Nash Bargaining via Flexible Budget Markets
Vijay V. Vazirani, Georgia Tech
May 2, 2008, 3:30PM, Wean 7500
**Note unusual room**
Abstract:
In his seminal 1950 paper, John Nash defined the bargaining problem;
the ensuing theory of bargaining lies today at the heart of game theory.
In this work, we initiate an algorithmic study of Nash bargaining problems.
We consider a class of Nash bargaining problems whose solution can be
stated as a convex program. For these problems, we show that there
corresponds a market whose equilibrium allocations yield the solution
to the convex program and hence the bargaining problem. For several of
these markets, we give combinatorial, polynomial time algorithms, using
the primal-dual paradigm.
Unlike the traditional Fisher market model, in which buyers spend a fixed
amount of money, in these markets, each buyer declares a lower bound on the
amount of utility she wishes to derive. The amount of money she actually
spends is a specific function of this bound and the announced prices of goods.
Over the years, a fascinating theory has started forming around a convex
program given by Eisenberg and Gale in 1959. Besides market equilibria, this
theory touches on such disparate topics as TCP congestion control and
efficient solvability of nonlinear programs by combinatorial means. Our
work shows that the Nash bargaining problem fits harmoniously
in this collage of ideas.