A celebrated impossibility result by Myerson and Satterthwaite (1983) shows that any truthful mechanism for two-sided markets that maximizes social welfare must run a deficit, resulting in a necessity to relax welfare efficiency and the use of approximation mechanisms. Such mechanisms, in general, make extensive use of the Bayesian priors. In this work, we investigate a question of increasing theoretical and practical importance: how much prior information is required to design mechanisms with near-optimal approximations? Our first contribution is a more general impossibility result stating that no meaningful approximation is possible without any prior information, expanding the famous impossibility result of Myerson and Satterthwaite. Our second contribution is that one single sample (one number per item), arguably a minimum-possible amount of prior information, from each seller distribution is sufficient for a large class of two-sided markets. We prove matching upper and lower bounds on the best approximation that can be obtained with one single sample for subadditive buyers and additive sellers regardless of computational considerations. Our third contribution is the design of computationally efficient black box reductions that turn any one-sided mechanism into a two-sided mechanism with a small loss in the approximation, while using only one single sample from each seller. On the way, our black box-type mechanisms deliver several interesting positive results in their own right, often beating even the state of the art that uses full prior information.

EFFICIENT TWO-SIDED MARKETS WITH LIMITED INFORMATION / Dütting, P., Fusco, F., Lazos, P., Leonardi, S., Reiffenhäuser, R.. - In: SIAM JOURNAL ON COMPUTING. - ISSN 0097-5397. - 55:1(2026), pp. 65-92. [10.1137/22M1518918]

EFFICIENT TWO-SIDED MARKETS WITH LIMITED INFORMATION

Fusco F.
;
Leonardi S.;
2026

Abstract

A celebrated impossibility result by Myerson and Satterthwaite (1983) shows that any truthful mechanism for two-sided markets that maximizes social welfare must run a deficit, resulting in a necessity to relax welfare efficiency and the use of approximation mechanisms. Such mechanisms, in general, make extensive use of the Bayesian priors. In this work, we investigate a question of increasing theoretical and practical importance: how much prior information is required to design mechanisms with near-optimal approximations? Our first contribution is a more general impossibility result stating that no meaningful approximation is possible without any prior information, expanding the famous impossibility result of Myerson and Satterthwaite. Our second contribution is that one single sample (one number per item), arguably a minimum-possible amount of prior information, from each seller distribution is sufficient for a large class of two-sided markets. We prove matching upper and lower bounds on the best approximation that can be obtained with one single sample for subadditive buyers and additive sellers regardless of computational considerations. Our third contribution is the design of computationally efficient black box reductions that turn any one-sided mechanism into a two-sided mechanism with a small loss in the approximation, while using only one single sample from each seller. On the way, our black box-type mechanisms deliver several interesting positive results in their own right, often beating even the state of the art that uses full prior information.
2026
two-sided markets; welfare maximization; budget balance
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
EFFICIENT TWO-SIDED MARKETS WITH LIMITED INFORMATION / Dütting, P., Fusco, F., Lazos, P., Leonardi, S., Reiffenhäuser, R.. - In: SIAM JOURNAL ON COMPUTING. - ISSN 0097-5397. - 55:1(2026), pp. 65-92. [10.1137/22M1518918]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1762804
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