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Constrained equal awards (CEA), also called constrained equal gains, is a division rule for solving
bankruptcy problem A bankruptcy problem, also called a claims problem, is a problem of distributing a homogeneous divisible good (such as money) among people with different claims. The focus is on the case where the amount is insufficient to satisfy all the claims. ...
s. According to this rule, each claimant should receive an equal amount, except that no claimant should receive more than his/her claim. In the context of taxation, it is known as leveling tax.


Formal definition

There is a certain amount of money to divide, denoted by ''E'' (=Estate or Endowment). There are ''n'' ''claimants''. Each claimant ''i'' has a ''claim'' denoted by ''c_i''. Usually, \sum_^n c_i > E, that is, the estate is insufficient to satisfy all the claims. The CEA rule says that each claimant ''i'' should receive \min(c_i, r), where ''r'' is a constant chosen such that \sum_^n \min(c_i,r) = E. The rule can also be described algorithmically as follows: * Initially, all agents are active, and all agents get 0. * While there are remaining units of the estate: ** The next estate unit is divided equally among all active agents. ** Each agent whose total allocation equals its claim becomes inactive.


Examples

Examples with two claimants: * CEA(60,90; 100) = (50,50); here r=50. In general, when all claims are at least E/n, each claimant receives exactly E/n. * CEA(40,80; 100) = (40,60); here r=60. Examples with three claimants: * CEA(50,100,150; 100) = (33.333, 33.333, 33.333); here r=33.333. * CEA(50,100,150; 200) = (50, 75, 75); here r=75. * CEA(50,100,150; 300) = (50, 100, 150); here r=150. *CEA(100,200,300; 300) = (100,100,100); here r=100. *CEA(100,200,300; 500) = (100,200,200); here r=200.


Usage

In the Jewish law, if several creditors have claims to the same bankrupt debtor, all of which have the same precedence (e.g. all loans have the same date), then the debtor's assets are divided according to CEA.


Characterizations

The CEA rule has several characterizations. It is the only rule satisfying the following sets of axioms: * Equal treatment of equals, invariance under truncation of claims, and composition up; * Conditional full compensation, and composition down; * Conditional full compensation, and claims-monotonicity.C-H Yeh, 2001, "Sustainability, claims monotonicity, and the constrained equal award rule", Mimeo.


Dual rule

The
constrained equal losses Constrained equal losses (CEL) is a division rule for solving bankruptcy problems. According to this rule, each claimant should lose an equal amount from his or her claim, except that no claimant should receive a negative amount. In the context of ...
(CEL) rule is the ''dual'' of the CEA rule, that is: for each problem (c,E), we have CEL(c,E) = c - CEA(c, \sum c - E).


References

{{Reflist Bankruptcy theory