Egalitarian equivalence (EE) is a criterion of
fair division
Fair division is the problem in game theory of dividing a set of resources among several people who have an entitlement to them so that each person receives their due share. That problem arises in various real-world settings such as division of i ...
.
In an egalitarian-equivalent division, there exists a certain "reference bundle"
such that each agent feels that his/her share is equivalent to
.
The EE fairness principle is usually combined with
Pareto efficiency
Pareto efficiency or Pareto optimality is a situation where no action or allocation is available that makes one individual better off without making another worse off. The concept is named after Vilfredo Pareto (1848–1923), Italian civil engin ...
. A PEEEA is an allocation that is both
Pareto efficient
Pareto efficiency or Pareto optimality is a situation where no action or allocation is available that makes one individual better off without making another worse off. The concept is named after Vilfredo Pareto (1848–1923), Italian civil engine ...
and egalitarian-equivalent.
Definition
A set of resources are divided among several agents such that every agent
receives a bundle
. Every agent
has a subjective
preference relation which is a
total order
In mathematics, a total or linear order is a partial order in which any two elements are comparable. That is, a total order is a binary relation \leq on some set X, which satisfies the following for all a, b and c in X:
# a \leq a ( reflexiv ...
over bundle.
These preference relations induce an equivalence relation in the usual way:
iff
.
An allocation is called ''egalitarian-equivalent'' if there exists a bundle
such that, for all
:
:::
An allocation is called ''PEEEA'' if it is both
Pareto-efficient
Pareto efficiency or Pareto optimality is a situation where no action or allocation is available that makes one individual better off without making another worse off. The concept is named after Vilfredo Pareto (1848–1923), Italian civil engin ...
and egalitarian-equivalent.
Motivation
The EE criterion was introduced by
Elisha Pazner and
David Schmeidler in 1978.
Previously, the main fairness criterion in economics has been
envy-freeness Envy-freeness, also known as no-envy, is a criterion for fair division. It says that, when resources are allocated among people with equal rights, each person should receive a share that is, in their eyes, at least as good as the share received by ...
(EF). EF has the merit that it is an ''ordinal'' criterion --- it can be defined based only on individual preference-relations; it does not need to compare utilities of different agents, or to assume that the agents' utility functions are normalized. However, EF might be incompatible with
Pareto efficiency
Pareto efficiency or Pareto optimality is a situation where no action or allocation is available that makes one individual better off without making another worse off. The concept is named after Vilfredo Pareto (1848–1923), Italian civil engin ...
(PE). In particular, in a standard economy with production, there may be no allocation which is both PE and EF.
EE, like EF, is an ordinal criterion --- it can be defined based only on individual preference-relations. However, it is always compatible with PE --- a PEEEA (PE and EE Allocation) always exists, even in production economies. Pazner and Schmeidler informally describe a PEEEA as follows:
:"Consider the case where there are two consumers and two commodities (but note that every step in the argument carries over to any number of agents and commodities...). Suppose that each consumer is given precisely half the total endowments. This egalitarian distribution will in general not be PE. Consider the ray in commodity space that goes from the origin through the vector of aggregate endowments. The ''egalitarian'' distribution is represented by each man being given the same bundle along this ray.
:If the egalitarian distribution is not PE, then (by monotonicity and continuity of preferences) moving each man slightly up along the ray yields distributions of utilities that are still feasible, since the starting utility distribution is in the interior of the utility possibility set. In particular, if we simultaneously move each man up along the commodity ray in precisely the same manner, we eventually shall hit a utility distribution that lies on the utility possibility frontier. This means that there exists a Pareto-efficient allocation that is ''equivalent'' from the viewpoint of each consumer to the hypothetical (nonfeasible) distribution along the ray that would give to each consumer the same bundle (which, by being strictly greater than the egalitarian distribution of the aggregate endowments, is itself not feasible). This PE allocation is thus ''equivalent to the egalitarian'' distribution in the hypothetical (larger than the original) economy...
:The resulting set of allocations is what we call the set of Pareto-efficient and egalitarian-equivalent allocations (PEEEA). It is a restriction of the Pareto set of the economy to those allocations having the specified equity property that their underlying utility levels distribution could have been generated by some egalitarian economy.".
Relation to the maximin criterion
As a special case, assume that there is a finite number of homogeneous divisible goods.
Let
be a certain bundle. For every