Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5128298 | Discrete Optimization | 2016 | 21 Pages |
Abstract
A common problem faced in economics is to decide the pricing of products of a company, since poorly chosen prices might lead to low profit. One important model for this is the unit-demand envy-free pricing problem, in which one considers that every consumer buys an item that maximizes his own profit, and the goal is to find a pricing of the items that maximizes the expected profit of the seller. This is a practical and interesting problem which is, unfortunately, not in APX unless P=NP. We present two new MIP formulations for this problem and experimentally compare them to previous ones from the literature. We describe three models to generate different random instances for general unit-demand auctions, that we designed for the computational experiments. Each model has a nice economic interpretation. Our results show that one of our MIP formulations can sometimes lead to better results than the previous ones from the literature. We also consider a variant of the network pricing problem in which one has to price toll arcs in a highway, and prove that it is as hard to approximate as the envy-free pricing problem.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Mathematics
Control and Optimization
Authors
Cristina G. Fernandes, Carlos E. Ferreira, Álvaro J.P. Franco, Rafael C.S. Schouery,