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Dividing Good and Better Items Among Agents with Bivalued Submodular Valuations

Abstract

We study the problem of fairly allocating a set of indivisible goods among agents with {\em bivalued submodular valuations} -- each good provides a marginal gain of either aa or bb (a<ba < b) and goods have decreasing marginal gains. This is a natural generalization of two well-studied valuation classes -- bivalued additive valuations and binary submodular valuations. We present a simple sequential algorithmic framework, based on the recently introduced Yankee Swap mechanism, that can be adapted to compute a variety of solution concepts, including max Nash welfare (MNW), leximin and pp-mean welfare maximizing allocations when aa divides bb. This result is complemented by an existing result on the computational intractability of MNW and leximin allocations when aa does not divide bb. We show that MNW and leximin allocations guarantee each agent at least 25\frac25 and ab+2a\frac{a}{b+2a} of their maximin share, respectively, when aa divides bb. We also show that neither the leximin nor the MNW allocation is guaranteed to be envy free up to one good (EF1). This is surprising since for the simpler classes of bivalued additive valuations and binary submodular valuations, MNW allocations are known to be envy free up to any good (EFX).

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