues as well as physical items.
Claims (20)
1. A method involving the use of a software program executed on a digital computer having computer memory and a display for the fair division of a collection of goods between two parties; the method, including the steps, in sequence, of:
(a) allocating to each party an equal number of points (e.g., 100);
(b) having each party allocate its points to each of the goods, based on that party's relative valuation of each of the goods;
(c) recording in computer memory each party's allocation of points;
(d) initially, having the computer calculate an assignment to each party of each good for which that party allocated more points than the other party; and (e) having the computer calculate and then assign goods to achieve equitability of points by reassigning goods, based on the ratio of the parties' allocations of points for each good, in sequence, based on increasing quotients of the ratios;
(f) displaying the reassignment of the goods of (e) on the computer display; and (g) physically dividing and delivering the goods according to the reassignment of the goods of (e).
(a) allocating to each party an equal number of points (e.g., 100);
(b) having each party allocate its points to each of the goods, based on that party's relative valuation of each of the goods;
(c) recording in computer memory each party's allocation of points;
(d) initially, having the computer calculate an assignment to each party of each good for which that party allocated more points than the other party; and (e) having the computer calculate and then assign goods to achieve equitability of points by reassigning goods, based on the ratio of the parties' allocations of points for each good, in sequence, based on increasing quotients of the ratios;
(f) displaying the reassignment of the goods of (e) on the computer display; and (g) physically dividing and delivering the goods according to the reassignment of the goods of (e).
2. A method, as in claim 1, wherein each party allocates his or her points without disclosure to any other party until after completion of point allocation by all the parties.
3. A method of claim 1 wherein each party submits sealed bids to allocate his or her points.
4. A method of claim 1 and in (e) reassigning goods from a party who receives goods valued at more points to the other party by first reassigning goods for which the parties have allocated the same points.
5. A digital computer-based method, using a digital computer having a display, for the fair division of a set of non-divisible goods between two parties, the method including the steps, in sequence, of:
(a) allocating to each party an equal number of points, the points having no fixed monetary or economic significance;
(b) having each party bid on each item in a sealed bid according to his or her valuation of the item;
(c) in the computer, recording the bids and calculating which party initially should be assigned each item by having bid the most points for that item, and summing the points each party receives;
(d) determining the goods to be reassigned, to obtain equality of points, on the basis of:
(i) reassigning the goods for which the bids are equal to a party who has initially received fewer points in (c), and then (ii) reassigning goods in the sequence of increasing quotients of the parties' bids;
(e) displaying the reassignment of (d) on the computer display;
and (f) physically dividing and delivering the goods according to the reassignment of (d).
(a) allocating to each party an equal number of points, the points having no fixed monetary or economic significance;
(b) having each party bid on each item in a sealed bid according to his or her valuation of the item;
(c) in the computer, recording the bids and calculating which party initially should be assigned each item by having bid the most points for that item, and summing the points each party receives;
(d) determining the goods to be reassigned, to obtain equality of points, on the basis of:
(i) reassigning the goods for which the bids are equal to a party who has initially received fewer points in (c), and then (ii) reassigning goods in the sequence of increasing quotients of the parties' bids;
(e) displaying the reassignment of (d) on the computer display;
and (f) physically dividing and delivering the goods according to the reassignment of (d).
6. A method, as in claim 5, wherein the bids are sealed when made.
7. A method, as in claim 5, wherein each party must bid at least 1 point for each good.
8. A method employing a software program executed on a digital computer, having a computer display, for the fair division of a set of divisible goods by two parties, the method including the steps, in sequence, of:
(a) allocating to each party an equal number of points, the points having no fixed monetary or economic significance;
(b) having each party bid on each item according to his or her valuation of the item;
(c) in the computer, recording the bids and calculating the portion of each good to be assigned each party on the basis of a ratio of their bids for each item;
(d) displaying the assignment of portions of each good assigned each party on the computer display; and (e) physically dividing and delivering the goods according to the assignment of (c).
(a) allocating to each party an equal number of points, the points having no fixed monetary or economic significance;
(b) having each party bid on each item according to his or her valuation of the item;
(c) in the computer, recording the bids and calculating the portion of each good to be assigned each party on the basis of a ratio of their bids for each item;
(d) displaying the assignment of portions of each good assigned each party on the computer display; and (e) physically dividing and delivering the goods according to the assignment of (c).
9. A method, as in claim 8, wherein each party allocates his or her points without disclosure to any other party until after completion of point allocation by all the parties.
10. A method of claim 8 wherein each party submits sealed bids to allocate his or her points.
11. A method for the fair division of a collection of goods between two parties, the method including the steps, in sequence, of:
(a) allocating to each party an equal number of points (e.g., 100);
(b) having each party allocate its points to each of the goods, based on that party's relative valuation of each of the goods;
(c) recording each party's allocation of points;
(d) initially, calculating an assignment to each party of each good for which that party allocated more points than the other party; and (e) calculating and then assigning goods to achieve equitability of points by reassigning goods, based on the ratio of the parties' allocations of points for each good, in sequence, based on increasing quotients of the ratios;
(f) displaying the reassignment of the goods of (e); and (g) physically dividing and delivering the goods according to the reassignment of the goods of (e).
(a) allocating to each party an equal number of points (e.g., 100);
(b) having each party allocate its points to each of the goods, based on that party's relative valuation of each of the goods;
(c) recording each party's allocation of points;
(d) initially, calculating an assignment to each party of each good for which that party allocated more points than the other party; and (e) calculating and then assigning goods to achieve equitability of points by reassigning goods, based on the ratio of the parties' allocations of points for each good, in sequence, based on increasing quotients of the ratios;
(f) displaying the reassignment of the goods of (e); and (g) physically dividing and delivering the goods according to the reassignment of the goods of (e).
12. A method, as in claim 1, wherein each party allocates his or her points without disclosure to any other party until after completion of point allocation by all the parties.
13. A method of claim 11 wherein each party submits sealed bids to allocate his or her points.
14. A method of claim 11 and in (e) reassigning goods from a party who receives goods valued at more points to the other party by first reassigning goods for which the parties have allocated the same points.
15. A method for the fair division of a set of non-divisible goods between two parties, the method including the steps, in sequence, of:
(a) allocating to each party an equal number of points, the points having no fixed monetary or economic significance;
(b) having each party bid on each item in a sealed bid according to his or her valuation of the item;
(c) recording the bids and calculating which party initially should be assigned each item by having bid the most points for that item, and summing the points each party receives;
(d) determining the goods to be reassigned, to obtain equality of points, on the basis of:
(i) reassigning the goods for which the bids are equal to a party who has initially received fewer points in (c), and then (ii) reassigning goods in the sequence of increasing quotients of the parties' bids;
(e) displaying the reassignment of (d); and (f) physically dividing and delivering the goods according to the reassignment of (d).
(a) allocating to each party an equal number of points, the points having no fixed monetary or economic significance;
(b) having each party bid on each item in a sealed bid according to his or her valuation of the item;
(c) recording the bids and calculating which party initially should be assigned each item by having bid the most points for that item, and summing the points each party receives;
(d) determining the goods to be reassigned, to obtain equality of points, on the basis of:
(i) reassigning the goods for which the bids are equal to a party who has initially received fewer points in (c), and then (ii) reassigning goods in the sequence of increasing quotients of the parties' bids;
(e) displaying the reassignment of (d); and (f) physically dividing and delivering the goods according to the reassignment of (d).
16. A method, as in claim 15, wherein the bids are sealed when made.
17. A method, as in claim 15, wherein each party must bid at least 1 point for each good.
18. A method for the fair division of a set of divisible goods by two parties, the method including the steps, in sequence, of:
(a) allocating to each party an equal number of points, the points having no fixed monetary or economic significance;
(b) having each party bid on each item according to his or her valuation of the item;
(c) recording the bids and calculating the portion of each good to be assigned each party on the basis of a ratio of their bids for each item;
(d) displaying the assignment of portions of each good assigned each party; and (e) physically dividing and delivering the goods according to the assignment of (c).
(a) allocating to each party an equal number of points, the points having no fixed monetary or economic significance;
(b) having each party bid on each item according to his or her valuation of the item;
(c) recording the bids and calculating the portion of each good to be assigned each party on the basis of a ratio of their bids for each item;
(d) displaying the assignment of portions of each good assigned each party; and (e) physically dividing and delivering the goods according to the assignment of (c).
19. A method, as in claim 18, wherein each party allocates his or her points without disclosure to any other party until after completion of point allocation by all the parties.
20. A method of claim 18 wherein each party submits sealed bids to allocate his or her points.
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US68764796A | 1996-07-26 | 1996-07-26 | |
US08/687,647 | 1996-07-26 |
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CA2204069A1 true CA2204069A1 (en) | 1998-01-26 |
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CA002204069A Abandoned CA2204069A1 (en) | 1996-07-26 | 1997-04-30 | Computer-based method for the fair division of property |
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