“…Economists and sociologists have long been interested in assignment processes in which agents are matched without a pairwise price mechanism, starting with the early work by Becker (). Examples of such processes include: the matching of organ donors with recipients (e.g., Baccara, Mok, and Yariv ); the assignment of students to schools, dorms, or work groups (e.g., Sacerdote ; Agarwal and Somaini ; Fafchamps and Mo ); and marriage markets without dowry, bride price, or prenuptial agreement (e.g., Becker ). Even in markets with a price mechanism, the assignment of goods and services to individual buyers often is subject to random variation due to fixed pricing or limited supply—for example, queuing at the emergency room, or lining up for fresh bread at the baker's.…”