Additive rules in bankruptcy problems and other related problems.
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1420530
DOI10.1016/S0165-4896(03)00079-9zbMath1092.91056OpenAlexW2133157759MaRDI QIDQ1420530
Gustavo Bergantiños, Juan J. Vidal-Puga
Publication date: 2 February 2004
Published in: Mathematical Social Sciences (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/s0165-4896(03)00079-9
Mathematical economics (91B99) Resource and cost allocation (including fair division, apportionment, etc.) (91B32)
Related Items (14)
Endowment additivity and the weighted proportional rules for adjudicating conflicting claims ⋮ Non-manipulable division rules in claim problems and generalizations ⋮ The reverse Talmud family of rules for bankruptcy problems: a characterization ⋮ On the linearity property for allocation problems and bankruptcy problems ⋮ Additive adjudication of conflicting claims ⋮ Characterization of linear symmetric solutions for allocation problems ⋮ Priority and proportionality in bankruptcy ⋮ Uncertainty in cooperative interval games: how Hurwicz criterion compatibility leads to egalitarianism ⋮ Families of sequential priority rules and random arrival rules with withdrawal limits ⋮ Additive rules in discrete allocation problems ⋮ Aggregator operators for dynamic rationing ⋮ A characterization of the random arrival rule for bankruptcy problems ⋮ Some game theoretic marketing attribution models ⋮ Axiomatic and game-theoretic analysis of bankruptcy and taxation problems: an update
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Game theoretic analysis of a bankruptcy problem from the Talmud
- Equal or proportional division of a surplus, and other methods
- Distributive justice in taxation
- The proportional solution for rights problems
- A problem of rights arbitration from the Talmud
- Individual rights and collective responsibility: The rights-egalitarian solution
- Axiomatic and game-theoretic analysis of bankruptcy and taxation problems: a survey.
- Priority Rules and Other Asymmetric Rationing Methods
This page was built for publication: Additive rules in bankruptcy problems and other related problems.