Strategic bankruptcy problem
A strategic bankruptcy problem is a variant of a bankruptcy problem in which claimants may act strategically, that is, they may manipulate their claims or their behavior. There are various kinds of strategic bankruptcy problems, differing in the assumptions about the possible ways in which claimants may manipulate.
Definitions
There is a divisible resource, denoted by '. There are n people who claim this resource or parts of it; they are called claimants. The amount claimed by each claimant i is denoted by '. Usually,, that is, the estate is insufficient to satisfy all the claims. The goal is to allocate to each claimant an amount such that.Unit-selection game
O'Neill describes the following game.- The estate is divided to small units.
- Each claimant i chooses some units.
- Each unit is divided equally among all agents who claim it.
Rule-proposal games
Chun's game
Chun describes the following game.- Each claimant proposes a division rule.
- The proposed rule must satisfy the property of order-preservation.
- All proposed rules are applied to the problem; each claimant's claim is replaced with the maximum amount awarded to him by a proposed rule.
- The process repeats with the revised claims.
Herrero's game
Herrero describes a dual game, in which, at each round, each claimant's claim is replaced with the minimum amount awarded to him by a proposed rule. This process, too, has a unique Nash equilibrium, in which the payoffs are equal to the ones prescribed by the constrained equal losses rule.Amount-proposal game
Sonn describes the following sequential game.- Claimant 1 proposes an amount to claimant 2.
- If claimant 2 accepts, he leaves with it and claimant 1 then proposes an amount to claimant 3, etc.
- If a claimant k rejects, then claimant 1 moves to the end of line, the claimant k starts making offerts to the next claimant.
- The offer made to each claimant i must be at most , and at most the remaining amount.
- The process continues until one claimant remains; that claimant gets the remaining estate.
Division-proposal games
Serrano's game
Serrano describes another sequential game of offers. It is parametrized by a two-claimant rule R.- The highest claimant suggests a division.
- Each other claimant can either accept or reject the offer.
- * Any claimant that accepts the offer, leaves with it.
- * Any claimant k that rejects the offer, receives the outcome of rule R on the two-claimant problem for k and 1, on the sum of the offers for k and 1.
- The highest claimant receives the remainder.
- The process is repeated with all the rejecters.
Corchon and Herrero's game
Corchon and Herrero describe the following game. It is parametrized by a "compromise function".- Agents propose division vectors, which must be bounded by the claims vector.
- The compromise function is used to aggregate the proposals.