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Fair and square: Cake-cutting in two dimensions
Institution:1. Department of Econometrics, VU University Amsterdam, De Boelelaan 1105, 1081 HV Amsterdam, Netherlands;2. Tinbergen Institute, Netherlands;3. Department of Economics, University of Washington, Box 353330, Seattle, WA 98195-3330, USA
Abstract:We consider the classic problem of fairly dividing a heterogeneous good (“cake”) among several agents with different valuations. Classic cake-cutting procedures either allocate each agent a collection of disconnected pieces, or assume that the cake is a one-dimensional interval. In practice, however, the two-dimensional shape of the allotted pieces is important. In particular, when building a house or designing an advertisement in printed or electronic media, squares are more usable than long and narrow rectangles. We thus introduce and study the problem of fair two-dimensional division wherein the allotted pieces must be of some restricted two-dimensional geometric shape(s), particularly squares and fat rectangles. Adding such geometric constraints re-opens most questions and challenges related to cake-cutting. Indeed, even the most elementary fairness criterion–proportionality–can no longer be guaranteed. In this paper we thus examine the level of proportionality that can be guaranteed, providing both impossibility results and constructive division procedures.
Keywords:Cake cutting  Fair division  Land economics  Geometry
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