On the Complexity of Fair House Allocation
Abstract
We study fairness in house allocation, where m houses are to be allocated among n agents so that every agent receives one house. We show that maximizing the number of envy-free agents is hard to approximate to within a factor of n1-γ for any constant γ>0, and that the exact version is NP-hard even for binary utilities. Moreover, we prove that deciding whether a proportional allocation exists is computationally hard, whereas the corresponding problem for equitability can be solved efficiently.
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