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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 taxation, it is known as
poll tax A poll tax, also known as head tax or capitation, is a tax levied as a fixed sum on every liable individual (typically every adult), without reference to income or resources. Head taxes were important sources of revenue for many governments f ...
.


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 CEL rule says that each claimant ''i'' should receive \max(0, c_i-r), where ''r'' is a constant chosen such that \sum_^n \max(0, c_i-r) = E. The rule can also be described algorithmically as follows: * Initially, all agents are active, and each agent gets his full claim. * While the total allocation is larger than the estate: ** Remove one unit equally from all active agents. ** Each agent whose total allocation drops to zero becomes inactive.


Examples

Examples with two claimants: * CEL(60,90; 100) = (35,65); here r=25. * CEL(50,100; 100) =(25,75); here r=25 too. * CEL(40,80; 100) = (30,70); here r=10. Examples with three claimants: * CEL(50,100,150; 100) = (0, 25, 75); here r=75. * CEL(50,100,150; 200) = (16.667, 66.666, 116.667); here r=33.333. * CEL(50,100,150; 300) = (50, 100, 150); here r=0.


Usage

In the Jewish law, if several bidders participate in an
auction An auction is usually a process of buying and selling goods or services by offering them up for bids, taking bids, and then selling the item to the highest bidder or buying the item from the lowest bidder. Some exceptions to this definition e ...
and then revoke their bids simultaneously, they have to compensate the seller for the loss. The loss is divided among the bidders according to the CEL rule. If the first bidder says: "I will edeemit for ten selaim," the second: "...for twenty," and a third "...for 24," and the second and third bidders retract at the same time, we enable the first to redeem it for 10, and we expropriate 7 from the property of both the second and the third. Thus, the Temple treasury collects 24. Similarly, if all three of them retract and the consecrated article is ltimatelysold for 3, we expropriate 7 selaim from the property of all of them.


Characterizations

The CEL rule has several characterizations. It is the only rule satisfying the following sets of axioms: * Equal treatment of equals, minimal rights first, and composition down; * Conditional null compensation, and composition up; * Conditional null compensation, and the dual of claims-monotonicity.C-H Yeh, 2001, "Sustainability, claims monotonicity, and the constrained equal award rule", Mimeo.


Dual rule

The constrained equal awards (CEA) rule is the ''dual'' of the CEL rule, that is: for each problem (c,E), we have CEA(c,E) = c - CEL(c, \sum c - E).


References

{{Reflist Bankruptcy theory