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1 - Econ - Advanced Economic Theory (Eng)

This document outlines the syllabus for an advanced economic theory course covering microeconomics, macroeconomics, international trade, and public economics. Section I focuses on microeconomics, including theories of oligopolistic markets, game theory, factor pricing, general equilibrium, and economics of information. Areas like Cournot competition, kinked demand curves, and Nash equilibrium will be examined. Section II will analyze macroeconomic topics like aggregate demand and supply, extending the IS-LM model to open economies. The course also includes modules on international trade theory and public economics.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
676 views1 page

1 - Econ - Advanced Economic Theory (Eng)

This document outlines the syllabus for an advanced economic theory course covering microeconomics, macroeconomics, international trade, and public economics. Section I focuses on microeconomics, including theories of oligopolistic markets, game theory, factor pricing, general equilibrium, and economics of information. Areas like Cournot competition, kinked demand curves, and Nash equilibrium will be examined. Section II will analyze macroeconomic topics like aggregate demand and supply, extending the IS-LM model to open economies. The course also includes modules on international trade theory and public economics.

Uploaded by

David Jack
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We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Syllabus

T.Y.B.A. PAPER : IV
ADVANCED ECONOMIC THEORY
with effect from academic year 2010-11 in IDOL

Preamble: The paper deals with four areas of economics :


microeconomics, macroeconomics including open-economy
macroeconomics, international trade theory and public economics,
Section I is devoted to microeconomics and begins with the
analysis of oligopolistic marks, since perfectly competitive and
monopolistically competitive market forms have been dealt with an
earlier paper in the course. Areas like game theory and economics
of information are sufficiently dealt with. Section II deals with
aggregate demand and aggregate demand and aggregate supply
analysis and extends the IS-LM model to an open economy. There
is also a module each on international trade theory and public
economics.

SECTION – I

1. Price and Under Oligopoly :


Features of Oligopoly market, Cournot‘s model, Kinked Demand
Curve Hypothesis, Collusion : Cartels and Price Leadership.
Game Theory : Nash Equilibrium and Prisoner‘s Dilemma.

2. Theory of Factor Pricing :


Factor pricing in Perfectly and Imperfectly Competitive Markets.
Economic Rent. Wage Determination under Collective
Bargaining, Bilateral Monopoly. Loanable Funds Theory, Risk,
Uncertainty and Profits.

3. General Equilibrium and Social Welfare :


Interdependence in the economy, General Equilibrium and its
existence. The Pareto Optimality Criterion of Social Welfare,
Marginal Conditions for a Pareto Optimal Resource Allocation,
Perfect Competition and Pareto Optimality.

4. Economics of Information :
Economics of Search : Search costs. Information failure and
missing markets. Asymmetric Information : The market for
Lemons. Adverse selection : Insurance Markets. Market
Signaling. The Problem of Moral Hazard. The Principal-Agent
Problem. The Efficiency Wage Theory

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