社会商品定价

Alon Eden, Tomer Ezra, M. Feldman
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In this paper, we conduct a systematic study of revenue-maximizing pricing schemes for social goods: we introduce a Bayesian model for this scenario, and devise nearly-optimal pricing schemes for various types of externalities, both for simultaneous sales and for sequential sales. To study this problem, we consider a setting with a single type of good, of unlimited supply, and a set of n agents; each agent i ϵ [n] has a non-negative valuation vi for purchasing the good, drawn independently from a distribution Fi. We denote the product distribution by F = Xiϵ[n]Fi. An agent i who purchases the good derives value vi from it. If an agent does not purchase the good, but the good is purchased by others, then this agent derives only a fraction of her value, depending on the set of agents and the type of externality the good exhibits on the agent. This type of externality is captured in our model by an externality function xi : 2[n] → [0, 1], where xi(S) denotes the fraction of vi an agent i derives when the good is purchased by the set of agents S. We assume that xi is publicly known (as it captures the agent's externalities), monotonically nondecreasing and normalized; i.e., for every T ⊆ S, xi(T) ≤ xi(S), xi(∅) = 0, and xi(S) = 1 whenever i ϵ S. We consider three structures of the function xi, corresponding to three types of externalities of social goods. (a) Full externalities (commonly known as \"public goods\"): in this scenario all agents derive their entire value if the good is purchased by any agent. Therefore, xi(S) = 1 if and only if S ≠ ∅. This model captures goods that are non-excludable, such as a coffee machine in a shared office. A special case of this scenario, where valuations are independently and identically distributed, has been studied in [1]. (b) Status-based externalities: in this scenario, agent i's \"social status\" is captured by some discount factor wi ϵ [0, 1], which corresponds to the fraction of the value agent i derives from a good when purchased by another party. This model captures settings that exhibit asymmetry with respect to the benefit different agents derive from goods they do not own (e.g., a fast food restaurant might benefit from any traffic in the shopping mall, whereas more specialized stores may benefit from as campaigns that draw customers interested in a similar kind of products). (c) Availability-based externalities: in this scenario, the availability of a good increases as more agents purchase a good, and therefore, an agent derives a larger fraction of her value as more agents purchase a good. This is captured by a monotonically non-decreasing function w : {0,..., n − 1} → [0, 1] with w(0) = 0. Examples of such scenarios include objects that are often shared by neighbors (e.g., snow blowers, lawn mowers), office supplies, etc. We provide the following results: (i) We devise poly-time pricing schemes for settings with full externalities that give a constant factor approximation to the optimal pricing scheme, for both simultaneous and sequential sales. Moreover, these results can be achieved using a non-discriminatory price, despite asymmetry among buyers. (ii) We devise poly-time pricing schemes for settings with status-based externalities that give a constant factor approximation to the optimal pricing scheme, for both simultaneous and sequential sales. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

社会商品是指不仅对其所有者有价值,而且对其所有者周围的环境也有价值的商品,比如他们的家人、朋友或同事。非所有者从物品中获得的利益受到许多因素的影响,包括物品的类型、可获得性和非所有者的社会地位。根据利益的大小和商品的价格,潜在买家可能不会购买商品,希望搭别人的便车。销售社会商品的收入最大化的销售者在为商品定价时必须考虑到这些因素。在过去的十年中,关于最优定价的文献已经取得了相当大的进步,但对销售社会商品的最优定价方案知之甚少。在本文中,我们对社会商品的收入最大化定价方案进行了系统研究:我们为这种情况引入了贝叶斯模型,并为各种外部性设计了近乎最优的定价方案,包括同时销售和连续销售。为了研究这个问题,我们考虑一个具有无限供给的单一商品和一组n个代理的设置;每个代理i ε [n]对购买商品有一个非负的估值vi,独立于分布Fi。我们用F = xii [n]Fi来表示乘积分布。购买商品的代理人i从中获得价值vi。如果一个代理人没有购买该商品,但该商品被其他人购买,那么这个代理人只能获得其价值的一小部分,这取决于代理人的集合和该商品在代理人身上展示的外部性类型。这种类型的外部性在我们的模型中通过外部性函数xi: 2[n]→[0,1]来捕获,其中xi(S)表示当一组代理S购买该商品时,代理i派生的vi的分数。我们假设xi是公开的(因为它捕获了代理的外部性),单调非递减且归一化;即,对于每个T≤xi(S),当i φ S时,xi(T)≤xi(S), xi(∅)= 0,xi(S) = 1。我们考虑函数xi的三种结构,对应于社会商品的三种外部性。(a)完全外部性(通常称为“公共物品”):在这种情况下,如果物品被任何代理人购买,所有代理人都能获得其全部价值。因此,当且仅当S≠∅时,xi(S) = 1。此模型捕获非排他性的商品,例如共享办公室中的咖啡机。[1]中已经研究了这种情况的一个特殊情况,即估值是独立且相同分布的。(b)基于地位的外部性:在这种情况下,代理人i的“社会地位”由某种折现系数(ε[0,1])表示,它对应于代理人i从另一方购买的商品中获得的价值的比例。该模型捕获了不同代理从他们不拥有的商品中获得利益的不对称设置(例如,快餐店可能从购物中心的任何流量中受益,而更专业的商店可能从吸引对类似产品感兴趣的客户的活动中受益)。(c)以可得性为基础的外部性:在这种情况下,一种商品的可得性随着更多的代理人购买该商品而增加,因此,当更多的代理人购买该商品时,一个代理人获得的价值比例就越大。这是由单调非递减函数w捕获的:{0,…, n−1}→[0,1],w(0) = 0。这种场景的例子包括经常由邻居共享的物体(例如,吹雪机,割草机),办公用品等。我们提供了以下结果:(i)我们为具有完全外部性的设置设计了多时间定价方案,为同时和顺序销售提供了恒定因子近似于最优定价方案。此外,这些结果可以通过非歧视价格来实现,尽管买家之间存在不对称。(ii)我们为具有基于状态的外部性的设置设计了多时间定价方案,该方案为同时和顺序销售提供了恒定因子近似于最优定价方案。(iii)我们设计了一个基于可用性外部性的顺序销售多时间定价方案,该方案给出了最优定价方案的对数因子近似值。
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Pricing social goods
Social goods are goods that grant value not only to their owners but also to the owners' surroundings, be it their families, friends or office mates. The benefit a non-owner derives from the good is affected by many factors, including the type of the good, its availability, and the social status of the non-owner. Depending on the magnitude of the benefit and on the price of the good, a potential buyer might stay away from purchasing the good, hoping to free ride on others' purchases. A revenue-maximizing seller who sells social goods must take these considerations into account when setting prices for the good. The literature on optimal pricing has advanced considerably over the last decade, but little is known about optimal pricing schemes for selling social goods. In this paper, we conduct a systematic study of revenue-maximizing pricing schemes for social goods: we introduce a Bayesian model for this scenario, and devise nearly-optimal pricing schemes for various types of externalities, both for simultaneous sales and for sequential sales. To study this problem, we consider a setting with a single type of good, of unlimited supply, and a set of n agents; each agent i ϵ [n] has a non-negative valuation vi for purchasing the good, drawn independently from a distribution Fi. We denote the product distribution by F = Xiϵ[n]Fi. An agent i who purchases the good derives value vi from it. If an agent does not purchase the good, but the good is purchased by others, then this agent derives only a fraction of her value, depending on the set of agents and the type of externality the good exhibits on the agent. This type of externality is captured in our model by an externality function xi : 2[n] → [0, 1], where xi(S) denotes the fraction of vi an agent i derives when the good is purchased by the set of agents S. We assume that xi is publicly known (as it captures the agent's externalities), monotonically nondecreasing and normalized; i.e., for every T ⊆ S, xi(T) ≤ xi(S), xi(∅) = 0, and xi(S) = 1 whenever i ϵ S. We consider three structures of the function xi, corresponding to three types of externalities of social goods. (a) Full externalities (commonly known as "public goods"): in this scenario all agents derive their entire value if the good is purchased by any agent. Therefore, xi(S) = 1 if and only if S ≠ ∅. This model captures goods that are non-excludable, such as a coffee machine in a shared office. A special case of this scenario, where valuations are independently and identically distributed, has been studied in [1]. (b) Status-based externalities: in this scenario, agent i's "social status" is captured by some discount factor wi ϵ [0, 1], which corresponds to the fraction of the value agent i derives from a good when purchased by another party. This model captures settings that exhibit asymmetry with respect to the benefit different agents derive from goods they do not own (e.g., a fast food restaurant might benefit from any traffic in the shopping mall, whereas more specialized stores may benefit from as campaigns that draw customers interested in a similar kind of products). (c) Availability-based externalities: in this scenario, the availability of a good increases as more agents purchase a good, and therefore, an agent derives a larger fraction of her value as more agents purchase a good. This is captured by a monotonically non-decreasing function w : {0,..., n − 1} → [0, 1] with w(0) = 0. Examples of such scenarios include objects that are often shared by neighbors (e.g., snow blowers, lawn mowers), office supplies, etc. We provide the following results: (i) We devise poly-time pricing schemes for settings with full externalities that give a constant factor approximation to the optimal pricing scheme, for both simultaneous and sequential sales. Moreover, these results can be achieved using a non-discriminatory price, despite asymmetry among buyers. (ii) We devise poly-time pricing schemes for settings with status-based externalities that give a constant factor approximation to the optimal pricing scheme, for both simultaneous and sequential sales. (iii) We devise a poly-time pricing scheme for sequential sales with availability-based externalities, that gives a logarithmic factor approximation to the optimal pricing scheme.
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