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Ulric B. and Evelyn L. Bray Social Sciences Seminar

Tuesday, May 6, 2025
4:00pm to 5:00pm
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Baxter B125
Quantifying Inefficiency
Yannai Gonczarowski, Professor of Economics and of Computer Science, Harvard University,

Abstract: We axiomatically define a cardinal social inefficiency function, which, given a set of alternatives and individuals' vNM preferences over the alternatives, assigns a unique number—the social inefficiency—to each alternative. These numbers—and not only their order—are uniquely defined by our axioms despite no exogenously given interpersonal comparison, outside option, or disagreement point. We interpret these numbers as per capita losses in endogenously normalized utility. We apply our social inefficiency function to a setting in which interpersonal comparison is notoriously hard to justify—object allocation without money—leveraging techniques from computer science to prove an approximate-efficiency result for the Random Serial Dictatorship mechanism.

For more information, please contact Mary Martin by phone at 626-395-4571 or by email at [email protected].