Microeconomics with Applications in Finance ECON5021
- Academic Session: 2024-25
- School: Adam Smith Business School
- Credits: 20
- Level: Level 5 (SCQF level 11)
- Typically Offered: Semester 1
- Available to Visiting Students: No
- Collaborative Online International Learning: No
Short Description
This course provides students with a basic understanding of advanced microeconomics, enabling them to understand and interpret recent developments in the literature and also giving them the appropriate toolkit to understand recent economic and finance models. Specific topics covered are game theory; price setting; oligopoly and market structure; inequality, risk and uncertainty; portfolio choice theory. On successful completion of the course students should be able to read and understand scholarly literature in microeconomic theory; be able to solve advanced analytical problems in economic theory; be able to identify open questions for their own research; understand the strategic decision making and price setting under different market structures; appreciate the welfare implications of such decisions; and appreciate risk and uncertainty and optimal portfolio choice in asset markets.
Timetable
One 2-hour lecture per week for 10 weeks.
Four 1-hour tutorials.
Requirements of Entry
Students must be registered on one of the associated programmes listed in this course specification.
Excluded Courses
None
Co-requisites
None
Assessment
ILO
Main Assessment In: December
Course Aims
The main aim of this course is to provide students with a basic understanding of advanced microeconomics to enable them to understand and interpret recent developments in the literature covering:
■ Game theory
■ Price setting
■ Oligopoly and market structure
■ Inequality, risk and uncertainty
■ Portfolio choice theory
Intended Learning Outcomes of Course
Upon completion of the course students should be able to:
1. Apply game theoretical tools to represent strategic environments (with or without uncertainty) and demonstrate the derivation of optimal strategies;
2. Identify the crucial features of a market and demonstrate how these affect the working of the market (with focus on market power);
3. Evaluate the welfare implications in imperfectly competitive markets;
4. Analyse decision problems under uncertainty and show how to derive the optimal portfolio choice in asset markets;
5. Address basic normative issues in a general equilibrium framework.
Minimum Requirement for Award of Credits
Students must submit at least 75% by weight of the components (including examinations) of the course's summative assessment.