• DocumentCode
    2722559
  • Title

    Welfare and Profit Maximization with Production Costs

  • Author

    Blum, Avrim ; Gupta, Anupam ; Mansour, Yishay ; Sharma, Ankit

  • Author_Institution
    Comput. Sci. Dept., Carnegie Mellon Univ., Pittsburgh, PA, USA
  • fYear
    2011
  • fDate
    22-25 Oct. 2011
  • Firstpage
    77
  • Lastpage
    86
  • Abstract
    Combinatorial Auctions are a central problem in Algorithmic Mechanism Design: pricing and allocating goods to buyers with complex preferences in order to maximize some desired objective (e.g., social welfare, revenue, or profit). The problem has been well-studied in the case of limited supply (one copy of each item), and in the case of digital goods (the seller can produce additional copies at no cost). Yet in the case of resources -- oil, labor, computing cycles, etc. -- neither of these abstractions is just right: additional supplies of these resources can be found, but at increasing difficulty (marginal cost) as resources are depleted. In this work, we initiate the study of the algorithmic mechanism design problem of combinatorial pricing under increasing marginal cost. The goal is to sell these goods to buyers with unknown and arbitrary combinatorial valuation functions to maximize either the social welfare, or the seller´s profit, specifically we focus on the setting of posted item prices with buyers arriving online. We give algorithms that achieve constant factor approximations for a class of natural cost functions - linear, low-degree polynomial, logarithmic - and that give logarithmic approximations for more general increasing marginal cost functions (along with a necessary additive loss). We show that these bounds are essentially best possible for these settings.
  • Keywords
    commerce; pricing; algorithmic mechanism design; combinatorial auctions; combinatorial pricing; combinatorial valuation functions; production costs; profit maximization; social welfare; welfare maximization; Algorithm design and analysis; Approximation algorithms; Approximation methods; Cost accounting; Cost function; Pricing; Production;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Foundations of Computer Science (FOCS), 2011 IEEE 52nd Annual Symposium on
  • Conference_Location
    Palm Springs, CA
  • ISSN
    0272-5428
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4577-1843-4
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/FOCS.2011.68
  • Filename
    6108152