Spring 2009

Microeconomics

Listed in: Economics, as ECON-54

Faculty

Christopher G. Kingston (Section 01)

Description

This course develops the tools of modern microeconomic theory and notes their applications to matters of utility and demand; production functions and cost; pricing of output under perfect competition, monopoly, oligopoly, etc.; pricing of productive services; intertemporal decision-making; the economics of uncertainty; efficiency, equity, general equilibrium; externalities and public goods. A student may not receive credit for both Economics 54 and Economics 58. Requisite: Economics 11 and Mathematics 11 or equivalent. Spring semester. Professor Kingston.