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Advanced Microeconomic Theory Course

ECO 601 is a graduate level microeconomics course taught by Professor Frank Scott in the fall of 2004. The course will cover traditional microeconomic topics including utility, consumer demand, production, costs, market structure and pricing using Walter Nicholson's textbook. Students will be evaluated based on two midterm tests making up 55% of the grade, problem sets for 10%, and a final exam worth 35%. The course is intended to serve both masters and PhD students as an introduction to microeconomics.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
210 views2 pages

Advanced Microeconomic Theory Course

ECO 601 is a graduate level microeconomics course taught by Professor Frank Scott in the fall of 2004. The course will cover traditional microeconomic topics including utility, consumer demand, production, costs, market structure and pricing using Walter Nicholson's textbook. Students will be evaluated based on two midterm tests making up 55% of the grade, problem sets for 10%, and a final exam worth 35%. The course is intended to serve both masters and PhD students as an introduction to microeconomics.

Uploaded by

Sarab
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

ECO 601: ADVANCED MICROECONOMIC THEORY

Fall 2004

Instructor: Frank Scott


B&E 335-M
257-7643
fscott@[Link]

Class: ECO 601-001


MWF 9:00-10:00 a.m.
B&E 301

Economics 601 is the first graduate course in microeconomic theory. It is designed


to study intensively a wide range of traditional micro topics such as utility and consumer
demand; production, costs, and the firm; market structure and pricing in product markets;
factor markets; market efficiency; and market failure. It is hoped that the course will serve
equally well as a terminal course for Masters students in Economics and Agricultural
Economics and Doctoral students from other programs, and as a preparation for succeeding
PhD courses in microeconomics.

Students are assumed to have had an undergraduate course in intermediate


microeconomic theory as well as one course in calculus. Economics 590 is not a
prerequisite for this course.

GRADING: There will be two tests and a quasi-comprehensive final exam. The material
to be covered on each test is indicated on the outline below. The first test will count 25%,
the second test will count 30%, and the final exam will count 35% toward the
determination of your final grade in the course. The remaining 10% will come from your
performance on the problem sets, which will be assigned at regular intervals.

TEXT: We will use Walter Nicholson's Microeconomic Theory: Basic Principles and
Extensions (9th edition, Southwestern/Thomson Learning). You may find it helpful to
acquire a good undergraduate intermediate microeconomics text and read it alongside the
assignments in Nicholson. Two possibilities are Browning and Zupan, Microeconomic
Theory and Applications, John Wiley & Sons, Inc. and Varian, Intermediate
Microeconomics, W. W. Norton & Co.

OFFICE HOURS: My office is 335-M in the Business and Economics Building. Office
hours are from 9:00 to 10:00 on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Appointments at other times are
welcomed and can be scheduled with me.
COURSE OUTLINE AND READING ASSIGNMENTS:

I. Introduction: Ch. 1

II. Mathematical Review: Ch. 2

III. Consumer Behavior and Demand:


A. Utility Maximization: Chs. 3 and 4
B. Individual Demand: Chs. 5 and 6
C. Market Demand: Ch. 10, pp. 279-283
D. Uncertainty: Ch. 18, pp. 533-545

TEST #1
(Friday, October 8)

IV. Production and the Firm:


A. Production Functions: Ch. 7
B. Costs: Ch. 8
C. Profit Maximization: Ch. 9

V. Pricing in Product Markets:


A. Perfect Competition: Chs. 10 and 11
B. Monopoly: Ch. 13

TEST #2
(Friday, November 19)

VI. Factor Markets: Ch. 16

VII. General Equilibrium and Welfare:


A. Competitive Equilibrium and Efficiency: Ch. 12
B. Externalities and Public Goods: Ch. 20

FINAL EXAM
(Friday, December 17, 8:00 a.m.)

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