Brown University Economics 2050, Microeconomics I. Fall Professor: Roberto Serrano Teaching Assistant: Yusuke Kamishiro. General References

Similar documents
Brown University Economics 2050, Microeconomics I. Fall Professor: Roberto Serrano Teaching Assistant: Mert Kimya. General References

1.6 Duality, Integrability & Revealed Preference

ECON 200A: MICROECONOMICS ("DECISIONS")

Mathematical Economics dr Wioletta Nowak. Lecture 3-4

Brown University ECON 1130, Intermediate Microeconomics (Mathematical) Spring 2017 Class meets Tuesdays and Thursdays, 1:00-2:30 p.m.

ECON 200A: MICROECONOMICS ( DECISIONS )

The 2x2 Exchange Economy. Joseph Tao-yi Wang 2013/10/2 (Lecture 8, Micro Theory I)

Advanced Microeconomic Analysis, Lecture 7

ECON 5113 Microeconomic Theory

The 2x2 Exchange Economy. Joseph Tao-yi Wang 2012/11/21 (Lecture 2, Micro Theory I)

Intermediate Microeconomic Theory Economics 3070 Summer Introduction and Review: Chapters 1, 2 (plus corresponding study guide)

Follow links for Class Use and other Permissions. For more information send to:

Preliminary --- Subject to Change ECONOMICS 200B --- MICROECONOMIC THEORY MARKETS AND WELFARE

Lecturers: Yuriy Avtonomov and Roman Chuhay Classteachers: Yuriy Avtonomov, Roman Chuhay, Evgeniy Andreev, Irina Semenova, N.

Chapter 9: Static Games and Cournot Competition

ECONOMICS 200B --- MICROECONOMIC THEORY MARKETS AND WELFARE

A TEXTBOOK OF MICROECONOMIC THEORY. Pankaj Tandon. Boston University

General Equilibrium for the Exchange Economy. Joseph Tao-yi Wang 2013/10/9 (Lecture 9, Micro Theory I)

BSc (Hons) Economics with International. Business and Finance. Cohort: BEIBF/16A/FT. Examinations for Academic Year

Week 4 Consumer Theory

Microeconomic Theory Mas Colell Solutions

Microeconomics I - Outline

Intermediate Microeconomics

Microeconomics. Catalog Description

Money-Metric Utility in Applied Welfare Analysis: A Saddlepoint Rehabilitation

ECON 200A: MICROECONOMICS ("DECISIONS")

Decision-Making by Price-Taking Firms

ECON 200A: MICROECONOMICS ("DECISIONS")

Index. Cambridge University Press A Short Course in Intermediate Microeconomics with Calculus Roberto Serrano and Allan M.

Advanced Microeconomics (Fall term)

Activity Rules and Equilibria in the Combinatorial Clock Auction

Luca Spataro Lectures 2. Public Economics. Efficiency (Ref. Myles 1995, ch. 2) March 2015, University of Pisa

ECON 727: Microeconomic Theory for Public Policy

A Short Course in Intermediate Microeconomics with Calculus

The main text for the course is

Econ BC3035 Spring 2016 Intermediate Micro Theory

Non-existence of Duopoly Equilibria: A Simple Numerical Example

Advanced Microeconomic Theory. Chapter 2: Demand Theory

CONTENTS PART ONE -BASIC CONCEPTSCONCEPTS

Problem Set 1. Question 1.1. A farm produces yams using capital, labor, and land according to the production technology described by:

Ph.D. MICROECONOMICS CORE EXAM August IMPORTANT. You are expected to adhere to the following guidelines in completing the exam:

CONTENTS. Preface. 1 The Market. 2 Budget Constraint. xix

MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS WILEY A JOHN WILEY & SONS, INC., PUBLICATION. A Mathematical Approach

Harvard University Department of Economics

THE SONNENSCHEIN-DEBREU-MANTEL PROPOSITION AND THE THEORY OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE

NORTH CAROLINA STATE UNIVERSITY GRADUATE COURSE ACTION FORM

Industrial Organization ( st term)

Code: ECTS Credits: 15. Degree Type Year Semester Economics and Business Administration OB 0 1

THE PIGOVIAN TAX-SUBSIDY POLICY WITH PRODUCTION EXTERNALITIES UNDER A SIMPLIFIED GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM SETTING* By MASAAKI HOMMA

ECONOMICS 100A: MICROECONOMICS Fall 2006

Economic Dynamics in Discrete Time. Jianjun Mia o/ The MIT Press Cambridge, Massachusetts London, England

W. W. Norton & Company New York London

New Perspectives on Industrial Organization

Introduction to Microeconomic Theory

A Primer on IRBC Theory

ENVIRONMENTAL VALUATION

Preface. Chapter 1 Basic Tools Used in Understanding Microeconomics. 1.1 Economic Models

Table of Contents. Setting the Stage

Public Economics by Luca Spataro. Market failures: Externalities (Myles ch. 10. sections 4.4, 5, 7.2 & 7.3 excluded)

A COMPARISON OF THE COURNOT AND STACKELBERG COMPETITION IN A MIXED DUOPOLY OF THE HIGHER EDUCATION MARKET. April 2012.

1.1 What finance theory is about

RBC Models of Small Open Economies

Exercise 2. Jan Abrell Centre for Energy Policy and Economics (CEPE) D-MTEC, ETH Zurich. Exercise

Modeling of competition in revenue management Petr Fiala 1

5/2/2016. Intermediate Microeconomics W3211. Lecture 25: Recap 2. The Story So Far. Organization for the Week. Introduction

Natural Resource and Environmental Economics

General Examination in Microeconomic Theory

EC 336 MATHEMATICAL ECONOMICS SYLLABUS

PROBLEM SET 1. Defining Economics, Methodology, and Models

MICROECONOMICS. DAVID A. SESANKO Northwestern University, Kellogg School of Management

Ph.D. MICROECONOMICS CORE EXAM August 2012

IN THIS PAPER, we consider a congestion pricing approach

^ Springer. The Logic of Logistics. Theory, Algorithms, and Applications. for Logistics Management. David Simchi-Levi Xin Chen Julien Bramel

Learning Outcomes Assessment. Instructor: Timothy Dang Academic year Economics 361

Incompleteness of the New Classical General Equilibrium Model and

Principles of Economics

Microeconomics (Fall term) Syllabus

A Consistent Firm Objective When Markets are Incomplete: Profit Maximization

Economics 361 Assessment

Section 1: Introduction

Demand Theory. Lecture VI and VII Utility Maximization, Choice, Demand (Varian Ch. 7, 8, 9, 10) Federico Trionfetti

Microeconomics I PEPM U6101. Summer 2015 Syllabus

Natural Resource and Environmental Economics

Technology Adoption in a Differentiated Duopoly: Cournot versus Bertrand

OPTIMAL LABOR CONTRACTS, IMPERFECT COMPETITION AND UNDREMPLOYMENT EQUILIBRIA: A FRAMEWORK FOR ANALYSIS. Working Paper No. 2060

LECTURE NOTES FOR AREC 304: INTERMEDIATE PRODUCTION AND CONSUMPTION ANALYSIS PROFESSOR BRUCE R. BEATTIE

CHAPTER 6 INTRODUCTION TO AN APPLIED GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM MODEL 1

SAMUELSON S CURIOUS CASE REVISITED: IT TURNS OUT TO BE NORMAL INDEED GENERIC. William D. A. Bryant*

Microeconomic Theory III

Separability and Aggregation

CMSC 474, Introduction to Game Theory Analyzing Normal-Form Games

Existence of a Pareto optimal social interaction outcome with non-binary preferences

Chih-Chen Liu and Leonard F.S. Wang *

ESSENTIAL MICROECONOMICS

Managerial Economics, 01/12/2003. A Glossary of Terms

Perfectly and Imperfectly Competitive Markets

Economics. In an economy, the production units are called (a) Firm (b) Household (c) Government (d) External Sector

On the mode of Competition as a Collusive Perspective in Unionized Oligopoly

Do Social Preferences Matter in Competitive Markets?

LECTURE 13 THE NEOCLASSICAL OR WALRASIAN EQUILIBRIUM INTRODUCTION

Transcription:

Brown University Economics 2050, Microeconomics I Fall 2007 Professor: Roberto Serrano Teaching Assistant: Yusuke Kamishiro General References The primary reference is Mas-Colell, A., M. Whinston and J. Green (1995), Microeconomic Theory, Oxford University Press, Oxford. Other references are: Jehle, G. and P. Reny (1998), Advanced Microeconomic Theory, Addison-Wesley, Reading, MA. Varian, H. (1982), Microeconomic Analysis, 2nd edition, Norton, New York. Debreu, G. (1959), Theory of Value, Wiley, New York. Arrow, K. and F. Hahn (1971), General Competitive Analysis, North Holland, New York. Feldman, A. and R. Serrano (2006), Welfare Economics and Social Choice Theory, 2nd edition, Springer, New York. 1

Syllabus 1. Classical Consumer and Producer Theories (Mas-Colell et al. s Chapters 2-5): Choice-based consumer theory and the weak axiom of revealed preference. Preference-based consumer theory and utility. Duality. Aggregation. Producer theory. 2. General Equilibrium, Welfare Economics and Social Choice (Mas-Colell et al. s Chapters 10, 15-17, 19 and 21): General equilibrium: exchange and production. Equilibrium, efficiency and the core: the welfare theorems. Existence of equilibrium. Local uniqueness and regular economies. Arbitrary aggregate excess demand. General equilibrium under uncertainty. Social choice. 2

List of Topics Class 1: Choice-based consumer theory. Commodities. The consumption set. Properties of consumption sets. The budget set. The ordinary or Walrasian demand correspondence and its basic properties. Class 2: Comparative statics of demand. Wealth and price effects. The matrix of price effects. Restrictions on wealth and price effects: Euler s condition, Engel and Cournot aggregation conditions. The weak axiom of revealed preference (WARP). Class 3: Implications of WARP. The compensated law of demand. Substitution effects. Differentiable version of the compensated law of demand: the negative semidefiniteness of the Slutsky matrix and the Slutsky equation. Class 4: Is the Slutsky matrix symmetric? The singularity of the Slutsky matrix. WARP and preference maximization. Class 5: Classical preference-based demand theory. The preference relation and its properties. Completeness, transitivity, desirability and convexity properties. Class 6: Utility representation of preferences. Continuous preference relations and representability. Class 7: The utility maximization problem and its solution. Walrasian or ordinary demand correspondence. Properties of the demand correspondence. The indirect utility function. Class 8: Properties of the indirect utility function. The expenditure minimization problem and its solution. The expenditure function. Properties of the expenditure function. Class 9: Relationship between the expenditure and the indirect utility functions. The Hicksian or compensated demand correspondence. Properties of the compensated demand. Hicksian demand and the compensated law of demand. Class 10: The Slutsky matrix when derived from preference maximization. Substitution effects revisited. The negative semidefiniteness, symmetry and singularity of the Slutsky substitu- 3

tion matrix. Relation between Walrasian demand and the indirect utility function: Roy s identity. Class 11: Integrability. Recovering the expenditure function from demand. Recovering preferences from the expenditure function. The strong axiom of revealed preference (SARP). Class 12: Aggregate demand. Aggregate demand as a function of aggregate wealth. Linear wealth expansion paths and Gorman forms. WARP in the aggregate. Price independence of wealth levels and the uncompensated law of demand. The representative consumer assumption. Class 13: Producer theory. Production sets and their properties. The profit maximization problem. The supply correspondence and the profit function. The single output case: production function and conditions for profit maximization. Class 14: Properties of supply and profit functions (homogeneity, convexity, Hotelling s lemma). The positive semidefiniteness of the matrix of price effects as an expression of the law of supply. Symmetry and singularity of the matrix of price effects. The cost minimization problem. Conditional input demands, the cost function and its properties (homogeneity, concavity, Shephard s lemma). Aggregation in the theory of the producer. Class 15: A partial equilibrium introduction to general equilibrium. Quasilinear preferences and small wealth effects. Competitive allocations in a partial equilibrium model: existence, uniqueness, welfare properties (Marshallian consumers and producers surplus). Class 16: General Equilibrium: Basic Definitions. Exchange and production Economies. Pareto efficiency. The Walrasian or competitive equilibrium. The core. Class 17: The first welfare theorem. Price equilibrium with transfers. The importance of local non-satiation for the first welfare theorem. Price quasiequilibrium with transfers. The strong version of the first welfare theorem: the market and the jungle. Class 18: The second welfare theorem. The importance of convexity to establish that any Pareto efficient allocation can be supported by a price quasiequilibrium with transfers. Positive 4

wealth and the relationship between price quasiequilibria and price equilibria. The core convergence theorem. Class 19: Existence of Equilibrium. The equilibrium as the zero of a system of equations. Properties of the aggregate excess demand. A graphic existence proof based on the intermediate value theorem. The equilibrium as a fixed point. Proof of existence based on Brouwer s fixed point theorem. Class 20: Local uniqueness of equilibrium. Regular economies. The local uniqueness, finiteness and oddness of equilibria in regular economies. Genericity of regular economies. How arbitrary is aggregate excess demand? The Sonnenschein-Mantel-Debreu theorem. Implications of the theorem for uniqueness, comparative statics and stability of equilibrium. Class 21: Uniqueness of equilibrium. WARP in the aggregate. Why WARP in the aggregate is now an even stronger condition (wealth distribution as a function of prices). The gross substitutes property. Comparative statics and stability of equilibrium. Class 22: Elements of decision making under uncertainty: expected utility and risk aversion. General equilibrium under uncertainty. States of the world and state contingent commodities. Arrow-Debreu equilibrium. Class 23: Sequential trade. The ex ante and ex post efficient allocation of risk in the Arrow- Debreu equilibrium. Arrow securities. Radner equilibrium. Equivalence of Arrow-Debreu equilibria and Radner equilibria under Arrow securities. General assets and market incompleteness. Class 24: Social choice. Social welfare functions. Arrow s impossibility theorem. 5