ArXiv TLDR

Justifiable Priority Violations

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2604.06396

Josué Ortega, R. Pablo Arribillaga

econ.THcs.GT

TLDR

This paper proposes an endogenous justifiability criterion for priority violations in matching markets, enabling Pareto improvements beyond consent-based methods.

Key contributions

  • Proposes an "endogenous justifiability" criterion for priority violations in matching markets.
  • Develops a "just below cutoffs" mechanism and an iterative algorithm for justifiable Pareto improvements.
  • Shows endogenous justifiability allows improvements unattainable by consent-based mechanisms.
  • Analyzes theoretical limitations of both consent and endogenous justifiability for Pareto efficiency.

Why it matters

This research offers a novel, question-free approach to improving matching market efficiency by defining justifiable priority violations. It provides practical mechanisms and algorithms, while also highlighting the inherent limitations of current methods in achieving full Pareto efficiency.

Original Abstract

Addressing the large inefficiencies generated by the Deferred Acceptance (DA) mechanism requires priority violations, but which ones are justifiable? The leading approach is to ask individuals if they consent to waive their priority ex-ante. We develop an alternative question-free solution, in which a priority violation is justifiable whenever the affected student either (i) directly benefits from the improvement, or (ii) is unimprovable under any assignment that Pareto-dominates DA. This endogenous justifiability criterion permits improvements unattainable by the leading consent-based mechanism under any consent structure. We provide a ``just below cutoffs'' mechanism that always finds a strongly justifiable matching whenever DA's outcome is inefficient, and build on it to construct a polynomial-time algorithm that expands justifiable improvements iteratively, converging to a DA improvement that cannot be Pareto-improved by any justifiable matching without strictly expanding the beneficiary set. Finally, we prove theoretically that both the ex-ante consent and the endogenous justifiability frameworks have important limitations in reaching Pareto-efficient outcomes, and use simulations to quantify how binding these constraints are in practice.

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