Hardness Results for Consensus-Halving
Abstract
We study the consensus-halving problem of dividing an object into two portions, such that each of n agents has equal valuation for the two portions. The ε-approximate consensus-halving problem allows each agent to have an ε discrepancy on the values of the portions. We prove that computing ε-approximate consensus-halving solution using n cuts is in PPA, and is PPAD-hard, where ε is some positive constant; the problem remains PPAD-hard when we allow a constant number of additional cuts. It is NP-hard to decide whether a solution with n-1 cuts exists for the problem. As a corollary of our results, we obtain that the approximate computational version of the Continuous Necklace Splitting Problem is PPAD-hard when the number of portions t is two.