Market-based control: a paradigm for distributed resource allocation
Market-based control: a paradigm for distributed resource allocation
High-performance bidding agents for the continuous double auction
Proceedings of the 3rd ACM conference on Electronic Commerce
Exploiting a Common Property Resource under a Fairness Constraint: a Case Study
IJCAI '99 Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence
Co-evolutionary Auction Mechanism Design: A Preliminary Report
AAMAS '02 Revised Papers from the Workshop on Agent Mediated Electronic Commerce on Agent-Mediated Electronic Commerce IV, Designing Mechanisms and Systems
Simulation for the Social Scientist
Simulation for the Social Scientist
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In the longstanding debate in political economy about the feasibility of socialism, the Austrian School of Economists have argued that markets are an indispensable means of evaluating goods, hence a prerequisite for productive efficiency. Socialist models for non-market economic calculation have been strongly influenced by the equilibrium model of neoclassical economics. The Austrians contend that these models overlook the essence of the calculation problem by assuming the availability of knowledge that can be acquired only through the market process itself. But the debate in political economy has not yet considered the recent emergence of agent-based systems and their applications to resource allocation problems. Agent-based simulations of market exchange offer a promising approach to fulfilling the dynamic functions of knowledge encapsulation and discovery that the Austrians show to be performed by markets. Further research is needed in order to develop an agent-based approach to the calculation problem, as it is formulated by the Austrians. Given that the macro-level objectives of agent-based systems can be easily engineered, they could even become a desirable alternative to the real markets that the Austrians favour.