This might be related to counting hamiltonian cycles.
@Peter Taylor gave negative result about the one dimensional case, but we believe his attack is not directly applicable to this question.
Given positive integer $n$, find integer $m$ and $m \times n$ matrix $A = a_{i,j}$ with positive integer entries.
Let $y_1,...,y_n$ be integer variables.
Consider the following integer program with constraints:
- $0 \le y_i \le n$
- $\sum_{j=1}^n y_j = n$
- For $ 1 \le i \le m$: $\sum_{j=1}^n y_j a_{i,j}= \sum_{j=1}^n a_{i,j}$
We require the integer program to have unique solution of $y_i$ all ones for chosen $(m,A)$. Let the solution be $(m_0,A_0)$.
Q1: How small the unique solution can be in terms of $n$? Can we get $2^{m_0} \max ( a \in A_0)=\exp(o(n))$?
Getting $O(\exp(n))$ is easy by taking $m=1,a_{1,i}=2^i$.