ECON9200 – Advanced Microeconomics
Course description
Schedule, syllabus and examination date
Course content
This course has joint teaching with ECON5200 – Advanced Microeconomics
This is an advanced course in microeconomic theory. The course covers the main topics of microeconomics from consumer and producer behavior, partial and general equilibrium, behavior under uncertainty, game theory and asymmetric information.
Topics
- Preferences, choice and demand.
- Production.
- Partial equilibrium.
- Expected utility.
- Static games.
- Dynamic games and beliefs.
- Market power and product differentiation.
- Adverse selection, signaling and screening.
- Principal agent problems.
- General equilibrium and welfare.
- Existence and uniqueness of equilibrium.
- General equilibrium under ucertainty.
- Intertemporal equilibrium.
Learning outcome
Knowledge outcomes
You will learn the fundamental methods and theories of microeconomics, and be provided with the basic tools and concepts required to understand scientific papers at the research frontier of microeconomic theory. The course cannot bring you to the frontier of all topics within microeconomic theory, but will give you sufficient knowledge to read papers on the frontier and thus be able to acquire knowledge of the frontier of most areas in microeconomics.
Skills
The student should be able to read and understand scientific papers representing the research frontier of microeconomic theory.
Admission
Students at UiO must apply for courses in StudentWeb.
Please note that the course ECON9200 is offered to PhD candidates at the Department of Economics. Other candidates admitted to a PhD program may apply to take the course, but must be registered at the University of Oslo.
Students at the Master's programme must use the code ECON5200.
Prerequisites
Formal prerequisite knowledge
- ECON3220 – Microeconomics 3 / ECON4220 – Microeconomics 3 or equivalent.
- Or the following discontinued courses: ECON3200 – Microeconomics and Game Theory (discontinued) / ECON4200 – Microeconomics and Game Theory (discontinued), ECON4215 – Microeconomics (discontinued), ECON4230 – Microeconomic Theory (discontinued) , ECON4235 – Microeconomic Theory (discontinued)
Overlapping courses
10 credits overlap with ECON5200 – Advanced Microeconomics
For PhD-candidates: 2,5 credits against ECON9210A and 2,5 credits against ECON9210B