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We study the budget aggregation problem in which a set of strategic voters must split a finite divisible resource (such as money or time) among a set of competing projects. Our goal is twofold: We seek truthful mechanisms that provide fairness guarantees to the projects. For the first objective, we focus on the class of moving phantom mechanisms, which are -- to this day -- essentially the only known truthful mechanisms in this setting. For project fairness, we consider the mean division as a fair baseline, and bound the maximum difference between the funding received by any project and this baseline. We propose a novel and simple moving phantom mechanism that provides optimal project fairness guarantees. As a corollary of our results, we show that our new mechanism minimizes the L1 distance to the mean for three projects and gives the first non-trivial bounds on this quantity for more than three projects.
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Rupert Freeman
University of Virginia
Ulrike Schmidt-Kraepelin
Center for Mathematical Modeling
University of Virginia
Eindhoven University of Technology
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Freeman et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68e72968b6db6435876a3623 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v38i9.28828
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