4.3 Article

Incentive Effects of Multiple-Server Queueing Networks: The Principal-Agent Perspective

Journal

EAST ASIAN JOURNAL ON APPLIED MATHEMATICS
Volume 1, Issue 4, Pages 379-402

Publisher

GLOBAL SCIENCE PRESS
DOI: 10.4208/eajam.231010.260711a

Keywords

Capacity allocation; competition; incentive theory; Markovian queueing systems; Nash equilibrium; principal agent

Funding

  1. Hong Kong RGC [7017/07P]
  2. HKU
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [71071028, 71021061, 70931001, 61070162]
  4. Specialized Research Fund for the Doctoral Program of Higher Education [20070145017, 20100042110025]
  5. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [N090504006, N100604021, N090504003]

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A two-server service network has been studied from the principal-agent perspective. In the model, services are rendered by two independent facilities coordinated by an agency, which seeks to devise a strategy to suitably allocate customers to the facilities and to simultaneously determine compensation levels. Two possible allocation schemes were compared - viz, the common queue and separate queue schemes. The separate queue allocation scheme was shown to give more competition incentives to the independent facilities and to also induce higher service capacity In this paper, we investigate the general case of a multiple-server queueing model, and again find that the separate queue allocation scheme creates more competition incentives for servers and induces higher service capacities. In particular, if there are no severe diseconomies associated with increasing service capacity it gives a lower expected sojourn time in equilibrium when the compensation level is sufficiently high.

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