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When does an additional stage improve welfare in centralized assignment?

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We study multistage centralized assignment systems to allocate scarce resources based on priorities in the context of school choice. We characterize schools' capacity-priority profiles under which an additional stage of assignment may improve student welfare when the deferred acceptance algorithm is used at each stage. If the capacity-priority profile is acyclic, then no student prefers any subgame-perfect Nash equilibrium (SPNE) outcome of the 2-stage system to the truthful dominant-strategy equilibrium outcome of the 1-stage system. If the capacity-priority profile is not acyclic, then an SPNE outcome of the 2-stage system may Pareto dominate the truthful dominant-strategy equilibrium outcome of the 1 -stage system. If students are restricted to playing truncation strategies, an additional stage unambiguously improves student welfare: no student prefers the truthful dominant-strategy equilibrium outcome of the 1-stage system to any SPNE outcome of the 2-stage system.

Market designMultistage assignmentSchool choiceDeferred acceptance algorithm

Battal Dogan、M. Bumin Yenmez

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Department of Economics, University of Bristol, 3B13 The Priory Road Complex, Priory Road, Clifton BS8 ITU, UK

Department of Economics, Boston College. 140 Commonwealth Ave, Chestnut Hill, MA 02467, USA

2023

Economic theory

Economic theory

ISSN:0938-2259
年,卷(期):2023.76(4)
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