30403 - MICROECONOMICS
BEMACS
Department of Economics
Course taught in English
Go to class group/s: 25
Course Director:
MARISTELLA BOTTICINI
MARISTELLA BOTTICINI
Course Objectives
The Microeconomics course equips students with economic models of individuals as consumers and producers, as well as of price determination through their interaction in markets. By way of economic theory, applications, and contemporary issues, this course treats:(i) the behavior and decision making on the part of individuals, households, business firms, and governments;
(ii) the function of prices, incentives, and markets. Economic interactions through markets will form the backbone of the course.
The course covers material using mathematical methods and rigorous analytical thinking.
Engaging lectures by the instructor, weekly problem sets, additional readings, and active student participation through class discussion is the key ingredients of the Microeconomics course.
Intended Learning Outcomes
Course Content Summary
- The economic theory of consumer choice under certainty and under uncertainty.
- Exchange economies: equilibrium and welfare analysis.
- The economic theory of the firm: production decisions and cost functions.
- Competitive markets: partial and general equilibrium analysis.
- Strategic behavior: elements of game theory.
- Markets with imperfect competition (monopoly, oligopoly, monopolistic competition).
- Asymmetric information (adverse selection, moral hazard).
- Externalities, public goods, taxes and subsidies.
Teaching methods
Assessment methods
Detailed Description of Assessment Methods
Grades will be based on written exam(s) with a mix of open ended and multiple choice questions (a midterm exam and a final exam or a general exam at the of the course) and on individual assignments or Group assignments.
Textbooks
Jeffrey Perloff, Microeconomics with Calculus plus MyEconLab with Pearson eText, Global Edition, 3rd Edition
Last change 26/05/2016 09:37