Allocating uncertain and unresponsive resources: an experimental approach.

We identify an important class of economic problems that arise naturally in several applications: the allocation of multiple resources when there are uncertainties in demand or supply, unresponsive supplies (no inventories and fixed capacities), and significant demand indivisibilities (rigidities). Examples of such problems include: scheduling job shops, airports, or supercomputers; zero-inventory planning; and the allocation and pricing of NASA's planned Space Station. Using experimental methods, we show that the two most common organizations used to deal with this problem, markets and administrative procedures, can perform at very low efficiencies (60-65% efficiency in a seemingly robust example). Thus, there is a need to design new mechanisms that more efficiently allocate resources in these environments. We develop and analyze two mechanisms that arise naturally from auctions used to allocate single-dimensional goods. These new mechanisms involve computer-assisted coordination made possible by the existence of networked computers. Both mechanisms significantly improve on the performance of administrative and market procedures.

[1]  F. Hayek The economic nature of the firm: The use of knowledge in society , 1945 .

[2]  T. Koopmans,et al.  Assignment Problems and the Location of Economic Activities , 1957 .

[3]  G. Debreu,et al.  Theory of Value , 1959 .

[4]  G. Debreu Theory of value : an axiomatic analysis of economic equilibrium , 1960 .

[5]  William Vickrey,et al.  Counterspeculation, Auctions, And Competitive Sealed Tenders , 1961 .

[6]  Stanley Reiter,et al.  Allocating Indivisible Resources Affording External Economies or Diseconomies , 1962 .

[7]  S. Reiter A System for Managing Job-Shop Production , 1966 .

[8]  Theodore Groves,et al.  Incentives in Teams , 1973 .

[9]  E. Lehmann,et al.  Nonparametrics: Statistical Methods Based on Ranks , 1976 .

[10]  V. Smith Papers in experimental economics , 1991 .

[11]  V. Smith,et al.  Research in Experimental Economics , 1979 .

[12]  Claude d'Aspremont,et al.  On Bayesian incentive compatible mechanisms , 1979 .

[13]  C. Plott,et al.  The Allocation of Landing Rights by Unanimity among Competitors , 1981 .

[14]  M. Harris,et al.  A Theory of Monopoly Pricing Schemes with Demand Uncertainty , 1981 .

[15]  Charles R. Plott,et al.  Industrial Organization Theory and Experimental Economies , 1982 .

[16]  G. Rand Sequencing and Scheduling: An Introduction to the Mathematics of the Job-Shop , 1982 .

[17]  V. Smith,et al.  Papers in Experimental Economics: Theory and Behavior of Single Object Auctions , 1982 .

[18]  Paul R. Milgrom,et al.  A theory of auctions and competitive bidding , 1982 .

[19]  V. Smith Microeconomic Systems as an Experimental Science , 1982 .

[20]  S. Rassenti,et al.  A Combinatorial Auction Mechanism for Airport Time Slot Allocation , 1982 .

[21]  C. D. Gelatt,et al.  Optimization by Simulated Annealing , 1983, Science.

[22]  John O. Ledyard,et al.  The economics of the space station , 1986 .

[23]  Robert Wilson,et al.  Priority Service: Pricing, Investment, and Market Organization , 1987 .

[24]  Robert Forsythe,et al.  Complete Information Outcomes without Common Knowledge , 1988, TARK.