Intermediate Microeconomics

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Intermediate Microeconomics Class code ECON-UA 9010-001 Instructor Details Dr. Donald Verry it is best to use my UCL email as this is checked more often. Office Hour: Day and Time: Details to be agreed at first session Location: Drayton House Room 306.(Map available with online course material). This is part of University College London and is 10 minutes walk from Bedford Square. email for appointment if this clashes with other classes. Class Details Intermediate Microeconomics, Fall 2013. Tuesdays 10am -1pm. Location to be confirmed. Prerequisites Economic Principles II (V31.0002 or C30.0001) and Calculus I (V63.0121). Class Description The aim of the course is to provide students with a thorough understanding of the core concepts and methods of microeconomics. The course can serve as a foundation for subsequent study of more advanced undergraduate electives requiring a microeconomics background. Students will develop their understanding of economic models specified in standard mathematical and/or game theoretic terms. Course content includes core topics of consumption, production, and decision-making by firms (both with and without some degree of market power) as well as the analysis of market failure due to public goods and externalities. These topics are analyzed more deeply and more rigorously than in introductory principles courses. Depending on time available, the course will cover a selection of further topics. These include some or all of: uncertainty, asymmetric information, general equilibrium, and behavioral economics. Because this course caters to the policy concentration stream, the level of mathematics is somewhat lower than it would be on the theory concentration, and the course will make extensive use of diagrams and stress the intuition of results. Nevertheless, intermediate microeconomics is rigorous and analytical. The calculus prerequisite is there for a reason; while the level of mathematics is not advanced, all students of intermediate microeconomics must be prepared for some mathematical analysis. The course is taught in 14 three-hour sessions. Each of these will be a combination of traditional lectures, problem-solving, discussion of homework and assessments, and open question and answer time. The mix of these components is not fixed and will vary from week to week. The topics listed below for each session should be regarded as a guide. While the objective is to adhere as closely as possible to the outline, the rate at which the course progresses can not be predicted exactly (unless the teacher is unresponsive to the needs of the class). For this reason, it may be possible to proceed more rapidly (and introduce some supplementary topics) or necessary to take things a bit more slowly, in which case some minor reductions of the course content may be required. Page 1 of 7

Desired Outcomes At the completion of the course students should: be familiar with the main elements and techniques of microeconomic theory at intermediate level. be able to solve and interpret stylized problems based on microeconomic models. be able to use these models to analyze real-world microeconomic phenomena and to evaluate issues of microeconomic policy. Assessment Components The assessment has three components: Final exam (2.5 hours): 45%. Two mid-term tests of approximately 90 minutes duration. The dates are given below and more information on the format will be provided in class. Highest graded mid-term 25%. Other mid-term 20%. Homework and class participation: 10%. Failure to submit or fulfill any required course component results in failure of the class. Failure to submit or fulfil any required course component results in failure of the class. Assessment Expectations Grade A: Clear and thorough analysis, responding directly to questions set. Both rigor and the ability to explain economic intuition. Grade B: Well organized, clearly expressed response to questions asked. Evidence of good analytical skills and appropriate reading. Grade C: Answers broadly correct with effective grasp of basic concepts. Ability to apply material from textbook and lectures, but lacking depth and subtlety. Grades D & E: Some effort and understanding although analysis may be incomplete and/or flawed. Grade F: Evidence of lack of effort and/or containing significant errors in even basic parts of answer. Incomplete/incorrect exposition of material from textbook/lecture notes. Lack of understanding of significant portions of core course content. Grade conversion NYU in London uses the following scale of numerical equivalents to letter grades: A=94-100 A-=90-93 B+=87-89 B=84-86 B-=80-83 C+=77-79 C=74-76 C-=70-73 D+=67-69 D=65-66 Page 2 of 7

F=below 65 Where no specific numerical equivalent is assigned to a letter grade by the class teacher, the mid point of the range will be used in calculating the final class grade (except in the A range, where 95.5 will be used). Grading Policy NYU in London aims to have grading standards and results in all its courses similar to those that prevail at Washington Square. Attendance Policy NYUL has a strict policy about course attendance. No unexcused absences are permitted. While students should contact their class teachers to catch up on missed work, you should NOT approach them for excused absences. Excused absences will usually only be considered for serious, unavoidable reasons such as personal ill health or illness in the immediate family. Trivial or non-essential reasons for absence will not be considered. Excused absences can only be considered if they are reported in accordance with guidelines which follow, and can only be obtained from the appropriate member of NYUL's staff. Please note that you will need to ensure that no make-up classes or required excursions - have been organised before making any travel plans for the semester. See also section 11.1 - Make up days. Absence reporting for an absence due to illness 1. On the first day of absence due to illness you should report the details of your symptoms by e-mailing absences@nyu.ac.uk including details of: class(es) missed; professor; class time; and whether any work was due including exams. Or call free (from landline) 0800 316 0469 (option 2) to report your absences on the phone. 2. Generally a doctor s note will be required to ensure you have sought treatment for the illness. Contact the Gower Street Health Centre on 0207 636 7628 to make an appointment, or use HTH general practitioners if you cannot get an appointment expediently at Gower Street. 3. At the end of your period of absence, you will need to complete an absence form online at http://bit.ly/nucl5k. You will need to log in to NYU Home to access the form. 4. Finally you must arrange an appointment to speak to Nigel Freeman or Donna Drummond- Smart on your first day back at class. You must have completed the absence form before making your appointment. Supporting documentation relating to absences must be submitted within one week of your return to class. Absence requests for non- illness reasons Absence requests for non-illness reasons must be discussed with the Academic Office prior to the date(s) in question no excused absences for reasons other than illness can be applied retrospectively. Please come in and see us in Room 308, 6 Bedford Square, or e-mail us atacademics@nyu.ac.uk. Further information regarding absences Each unexcused absence will be penalized by deducting 3% from the student s final course mark. Page 3 of 7

Students are responsible for making up any work missed due to absence. Unexcused absences from exams are not permitted and will result in failure of the exam. If you are granted an excused absence from an examination (with authorisation, as above), your lecturer will decide how you will make-up the assessment component, if at all (by make-up examination, extra coursework, viva voce (oral examination), or an increased weighting on an alternate assessment component, etc.). NYUL also expects students to arrive to class promptly (both at the beginning and after any breaks) and to remain for the duration of the class. If timely attendance becomes a problem it is the prerogative of each instructor to deduct a mark or marks from the final grade of each late arrival and each early departure. Please note that for classes involving a field trip or other external visit, transportation difficulties are never grounds for an excused absence. It is the student s responsibility to arrive at an agreed meeting point in a punctual and timely fashion. Please refer to the Student Handbook for full details of the policies relating to attendance. A copy is in your apartment and has been shared with you on Google Docs. Late Submission of Work Written homework to be submitted in class as directed by class teacher. Plagiarism Policy Plagiarism: the presentation of another piece of work or words, ideas, judgements, images or data, in whole or in part, as though they were originally created by you for the assignment, whether intentionally or unintentionally, constitutes an act of plagiarism. Please refer to the Student Handbook for full details of the plagiarism policy. On this course the assignments require you to complete multiple choice questions and solve numerical and analytic problems. Turnitin is not well suited to monitoring this kind of work, and is not used. Nevertheless, plagiarism is no more acceptable for this kind of assignment than it is in essay-based work and, if detected, can result in failure of the particular assignment, while repeat offending can result in failure for the course as a whole. (Penalties for confirmed cases of plagiarism are set out in the Student Handbook). Required Text(s) Besanko, David and Ronald R. Braeutigam Microeconomics (Fourth Edition). ISBN: 978-0-470-64606-9 Supplemental Texts(s) (not required to purchase as copies are in NYU-L Library) There are many good intermediate microeconomics texts. Here are three popular and respected ones, any of which you could use as a backup/supplement to the main text. Perloff, J. M. Microeconomics: Theory and Applications with Calculus. 2 nd edition. ISBN 978-1-4082-6432-4 Pindyck, R. and Rubinfeld, D Microeconomics (now in its 8 th edition, but any recent editions would do). ISBN-10: 140826286X Varian, Hal R. Intermediate Microeconomics (now in its eighth edition, but any recent addition would do). ISBN-10: 0393935337 For those who have not read it Freakonomics, in one of its several versions, is quite fun. An interesting Page 4 of 7

non-technical coverage of some of the course material is: McMillan, John Reinventing the Bazaar. Further reading can be suggested on request. Internet Research Guidelines Additional Required Equipment Session 1 September 3 rd Not applicable to this course. None The use of models in economics. Mathematical techniques. Review of basic supply and demand. Besanko and Braeutigam, henceforth BB, chapters 1 & 2. Session 2 September 10 th Session 3 September 17 th Session 4 September 24 th Session 5 October 1 st Consumer preferences, budget constraint. Consumer choice. BB chapters 3 & 4. 1 st homework due. Demand and consumer welfare BB chapter 5. 2 nd homework due. Production. Cost minimization BB chapters 6 & 7. 3 rd homework due. First mid-term assessment. Cost functions. BB chapter 8. Session 6 October 8 th Session 7 October 11 th (makeup lecture) Profit maximization. Factor demands. BB chapter 9. 4 th homework due. Competitive markets -- short and long run behavior. (BB chapters 9 & 10). 5 th homework due. Session 8 October 15 th Market power I; monopoly and monopsony, price discrimination, bundling. BB chapters 11 & 12. Page 5 of 7

6 th homework due. Session 9 October 22 nd Session 10 October 29 th Market power II. Monopolistic competition, Cournot, Bertrand and Stackelberg models of oligopoly. BB Chapter 13. 7 th homework due. Second mid-term assessment. Game Theory I BB chapter 14. Session 11 November 12 th Session 12 November 19 th Session 13 November 26 th Session 14 December 3 rd Game Theory II BB Chapter 14. 8 th homework due. Risk and uncertainty BB chapter 15. 9 th homework due. Public goods and externalities BB chapter 17. 10 th homework due. General equilibrium BB chapter 16. Session 15 December 10 th Final Examination. Classroom Etiquette Please arrive punctually as lectures begin on time and late arrivals disrupt others. No phones on during classes (there is a break in each session). Laptops, tablets etc can be used to follow lecture handouts but for no other purposes. NYU has a no-eating policy in its Bedford Square classrooms. Required Cocurricular Activities None. Suggested Cocurricular Activities London has a rich menu of lectures and events, many of which are directly or indirectly relevant to economics students. In particular both the London School of Economics and University College London have interesting public lecture series and are within easy reach of the Bedford Square site. Details of such programs are circulated to students. Page 6 of 7

Your Instructor A brief profile is available on the course website. Page 7 of 7