N. Gregory Mankiw, Principles of Microeconomics, 8th Edition, Cengage Learning ISBN-10: ISBN-13:

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E201: Introduction to Microeconomics --- Fall 2018 Section: 10804 MW, 2:30-3:45 LH 008 Instructor: Mr. Berg Cui Office: Wylie 244 E-mail: cuim@indiana.edu Office Hour: Wylie 244, 2:00-4:00pm, Tuesday, or by appointment. Class Information: Canvas. All class materials, including lecture notes, assignments, past exam papers and exam information will be posted on Canvas. Please check it regularly. (https://iu.instructure.com/courses/1736407) Required Text: N. Gregory Mankiw, Principles of Microeconomics, 8th Edition, Cengage Learning ISBN-10: 1305971493 ISBN-13: 978-1305971493 Prerequisites: None. However, a basic understanding of high school algebra, geometry, and graphical presentation is expected. Course Description This course is designed to give the student a familiarity with the language common to economics, an elementary ability to analyze various microeconomic problems common in our economy and society, along with being able to think through everyday microeconomic problems. Models and theories studied will help the student to understand how producers could best allocate scarce resources to produce goods and services. Likewise, the student will gain insight into what drives consumers to give up resources to obtain goods and services produced by others. Upon completion of this course, the student should be able to apply economic modeling tools to both business situations and to problems and situations from everyday life. The student will find that the tools of economic reasoning are extremely useful in a multitude of everyday situations that require decisions on how to allocate time and resources. GenEd Learning Outcomes (from the Social and Historical Studies requirements) Students will demonstrate: Requirement (3): skills of inquiry and analysis; Requirement (4): quantitative and/or qualitative literacy through theory and methodology Assessment Instrument used to report meeting or not these requirements is selected questions from the department wide common set of questions on the E201 final course examination. Course Learning Outcome The primary learning outcome of this course is for a student to develop and apply economic reasoning to both everyday choices and business decisions. In addition, the student should have the ability to use basic economic models for insight in various problems and situations in the microeconomic setting. Course Learning Objects: Have an understanding and ability to apply, at an elementary level, each of the following concepts and models. 1. Introductory concepts a) Overview of economic systems: resource allocation with scarcity b) Illustration of basic concepts using the production possibilities frontier (PPF) c) Comparative advantage and gains from trade 2. Price Determination in Competitive Markets a) Demand curves and demand shifters b) Supply curves and supply shifters c) Determination of competitive market equilibrium price and trading volume d) Comparative statistics exercises: changes in market equilibrium

e) Government intervention price controls and taxes 3. Elasticity a) Price elasticity of demand: definition, formula, numerical calculation using the mid-point formula b) Relationship between price elasticity, consumer expenditures (seller revenues) c) Factors that influence the observed price elasticity of demand d) Price elasticity of supply: definition, formula, numerical calculation e) Factors that influence the observed price elasticity of supply 4. Economics of Consumer Choice a) The consumer s constrained optimization problem b) Budget constraint c) Total and marginal utility d) Law of diminishing marginal utility e) Utility maximization rule and consumer equilibrium f) Consumer equilibrium responses to price changes g) Individual consumer demand curve and market demand curve 5. Economics of Production a) The production function b) Fixed vs. variable inputs: short-run vs. long-run c) Total Product and Marginal Product 6. The Firm s Cost Curves a) Fixed and Variable costs, explicit and implicit costs b) Short-run total, average, and marginal cost curves c) Economies and diseconomies of scale using the long-run average cost curve 7. Perfect Competition a) Competitive firm s demand and revenue curves b) Short-run profit maximization and loss minimization c) Short-run supply curve of the firm and industry d) Long-run equilibrium and long-run adjustment dynamics 8. Imperfect Competition a) Characteristics of Pure Monopoly and Monopolistic Competition b) Demand and revenue curves under imperfect competition c) Profit maximization/loss minimization for a firm with monopoly power 9. Introduction to Welfare Economics a) Net social welfare (consumer surplus + producer surplus) maximization rule b) The competitive ideal c) Welfare effect of exercising monopoly power d) External costs in a competitive market (negative externalities) e) External benefits in a competitive market (positive externalities) f) Public Goods 10. Note-taking skills in an economics class a) Be able to take notes about a class lecture (or online sessions) and capture the main points discussed and presented. b) Be able to take notes from the textbook and be able to capture the main points discussed. c) Be able to form questions on various economic concepts that aid in your understandings. The last day to drop the course with an automatic W: Sun, Oct 21

Grades and Exam Schedule: Your course grade will depend on performance in the following area on listed dates. Homework Weekly 5% of your course grade Semester Exam 1 Monday, Sept 17 20% of your course grade Semester Exam 2 Monday, Oct 22 20% of your course grade Semester Exam 3 Monday, Nov 26 20% of your course grade Final Exam TBA 35% of your course grade All exams will be held in our classroom except final exam. Exams are multiple choices and short answers. It is students responsibility to arrange schedule so that you can attend all exams at the given time. All students must take the final exam. The final exam is scheduled at TBA. Your schedule must permit you to be free to take the final exam at the time listed above. There are no alternatives to taking the final exam at this time and date. If you are enrolled in two or more of the following courses you have a conflict Economics E201, Chemistry C341, Mathematics M212, and Mathematics T101. Drop all but one of these conflicting courses now, unless you can resolve the conflict with your instructor(s) in the other course(s). Makeup Policy for Final Exam Only under extraordinary circumstance such as a documented medical emergency will I grant you permission for a make-up final. If you miss the final exam without proper documentation or approval from me, you will generally not be allowed to take a make-up final. Under some circumstances, I may allow you to take a make-up final for non-document reasons. However, your make-up final will be worth only 90 % of the available points allocated to your final exam, if the reason is not properly documented. If I give you permission for a make-up final, you will receive an incomplete for the course and a make-up final will be administered to you in the next semester (Spring 2019). You must see me and sign a removal of incomplete document to receive the incomplete or you will receive a zero on your final exam. If you do not take the final exam, you will receive a grade of zero for your final exam grade. It is university policy, generally, not to allow make-up finals unless there are extreme circumstances (oversleeping is not an extreme circumstance) in other words DO NOT miss the final. Makeup Policy for In-term Exams If it is necessary to miss any exam due to medical or a non-medical reason that is outside of your control (other class workload, desired travel, job requirements, etc. are not considered outside of your control), you must contact me (prior to the exam if possible) via e-mail or phone if you are unable to access your email. In general, I will not grant you permission for a makeup exam if one class meeting passes after the schedule exam date before you contact me. For example, the in-term exam is scheduled on Tuesday and you have an unexpected illness immediately before the exam and miss the exam. If you contact me before the the next class meeting, then I will give you permission to take a makeup exam providing you provide any requested proof. I reserve the option to require you to provide documentation supporting your request. If you wait and contact me after the next class, then you will not be given approval and you will receive zero points for that exam. All attempts should be made to contact me prior to the exam. The best way to contact me is via email; however, you are responsible to ensure conformation of your request since email is not completely reliable. If you receive approval for a makeup in-term exam, you are required to complete the makeup exam within two weeks of date the exam was originally scheduled. It is your responsibility to make yourself available for the makeup exam. Coordinating details will be provided to you, when you receive approval from me. Homework Assignments and Readings will be posted on Canvas on a weekly basis. Homework is very important for you to understand better and a good practice for exams. Exam questions will be similar to homework. Homework is due before class begins. Answer key will be provided as well. Attendance at lectures is highly recommended. Exam coverage will be mostly tied to class lectures and homework assignments.

Extra-Credit: Under no circumstances will extra-credit work be given to individual students other than that discussed in the syllabus. During the semester there will be optional class exercises in which extra credit points can be earned. Total extra credit will be worth 1% of your overall grade. Accommodation for Disability: If you desire classroom/testing accommodations for a disability, contact your instructor outside of class to present the written supporting memorandum of accommodation from the Office of Disability Services for Students, https://studentaffairs.indiana.edu/disability-services-students/. Requests for accommodations for disability must be received and authorized by your instructor in written form no less than two weeks in advance of need, in order to allow adequate time to review and make appropriate arrangements. No accommodation should be assumed until authorized by your instructor. Academic Misconduct: I follow the policy in the IU Academic Handbook with regard to cheating and academic dishonesty. A grade of zero will be given for any assignment or examination on which the student is guilty of cheating. The incident will be reported to the Dean of Student s Office. Class Decorum is based on the Code of Student Rights, Responsibilities and Conduct. Common courtesy and standards of professional conduct require that you arrive promptly for class, remain attentive for the entire class period, and refrain from any disruptive behavior. As a community of scholars, we are all dedicated to the pursuit of knowledge and excellence. Disturbances that interfere with students learning and/or the faculty s instruction will not be tolerated. Behaviors that are distracting--arriving late, chatting, leaving early, reading, ringing of phones, texting, and even sleeping--are destructive of the teaching/learning process and therefore should not occur. Disorderly conduct has no place in an IU classroom and will be dealt with as personal misconduct according to the Code. Grades Your course grade is calculated by adding your weighted performance in the following graded components of the course. (a) Term exams calculated as: (0.2)(percentage score on exam one) + (0.2) (percentage score on exam two) + (0.2)(percentage score on exam three) (b) Home assignments calculated as: (0.05)(percentage score on the average of the home assignments) (c) Final exam calculated as: (0.35)(percentage score on final exam) Your percentage course grade is found by added the above calculations, (a) through (c), together. Once you calculate your course percentage grade you can find your letter grade by using the below grading scale. Grading Scale: At the end of the semester, you will have weighted scores adding up to 100 points or less (not counting extra-credit). Your final letter grade for the course will be based on the following scale - expressed as a percentage of 100 points. A+ [100, + ) B+ [87,90) C+ [74,77) D+ [62,65) F [0,55) A [93,100) B [80,87) C [68,74) D [58,62) A- [90,93) B- [77,80) C- [65,68) D- [55,58) Weekly Schedule (Tentative) Week 1: Ch3 Week 2: Ch4 Ch5 Week 3: Ch6 Week 4: Ch7 Week 5: Term Exam 1, Ch8 Week 6: Ch9 Week 7: Ch10 Week 8: Ch11 Week 9: Ch12, Term Exam 2 Week 10: Ch13 Ch14 Week 11: Ch15 Week 12: Ch16 Ch17 Week 13: Ch17, Term Exam 3 Week 14: Thanksgiving

Week 15: Ch18 Ch19 Week 16: Ch20 Week 17: Final Exam