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Scheduling with Opting Out: Improving upon Random Priority

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  • Moulin, Herve

    (Rice U)

  • Cres, Moulin

    (HEC School of Management)

Abstract

In a scheduling problem where agents can opt out, we show that the familiar Random Priority (RP) a rule can be improved upon by another mechanism dubbed Probabilistic Serial (PS). Both mechanisms are nonmanipulable in a strong sense, but the latter is Pareto superior to the former and serves a larger (expected number of agents. The PS equilibrium outcome is easier to compute than the RP outcome; on the other hand RP is easier to implement than PS. We show that the improvement of PS over RP is significant but small: at most a couple of percentage points in the relative welfare gain and the relative difference in quantity served. We conjecture that the latter never exceeds 8.33 %. Both gains vanish when the number of agents is large.

Suggested Citation

  • Moulin, Herve & Cres, Moulin, 2000. "Scheduling with Opting Out: Improving upon Random Priority," Working Papers 2000-03, Rice University, Department of Economics.
  • Handle: RePEc:ecl:riceco:2000-03
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    File URL: http://www.ruf.rice.edu/~econ/papers/2000papers/03Moulin.pdf
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