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The Reverse Talmud Rule for Bankruptcy Problems

TLDR
In this paper, the authors introduce a new solution for bankruptcy problems that satisfies weaker versions of the Exemption en Exclusion properties from the literature, and generalize the Reverse Talmud rule to a class of bankruptcy rules that all satisfy some weak exemption and some weak exclusion property (that are not necessarily each others dual).
Abstract
Read also the publication in the 'European Journal of Operational Research' , 2013, 228, 413-417. We introduce a new solution for bankruptcy problems that satisfies weaker versions of the Exemption en Exclusion properties from the literature. Although the principles of Exclusion and Exemption are appealing, the specific conditions under which an agent receives its claim, respectively nothing, seem arbitrary and are inconsistent in the sense that there is no bankruptcy rule that satisfies both. However, weakening these conditions (by putting lower boundaries on what is considered to be a ‘small claim’), there do exist rules satisfying both principles. In this paper we consider a Weak Exemption and a Weak Exclusion property such that there is a unique bankruptcy rule that satisfies these two properties together with Consistency and Weak Proportionality (i.e. a change in the estate effects the payoffs of agents with bigger claims more than the payoffs of agents with smaller claims). This rule turns out to be some kind of reverse of the famous Talmud rule. Moreover, we show that Weak Exemption and Weak Exclusion are each others dual, and that the Reverse Talmud rule also can be characterized as the unique Self-Dual solution that satisfies Weak Proportionality and either Weak Exemption or Weak Exclusion. Finally, we generalize the Reverse Talmud rule to a class of bankruptcy rules that all satisfy some Weak Exemption and some Weak Exclusion property (that are not necessarily each others dual), which contains the famous Constrained Equal Awards and Constrained Equal Losses rules as extreme cases.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Game theoretic analysis of a bankruptcy problem from the Talmud

TL;DR: For three different bankruptcy problems, the 2000-year old Babylonian Talmud prescribes solutions that equal precisely the nucleoli of the corresponding coalitional games, and a rationale for these solutions that is independent of game theory is given in this article.
Journal ArticleDOI

A problem of rights arbitration from the Talmud

TL;DR: The method endorsed here regards the problem as one of rights arbitration in which the division is based on interpreting the applicable rules, rather than on weighing the parties' powers and possible benefits.
Book ChapterDOI

Chapter 6 Axiomatic cost and surplus sharing

TL;DR: In this article, the authors review the normative literature on additive cost-sharing and rationing, and emphasize their deep structural link via the additive axiom for cost sharing: individual cost shares depend additively upon the cost function.
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Distributive justice in taxation

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose a continuous and continuous tax-apportionment method with four properties: (i) the way that taxpayers split a given tax total depends only on their own taxable incomes; (ii) an increase in the tax total implies that everyone pays more; (iii) every incremental increase in tax is apportioned according to taxpayers' current after-tax incomes; and (iv) the ordering of taxpayers by pre-tax income and after tax income is the same.
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On Dividing an Amount According to Individual Claims or Liabilities

TL;DR: Every consistent, continuous taxation method optimizes an additively separable objective function and optimal allocations may be computed by a simple Lagrange multiplier technique.
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