Microeconomics

Title:                     Microeconomics – A Calculus Approach – Semester 1

Instructors:        Anna Bottasso, Beatrice Braut, Simone Robbiano, Claudio Piga claudio.piga@unige.it

Credit (CFU):     3

Lectures: 24 hours

Reading and Essay Writing:50 hours

Period Taught:  November-January

 

Course Description and objectives

This course is the part of the Microeconomics sequence for the PhD program in Economics and EQM. The objective of the course is twofold. In terms of the material covered, the course delivers a brief but rigorous introduction of foundational topics in microeconomic theory, namely Consumer Theory and Theory of the Firm. Each topic is presented using both an intuitive graphical analysis with real world applications and a more formal approach based on calculus. On the methodological side, the aim is to enhance students’ understanding on the essential measures used by economists to assess markets’ efficiency.

Prerequisites

It is expected that students have prior knowledge of intermediate microeconomics methods and concepts. 

Course Materials

Lecture slides will generally contain all the material students are expected to learn. In turn, the lectures will often refer to and closely follow the relevant chapters in:

  • Nechyba, T. (2011), Microeconomics: an Intuitive Approach with Calculus, International Edition, 1st or 2nd Edition, Southwestern CEngage Learning

Lecture Schedule 

Lecture

Module Convenor

Topic

1

Robbiano

Ch.2 and Ch. 4 – Consumer’s Budgets and Preferences

2

Robbiano

Ch. 5 and ch. 6 – Special Utility Functions and Optimality

3.-4

Braut

Ch. 7 – Income and Substitution Effect

5.

Braut

Ch. 9 – Demand and Supply Functions

6-7

Piga

Ch. 10 – Consumer Welfare and Deadweight Loss

8

Robbiano

Ch. 11 Short Run Producer Model

9.-10

Bottasso

Ch.12 Production with Multiple Inputs and Duality

11-12.

Bottasso

Ch. 13 – Production decisions in the short and long run

Assessment

Students will be assessed in the final exam, which will consist in a written test containing short numerical problems and a multiple choice test. Questions will draw from material covered in all chapters presented.

Last update 22 October 2024