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If $\boldsymbol{A}\in\mathbb{R}^{n\times n}$ is the cost-matrix of an assignment problem, then the usual statement of the problem of finding an optimal assignment is to identify $n$ elements $a_{i,\,\pi(i)},\ i=1\cdots n$ of least cost-sum, i.e. to directly determine the solution set from $\boldsymbol{A}$ by modifying its entries e.g. according to the Hungarian algorithm.

Question:

can the following interpretation of the assignment problem fail to report the optimal solution:

determine the sequence of line-exchanges that renders the sum of the diagonal-elements optimal?


If the permutation-formulation also generates the optimal solution to the assignment problem, that would yield a greedy algorithm:

Exchanging two lines also exchanges two on-diagonal elements with two off-diagonal elements with known effect on the cost-sum of the elements on the diagonal.
It doesn't seem reasonable to exchange a pair of lines that doesn't bring about the maximal cost-reduction for the elements on the diagonal.

Addendum:
as the counter example of Brendan McKay shows, swapping pairs of rows or columns may not suffice to find the optimal assignment.
A preprocessing step that can deal with the counter example would be to first rotate the columns until the diagonal-elements have optimal cost-sum and only then strive for further improvements via swapping pairs of rows or columns.
It may even be necessary to interleave line-swapping with column-rotations frequently so that the elements on the principal diagonal always have better cost-sum than the elements on other diagonals.

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  • $\begingroup$ There will be cases where all row swaps makes it worse but the global maximum is elsewhere. $\endgroup$ May 28, 2022 at 9:45
  • $\begingroup$ @BrendanMcKay is that also true if not only row swaps but also column swaps are checked for optimization potential? Would be nice to have a concrete example of such a situation. $\endgroup$ May 28, 2022 at 10:18

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$$\pmatrix{ 2&3&0&0\\0&2&3&0\\0&0&2&3\\3&0&0&2}$$

Every swap of two columns or swap of two rows decreases the trace. However, there is a permutation putting all the 3s on the diagonal.

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