We study the complexity of computing the coefficients of three classical polynomials, namely
the chromatic, flow and reliability polynomials of a graph. Each of these is a specialization
of the Tutte polynomial Σtijxiyj. It is shown that, unless NP = RP, many of the relevant
coefficients do not even have good randomized approximation schemes. We consider the
quasi-order induced by approximation reducibility and highlight the pivotal position of the
coefficient t10 = t01, otherwise known as the beta invariant.
Our nonapproximability results are obtained by showing that various decision problems
based on the coefficients are NP-hard. A study of such predicates shows a significant
difference between the case of graphs, where, by Robertson–Seymour theory, they are
computable in polynomial time, and the case of matrices over finite fields, where they are
shown to be NP-hard.