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Guaranteeing Maximin Shares: Some Agents Left Behind

Abstract

The maximin share (MMS) guarantee is a desirable fairness notion for allocating indivisible goods. While MMS allocations do not always exist, several approximation techniques have been developed to ensure that all agents receive a fraction of their maximin share. We focus on an alternative approximation notion, based on the population of agents, that seeks to guarantee MMS for a fraction of agents. We show that no optimal approximation algorithm can satisfy more than a constant number of agents, and discuss the existence and computation of MMS for all but one agent and its relation to approximate MMS guarantees. We then prove the existence of allocations that guarantee MMS for 23\frac{2}{3} of agents, and devise a polynomial time algorithm that achieves this bound for up to nine agents. A key implication of our result is the existence of allocations that guarantee MMS3n/2\text{MMS}^{\lceil{3n/2}\rceil}, i.e., the value that agents receive by partitioning the goods into 32n\lceil{\frac{3}{2}n}\rceil bundles, improving the best known guarantee of MMS2n2\text{MMS}^{2n-2}. Finally, we provide empirical experiments using synthetic data.

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