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Title: U.S. Spectrum Reallocation and Heuristic Auctions Paul Milgrom and Ilya Segal


1
U.S. Spectrum Reallocation and Heuristic
AuctionsPaul Milgrom and Ilya Segal
  • December 2012

2
F.C.C. Backs Proposal to Realign Airwaves
  • September 28, 2012 By EDWARD WYATT
  • WASHINGTON The government took a big step on
    Friday to aid the creation of new high-speed
    wireless Internet networks that could fuel the
    development of the next generation of smartphones
    and tablets, and devices that havent even been
    thought of yet.
  • The five-member Federal Communications Commission
    unanimously approved a sweeping, though
    preliminary, proposal to reclaim public airwaves
    now used for broadcast television and auction
    them off for use in wireless broadband networks,
    with a portion of the proceeds paid to the
    broadcasters.
  • The initiative, which the F.C.C. said would be
    the first in which any government would pay to
    reclaim public airwaves with the intention of
    selling them, would help satisfy what many
    industry experts say is booming demand for
    wireless Internet capacity.
  • Mobile broadband traffic will increase more than
    thirtyfold by 2015, the commission estimates.
    Without additional airwaves to handle the
    traffic, officials say, consumers will face more
    dropped calls, connection delays and slower
    downloads of data.

3
The Incentive Auction Plan
  • Reverse Auction buy TV broadcast licenses,
    providing an incentive for broadcasters to
    participate.
  • Repack the remaining broadcasters into a smaller
    spectrum band.
  • CBO 15 billion cost
  • Forward Auction sell 4G wireless broadband
    licenses.
  • Must first reorganize the cleared spectrum to
    create usable licenses.
  • CBO 40 billion revenue.
  • Clearing Rule combine bids in the two auctions
    to determine the amount of spectrum to be cleared
    and the auctions winners.

4
Background
  • A Proposal for a Rapid Transition to Market
    Allocation of Spectrum, Evan Kwerel and John
    Williams, OPP Working Paper 38, 2002.
  • National Broadband Plan, 2010 (pp. 84-85)
  • Middle Class Tax Relief and Job Creation Act,
    February 16, 2012, Sec. 6101-6703
  • Straw man Appendix to FCCs Notice for Proposed
    Rule Making, Ausubel, Levin, Milgrom (team
    leader), Segal, September 2012

5
What kind of Commodity is Radio Spectrum?
6
TV broadcast licenses
  • Each channel uses 6MHz of spectrum in one of
    three bands

Repurposed in DTV transition
7
Each of 2,500 TV licenses includes
  • Channel, location, and power restrictions
  • Protection from interference in current service
    area
  • From same channel or adjacent-channel stations
  • Must-carry rights on cable and satellite TV
  • Statute lets FCC retune non-participating station
    within home bands (compensating retuning costs)
  • Mandates all reasonable efforts to preserve
    interference-free population coverage
  • Stations can bid
  • to go off-air
  • to move to a lower band (preserving must-carry
    rights)

8
Interference Constraints




















Pairwise constraints (0.5 threshold) 130,000
edges
OET-69 Bulletin Coverage 2 million cells (2km
x 2km )
9
Broadband (mobile) licenses
  • Must be separated in frequency from TV
  • Optimal license design depends on technology
  • Frequency Division Duplexing Separated Paired
    Uplink Downlink Multiples of 2x5MHz max
    speeds use 2x20MHz
  • Time Division Duplexing Typically 10 MHz
    unpaired
  • Geographic coverage
  • National licenses, regional licenses, or a mix?
  • Overlap many TV stations license areas

10
FCCs role in spectrum reallocation?
  • Allocate by administrative authority?
  • Coasian approach sell to broadcasters the
    property rights to use their spectrum as they
    desire and allow trading?
  • Coordinated action of many parties is needed to
    repurpose spectrum respecting engineering
    requirements.
  • Market Design approach
  • Define spectrum and interference rights (e.g.
    FCCs right to retune) to minimize holdout,
    promote competition
  • Market mechanism for spectrum allocation with
    simple participation and minimal scope for gaming

11
New Paradigm for Spectrum Policy
  • FCCs previous auctions
  • Incentive Auction
  • (Commissioner Robert McDowell)

12
Reverse Auction Buying TV Licenses
  • Seek a mechanism to buy spectrum rights
    sufficient for a given goal, repacking remaining
    broadcasters
  • E.g. 120 MHz clear channels 32-51
  • Goal may depend on the forward auction revenues
  • Assume
  • Each station is separately owned
  • Each station is a single-minded bidder bids on
    just one option (going off-air or to a lower
    band)
  • Assignment rule which bids win (accepted) and
    lose (rejected assigned to home band)

13
Optimization-Based Reverse Auction?
  • Assignment rule maximizes the total value s.t.
  • interference constraints
  • a given clearing goal (e.g. clear channels
    32-51).
  • Variation incorporate revenue goal by maximizing
    Myersons total virtual value conditioning on
    stations characteristics
  • Computational challenge Optimization is NP-hard
    can only be approximated
  • Associated payment rules
  • Paid as bid? Induces overbidding
  • Ensure truthful bidding using Vickrey prices?

14
Paid-as-bid?
  • Broadcasters optimal bid depends on its
    estimates of
  • bids of neighboring stations
  • algorithm used for computing the assignment
  • interference constraints used in the algorithm
  • bids in the forward auction, which help determine
    how much spectrum is repurposed
  • post-auction value of licenses (common-value
    element)
  • ? Difficult, expensive for broadcasters to bid
    well!
  • Reduces participation in the auction.

15
Vickrey Payments
  • Let S be a set of bids that can be feasibly
    rejected (assigned to home bands into channels
    2-31) let X be the collection of all such sets.
  • Each station s submits a bid bs for its bidding
    option.
  • Set of bids to reject
  • Stations in S receive no payment.
  • Other bids are accepted, and paid

16
Vickrey Computational Problems
  • Vickrey price difference between two amounts
    much larger than the price itself ? small
    errors in optimization can lead to large errors
    in prices
  • Example (hypothetical)
  • True Vickrey price 100 99 1
  • Approximate Vickrey price 100 96 4
  • 3 error in second optimization ? 300
    overpayment
  • Underpayment can also happen when second
    optimization is more precise than overall
    optimization
  • These errors destroy incentives for truthful
    bidding and thus ruin the auctions supposed
    efficiency

17
Greedy Heuristic Auctions
18
A Greedy Heuristic Algorithm
  • A (possibly imperfect) method to check whether a
    set of bids can be feasibly rejected assigned
    to their home bands (with repacking).
  • A scoring function to prioritize bids.
  • Each bidders score is increasing its bid (e.g.
    score bid/volume)
  • May be fixed or adaptive - depend on the
    current assignment, and on bids already rejected
  • Tie-breaking is fixed as part of the scoring
  • Start with all bids active (provisionally
    accepted)
  • In each round, irreversibly reject the
    highest-scoring still-active feasible bid

19
Strategy-Proof Auctions
  • An auction is a deterministic assignment rule
    coupled with a payment rule in which only
    accepted bids receive payments.
  • An auction is strategy-proof if each bidder i,
    regardless of other bids, cannot gain by bidding
    an amount different from its true value for its
    bidding option.
  • Assume each bidder is single-minded

20
Threshold Prices
  • An assignment rule is monotonic if for any bidder
    j, increasing his bid bj never causes it to win,
    regardless of the other bids b-j .
  • For any monotonic assignment rule and any bidder
    j and competing bids b-j, bidder js threshold
    price is the unique amount pj pj(b-j) such that
    j loses if bj gt pj and wins if bj lt pj.

21
Characterization of Strategy-Proof Auctions
  • A threshold auction collects bids and then
    applies
  • a monotonic station assignment rule
  • the corresponding threshold pricing rule, which
  • Pays each accepted bidder its threshold price
  • Pays zero to each rejected bidder
  • Theorem 1. An auction is strategy-proof if and
    only if it is a threshold auction.

22
Greedy Threshold Auction
  • A greedy algorithm is monotonic.
  • Definition. A greedy threshold auction is a
    threshold auction whose assignment rule is
    computed by some greedy algorithm.
  • It is easy(!) to compute the exact threshold
    prices for accepted bids
  • In each round n, for each still active bidder j,
    let pjn his highest bid that would not be
    rejected in that round.
  • When the algorithm terminates, for each accepted
    bid j, the threshold price is pj minn pjn

23
Nice Properties of Greedy Threshold Auctions
  • Computationally Simpler
  • Strategy-Proof
  • Equivalent to Descending Clock Auctions
  • (Weakly) Group Strategy-Proof
  • Outcome-equivalent to full-info Nash equilibrium
    of paid-as-bid auction with same assignment rule
  • i.e. threshold pricing may not cost us
  • Can implement any assignment rule in which
    bidders are substitutes (if computationally
    feasible)
  • Vickrey fails (3)-(5) when bidders are not
    substitutes

24
Earlier Heuristic Auctions
  • Lehmann, OCallaghan, Shoham (2002),
    Babaioff-Blumrosen (2008) Greedy heuristic
    auction for selling, trivial feasibility checking
  • Our auction irreversibly rejects bids (deferred
    acceptance), theirs irreversibly accept bids ?
    NOT equivalent to a clock auction (price
    computation requires more info)
  • Moulin (1999), Mehta et al. (2007), Juarez
    (2007) Cost-Sharing Mechanisms that are (W)GSP
  • Special cases of clock auction losers cannot
    affect others assignments or payments
  • Ensthaler-Giebe (2009,2010) Heuristic sealed-bid
    and clock auctions for budget-constrained
    knapsack problem

25
Greedy Threshold Auctions
Descending Clock Auctions
(assuming finite bid space)
26
Descending Clock Auctions
  • Definition A descending clock auction is a
    dynamic mechanism in which bidder-specific prices
    are initialized at reserves and descend over
    time. In every round, the auction
  • Selects a still-active bidder who can feasibly
    quit be assigned to its home band
  • Decrements the selected bidders price and gives
    him the option to quit
  • When no more bidder can feasibly quit, auction
    ends, accepting all still-active bids at their
    current prices

27
  • Theorem 2(a) Any greedy threshold auction is
    equivalent to a descending clock auction.
  • Proof The equivalent clock auction selects for
    price reduction the highest-scoring bidder among
    those who could be feasibly rejected

28
  • Theorem 2(b) Any descending clock auction is
    equivalent to a greedy threshold auction.
  • Proof An equivalent greedy auction gives each
    active bidder a score equal to inverse of the
    number of clock rounds, starting from current
    threshold prices, in which he would quit by
    bidding truthfully if no other bidder quits
    before him
  • This score is increasing in the bidders value
  • The highest-scoring active bidder is the next to
    quit

29
Advantages of descending clock auctions
  • Optimality of truthful bidding for single-minded
    bidders is obvious (also in experiments)
  • Winners need not reveal/know their exact values
  • With common values, permit information feedback
    to help aggregation (Milgrom-Weber 1982)

30
Group Strategy-Proofness
  • Broadcasters Considering FCC Incentive Auctions
    Launch Coalition (National Journal, Nov 13,
    2012)
  • Definition An auction is Weakly Group
    Strategy-Proof if no coalition has a strict
    Pareto improving deviation from truthtelling, for
    any bids of others
  • Side payments not allowed
  • Weak Pareto improvements not considered
  • Theorem 3 Any greedy heuristic auction is Weakly
    Group Strategy-Proof.
  • Generalizes Mehta, Roughgarden, Sundararajan
    (2007)

31
Proof of WGSP
  • No assigned (losing) bidder can be in the
    deviating coalition
  • ? Deviation cannot affect payments to winners
    (determined by losers bids) unless it changes
    the assignment
  • Consider the first round of the heuristic
    affected by deviation
  • Losers are truthful ? bidder supposed to be
    assigned in this round must have underbid to
    remain unassigned
  • ? his current threshold price lt his value
  • ? his final threshold price cant be any higher
  • ? he does not gain from the deviation

32
Paid-as-Bid vs. Threshold Auction
Full-Information Equivalence
  • Theorem 4. A paid-as-bid auction whose assignment
    rule is computed by a greedy algorithm, for any
    vector of values, has a full-information Nash
    equilibrium in which losers bid their values and
    winners bid their threshold prices.
  • The equilibrium assignment and payments are the
    same as in the corresponding threshold auction.
  • Proof
  • A winner has no profitable deviation its
    threshold price gt value, and is the highest
    payment it could get.
  • A loser has no profitable deviation to win it
    would have to bid at most its threshold price lt
    value.

33
Ruling out other NE outcomes
  • Definition An assignment rule is non-bossy if a
    bidder cannot affect assignment without changing
    his own.
  • Prevents losers (who are indifferent) from
    affecting allocation
  • Winners are always non-bossy in a greedy
    heuristic
  • Examples
  • Surplus-maximizing assignment
  • Stationary greedy algorithms
  • bidders scores are fixed (e.g., score
    bid/population)
  • feasibility checking is static (feasibility of
    a set S is history-independent) and monotone (S
    is feasible ? so is any subset of S)

34
Dominance-Solvability of Paid-as-Bid Auctions
  • An auction is dominance-solvable if, under full
    information, iterated deletion of dominated
    strategies yields a unique outcome (allocation
    and winning bids).
  • Non-bossiness ? order of deletion doesnt matter
    (Marx-Swinkels)
  • Theorem 5. Consider a paid-as-bid non-bossy
    monotonic auction with finite bid spaces.
  • The auction is dominance-solvable if and only if
    it can be implemented via a greedy heuristic.
  • In this case, the outcome in (1) is also a unique
    Nash equilibrium outcome in undominated
    strategies.
  • In one bid profile consistent with both iterated
    dominance and undominated Nash, losers bid
    value and winners bid threshold prices

35
Proof of If
  • Start by eliminating dominated bids below values.
    Then winning is strictly preferred to losing.
  • As clock prices descend, quitting to lose is
    undominated/in support of NE only for sure
    losers, who might as well bid value (by
    non-bossiness)
  • When clock stops, this leaves winners, for whom
    bidding below the final clock price ( threshold
    price) is dominated

36
Proof of Only If
  • Start by eliminating dominated bids below values.
    Then winning is strictly preferred to losing.
  • Bid bi is dominated by bi' gt bi
  • ? the change never causes bidder i to lose
  • ? it never affects his winning (by monotonicity)
  • ? it never affects outcome (by non-bossiness)
  • Bid bi is dominated by bi' lt bi ? bi never wins
  • ? all bids above bi never win (by monotonicity)
  • Until unique outcome is established, we can find
    one bidder whose highest remaining bid never wins
    ? can decrement clock price to this bidder in
    this round

37
  • Corollary. A paid-as-bid surplus-maximizing
    auction is dominance-solvable if and only if it
    has the substitutes property.
  • Proof
  • Surplus maximization ? non-bossiness,
    monotonicity
  • For surplus maximization, implementation via a
    greedy heuristic is equivalent to the substitutes
    property

38
What about the Vickrey auction?
  • It is strategy-proof ? a threshold mechanism
  • Definition Bidders are substitutes in the
    assignment rule if raising one bid cannot cause
    another to lose.
  • Theorem Any monotonic assignment rule in which
    bidders are substitutes can be implemented with a
    clock auction (? greedy threshold auction).
  • Proof decrement price to a bidder who would lose
    given the current prices and already-rejected
    bids
  • Substitutes ? Since other active bids can only go
    down, this bidder could never win at his current
    bid

39
Vickrey with Complementarity
C
A
B
  • One channel available ? can assign either AB or
    C
  • Optimization CANNOT be achieved via greedy
    heuristic or a clock auction
  • AB lt C ? C assigned, Vickrey prices pA C - B,
    pB C - A
  • NOT group strategy-proof A,B maximize each
    others prices by bidding 0
  • Pays too much pA pB 2C-A-B gt C cost of
    truthful full-info Nash equilibrium of
    paid-as-bid optimizing auction (Bernheim-Whinston
    1986)

40
Simulations
  • Complementarities are present
  • However, greedy heuristic outcome with good
    feasibility checking looks close to Vickrey in
    efficiency and cost
  • Cost may be even lt Vickrey cost if scoring is
    used to curb stations inforents
  • Conjecture large number of channels (e.g. at
    least 16 for UHF) creates substitutability that
    outweighs complementarities

41
Extensions
  • Post-Auction Resale
  • Multi-minded bidders
  • Clearing Rule

42
Post-Auction Resale
  • Consider an isolated region with n identical
    stations, of which we must clear exactly k
  • Greedy heuristic ( Vickrey) clears the k
    lowest-value stations at the (k1)st lowest
    value
  • Price the highest post-auction equilibrium
    market price of stations
  • Truthful bidding in the auction is resale-proof

price
43
Resale of Heterogeneous stations
  • Resale-proofness generally not achievable nor
    desirable
  • Resale can raise efficiency by moving programming
    across sticks
  • Example liquid post-auction resale market will
    value sticks proportionally to their coverage
    pops
  • ? efficiency means maximizing total on-air
    channelpop ( average of channels per
    resident)
  • Under full information, scoring almost entirely
    by value/pop eliminates all inforents, and can
    get close to efficiency
  • Dispersed common-value information can be
    aggregated via a clock auction with information
    feedback (as in Milgrom-Weber)

44
Multi-minded Bidders
  • A clock auction quoting bidder-specific prices
    for different bidding options may permit bidders
    to switch bidding option as prices fall
  • Strategy-proofness is lost for such bidders
  • But incentives to manipulate may be small in
    large markets
  • Similarly for owners of multiple stations

45
Clearing Rule Efficiency-Revenue Trade-Off
  • Theorem (Segal-Whinston 2012, generalizing
    Myerson-Satterthwaite)
  • Independent Private Values
  • Each agent has an opt-out type, whose
    non-participation is efficient regardless of the
    others types
  • The core is nonempty with prob. 1, multivalued
    with prob. gt 0
  • Then any efficient voluntary mechanism runs an
    expected deficit.
  • Proof idea
  • To ensure incentives and voluntary participation,
    each agent must get at least his expected
    marginal contribution to the total surplus
  • Multivalued core ? marginal contributions add up
    to more than the total surplus
  • To yield revenues, must reduce trade
  • E.g. McAfee (1992) prohibit one least valuable
    trade

46
An Interleaved Double Auction(Uniform-Product
Illustration)
TV spectrum supply
LOSS
Broadband spectrum demand
47
Conclusion
  • A heuristic, interleaved clock double auction
    approach to spectrum repurposing
  • Things to do
  • A good feasibility checker for TV channel
    repacking to reduce cost/maximize clearing s.t.
    net revenue target
  • Allow other types of bids accept interference,
    channel-share
  • Lose exact strategy-proofness
  • Allow non-uniform regional clearing to sidestep
    holdout stations in scarce-spectrum areas?
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